Saturday, May 31, 2008

Call on ‘bomb at Taj’ proves to be a hoax !!!


(LUCKNOW)

A phone call from Madurai to a resident of a village in Agra district asking whether a bomb has been planted in the Taj Mahal caused a flutter in the Uttar Pradesh police circles. Security forces, including the Central Industrial Security Force, deployed at the Taj, were put on alert.
The Tamil Nadu Director-General of Police was informed about the call by the Senior Superintendent of Police, Agra.
Additional Director-General of Police (Law and Order) Brij Lal said the phone call was received on the cellular phone of Kalyan Singh, resident of Lightpura ki Khaar village under the Dauki police station area in Agra district, at 9 a.m.
The caller said he had planted a bomb in Tamil Nadu (the location was not disclosed) and wanted to know whether “he” had planted a bomb in the Taj Mahal.
When Mr. Singh wanted to know who was speaking, the caller disconnected saying “Sorry.”
Mr. Lal said investigations showed that the call was made from a PCO in Madurai.

Yet another Spielberg special - Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull

Harrison Ford&Shia LaBeouf: A still from ‘Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull’.
Film: Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull
Director: Steven Spielberg
This one comes soaked in the colours of nostalgia. The first of the series came a little under 30 years ago. Life was young and dreams innocent.
In the intervening years, we might have forfeited our right to easy wonderment, but director Steven Spielberg revives those boyhood dreams, dusted and daring. The fourth in the Indiana Jones series does not so much feed off the past as it borrows. Par tially with the idea of reviving fading memory, partially to fill in the details, Spielberg keeps a good thing going here. The film comes packed with all the reference points. Elements in place
Harrison Ford is 60-something and is up to something clearly big here. All the identifiable elements are in place: When he turned up the last time, the world was on the verge of a war and the villains did not have a hiding place in the irrepressible hero’s noble search. Now, Jones does more of the same: the world is still in danger! Our man has to tackle the challenges afresh: this time there is a threat of nuclear annihilation. And there is that crystal you just cannot look in the eye. That needs to be protected. A bit far fetched?
Yes, but when was simple logic a part of the Indiana Jones curriculum? Add the usual clichés of painted tribals seeking to kill, KGB on a roll, the FBI in hot pursuit, and you have the body of the new film ready.Emotional sub-plot
Soul? That comes from a little emotional sub-plot of a long forgotten wife and a son the father did not know he had. It is this addition that adds real value to the film: the parting shot where the son is about to put on the hat of the ageless hero gives us hope that, maybe, he might just take over. Not to be though.
Fine with flesh and soul. But what about the kiss of life? Well, that comes, as it inevitably does in a Spielberg film, from the special effects, the action sequences. The waterfall chase is spell-binding; the attack of the ants evokes a puking feeling. Just as it is supposed to. Then the jeep chases, the hanging of men and women by the branches of the tree…all expected, still delightful in their own ways.
In some ways, the film is a throwback to the times when films carried a bit of everything.
In some ways, the latest version has some concessions to the wheel of time. Our hero has aged and is not uncomfortable with his age-lines. And his weapons of destruction – or is it defence – are more sophisticated.
Among the less heavy films of the famous director, ‘Crystal Skull’ is not as mesmerising as say ‘The Temple of Doom’ or ‘The Last Crusade’. It cannot be. Also, it does not need to be. But you would still like it.
All that the cinemagoers are required to do here is to carry the eye of an archaeologist, the heart of a young boy; and the uncomplaining attitude of the layman. A light film for a breezy weekend.

Friday, May 30, 2008

Building change competence in employees!!

The following list defines the requirements for building change competency in employees. It uses the ADKAR model as a framework (the same model you will teach employees to use as they go through changes). The requirements must be filled in sequential order. In other words, only when the first requirement is met should you move to the second requirement.
1. Awareness – Employees are aware of the significant role they play in the overall change management process. They understand that change is the norm, not the exception. They also understand that some changes may happen quickly and without warning. Employees expect change, and understand that their change competency is part of their job responsibility (included in their job description). Employees are aware that they collectively produce business success and understand the need to change to keep pace with changing market conditions.
2. Desire – Employees are committed to building change competency. They understand the business risk of not building this competency into the organization, and understand the personal consequences for them (both good and bad) that create a desire to develop this competency. Employees recognize that being able to adapt to change is part of their job responsibilities, and that doing their job well requires constant adaptation and change. They see evidence that adaptability and change competence is part of their overall performance evaluation.
3. Knowledge – Employees understand how to cope and thrive in a changing environment. Tools like the ADKAR model of change are provided to employees and are part of the coach-employee relationship. Employees understand the tools and resources they have to assist them through the transition. They know how to identify where they are having problems and know how to seek solutions. Employees have the skills, behaviors and knowledge to be change competent.
4. Ability – Employees have a chance to practice and fail in a non-threatening environment. They have been given the appropriate coaching and know where to go for help.
5. Reinforcement – The values of a change-competent organization are factored into the job descriptions, compensation and reward schemes for employees. Their direct supervisors provide guidance and opportunities to practice the skills needed to support constant change.

Outlook’s Top Colleges List!!

Top 100 Engineering Colleges

Recently Outlook Magazine released a list of Top 100 Engineering Colleges in India. A total of 12 universities from Tamil Nadu featured in the list. Among them were IIT Madras (#4), Anna University (#10), NIT/REC (#15), PSG College of Technology (#23), Velore Inst Technology (#43), Coimbatore Institute of Technolgy (#44), SSN College of Engineering (#45), SRM Inst of Science and Technology (#65), SASTRA (#66), Karunya Inst Technology (#84), Sathyabhama Engineering College (#86), and Hindustan Inst Engineering Technology (#90). I was quite surprised to see many “Deemed Universities” in the list. IIT Madras was placed 4th overall behind IIT Kanpur, Kharagpur, and Bombay.

The Five Key Things You Need to Know Before You Buy a Domain Name??

Buying a domain name is one of the most important steps a business can take to ensure success.
So what do you need to know when searching for your domain?
  1. Determine Your Domain Name Strategy
  2. Variations on a Theme: Your Name in Many Forms
  3. Domains As a Capital Investment: Think About Your Domains as Assets
  4. Due Diligence: Don't Let Trademark Issues Cloud Your Target Domains
  5. Plan for Success: Acquire Your Domain with a Plan in Place
From defining a domain name strategy, to planning first steps post-acquisition, this document outlines five key points that every entrepreneur should consider.

Tips on Domain Selling!!

What are some tips on domain selling?

Tips on domain selling are bound to help you make a profitable deal when trading your domains. Domain selling requires patience, skills, and talent; more importantly, you have to be abreast with the latest domain news and events. Though many domain owners employ conventional domain selling strategies, it has been established that certain serious considerations and skilful ploys can bring you better profit.

Consider these tips on selling a domain name:

  • Evaluate the worth of your domain name and determine the price. Decide on a reasonable price.
  • Create an HTML page to advertise the sale of your domain name. Almost all domain registrars offer free HTML pages without paying web hosting fees.
  • You can provide your web URLs to leading search engines so that you get increased traffic to your domains.
  • Update the WHOIS information to make others sure that your domain name is for sale.
  • If your domain names that are listed for sale do not receive sufficient buyer attention, seek advice from the experts.
  • As a rule, reply to every tender even if the price is not what you expected.
  • Make sure that your contact address is up-to-date.

If you cannot sell your domain name by yourself, make use of the services of a number of professional domain name marketing companies. Some companies will list your domain names absolutely free. They operate on a commission basis. You are charged only if they manage to find a buyer for your domain names.

Domain sales are very much dependent on the domain names. Buyers are attracted to clear and identifiable, short domain names, with few numbers as characters. Another important aspect of successful domain sales is effective marketing. You should not only have a worthy domain but know how to market it. In this regard, it is worthwhile to accept necessary tips on domain selling from those experienced in the field.

How to Sell Web Domain Names??

Information on how to sell web domain names.

Wondering how to sell web domain names? Domain name trading has now become a profitable business on the Internet. Premium domains enjoy great demand and are usually noted for their catchy names and remarkable traffic.

It is vital to first assess the market value of your domain name through a domain appraisal study. Find out the market value of an extensive range of domain names such as aftermarket domains, high-value domains, top domains, secondary market domains, sounding domains etc. The .com domain name has more market value than other generic top level domain names. Generally, customers choose short domain names rather than long ones. So try to sell domains with short and memorable names which are highly desired in the domain market.

You can display a list of domain names for sale in the advertising market sites provided by various companies facilitating domain sales. Make your site attractive enough to invite a number of potential customers. In order to maximize the chance of sales, the site you created must be provided with relevant information.

Are you looking to sell domain names at a fast rate? Then, sell domain names at various discount rates plus additional features. You can offer multiple domain names for a wholesale rate. Customers always look for low prices. In the rapid changing domain name market, price value can go up as time changes. So never display current price values on the sites but give an option for request price. Another selling technique is to offer domain names with longer registration periods. Domains which have been registered for longer periods invite more customers because domain buyers are always on the lookout to reduce their risk from losing names through accidental expiration.

Let's now hope you got certain tips how to sell web domain names in the cyberspace business world.

Motion-capture system adds costume to the drama!!

Special effects based on the 3D movements of real actors were once the domain of film-makers with hundreds of millions of dollars to spare. But digital motion capture could soon be within reach of low-budget film makers thanks to new software that records movement without using markers.

Studios making computer games and movies typically capture motion using highly visible markers placed across the body of an actor wearing a tight, dark suit, to help a camera track their movements. The technique was used heavily in Paramount's film Beowulf, released last year.

However, the vision-processing software sometimes loses track of these markers and the errors must be corrected by hand.

"This contributes significantly to the production costs," says Christian Theobalt from Stanford University, USA.

Digital double

Theobalt and colleagues at Stanford, and from the Max-Planck Institute Informatik in Saarbrücken, Germany, claim to have made software accurate enough to capture the full 3D movement of a person's body without markers. A video (top, right) shows it in action.

The new method begins the creation of a 3D digital clone of the actor using a laser scanner. Eight cameras then capture their movements from different angles as they act the scene. Their recording of the person's movement is then analysed to animate the 3D clone.

For each frame, vision-processing software finds the outline of the actor in the eight different images to capture their movement. The software compares the relative positions of features on the eight original images to calculate other details like creases in the actor's clothes. The final 3D animation of the person can then be exported into the movie environment.

Because the new method is not confused by loose clothing, an actor can wear costume for the recording. After a conventional marker-based recording, clothing must be digitally added.

Costume capture

Capturing the ruffle of real clothes, rather than simulating this with a computer, could make the animations appear more realistic. It could also improve the actor's performance.

"I would imagine an actor could perform better if they were immersed in the right costume," says Richard Broadbridge, an expert in motion capture from 4D View Solutions.

Tests of the new system on dancers and martial artists included clothing like long, flowing skirts that would have confused a marker-based system.

With improvements, the technique used by Theobalt's software to capture the movements of clothing might one day prove capable of capturing facial expressions too, says Broadbridge, who says the results so far are impressive.

The work will be presented at the computer graphics conference Siggraph in Los Angeles, California, in August.

Thursday, May 29, 2008

A 10-minute office workout to stay fit!

With practically everyone working longer hours at the office these days, it is tough to stay motivated enough to hit the gym in the evenings -- or even in the mornings before work, for that matter! But that doesn't mean you can't get into shape. Here is a super-easy workout that can be done in your very own office, at your very own desk.

You don't even need to do these exercises daily, just four days a week is good enough. The workout comprises of body resistance exercises with a resistance tube, which can easily be stored in your desk drawer, so you don't need to carry it back and forth. The tube is available at most sports shops. I highly recommend the Reebok Resistance Tube, Level 2; men can use the Level 3.

Power Walk

Walking is the most important exercise since it burns fat, strengthens the heart and lungs, improves stamina, increases concentration levels and builds bone density, among other benefits.

A power walk will help you burn off excess fat and is a good warm-up for the exercises to follow. Thirty minutes is ideal, but if that's difficult to manage, split it up into two 15-minute power walks. The time of day for the walk is dependent on your schedule. Keep your pace brisk and non stop.

As for where to walk, you may consider your office compound or then on your way to work, simply get off a small distance away from the office and walk it up.

'Harry Potter' prequel to sell at U.K. auction!!

An 800-word mini-prequel by Rowling will be up for grabs on June 10
An 800-word Harry Potter prequel is one of 13 card-sized works to be sold at a charity auction in the British capital.

Waterstone's Booksellers Ltd. says the cream-colored A5 papers — each slightly bigger than a postcard — were distributed to 13 authors and illustrators, including the boy wizard's creator J.K. Rowling, Nobel Prize winner Doris Lessing, novelist Margaret Atwood and playwright Tom Stoppard.

Rowling used both sides of her card to hand-write a prequel to her seven-book Harry Potter saga, while Lessing penned a story about the power of reading. Stoppard wrote a short mystery and Atwood was due to fill out her card remotely using a robotic arm controlled by computer linkup.


Twentyone people are dead and 100 missing as a result of snowstorms in eastern Mongolia!

Mongolia: Snowstorms have killed at least 21 people and left 100 others missing.
The State Emergency Authority said today that heavy snow and strong winds have hit three provinces in eastern Mongolia.

It says most of the victims were herders who were frozen to death and that hundreds of livestock also died.

Afghanistan: Fourteen people were killed and 52 injured today when a packed truck plunged into a ravine in the north-eastern province of Badakhshan.

Winter storm

A winter storm is an event in which the dominant varieties of precipitation are forms that only occur at cold temperatures, such as snow or sleet, or a rainstorm where ground temperatures are cold enough to allow ice to form (i.e. freezing rain). In temperate continental climates, these storms are not necessarily restricted to the winter season, but may occur in the late autumn and early spring as well. Very rarely, they may form in summer, though it would have to be an abnormally cold summer, such as the summer of 1816 in the Northeast United States of America. In many locations in the Northern Hemisphere, the most powerful winter storms usually occur in March and, in regions where temperatures are cold enough, April.

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Petroleum Ministry(India) for immediate hike in retail fuel prices!

The Petroleum Ministry has proposed a Rs 10 a litre hike in petrol, Rs 5 per litre increase in diesel and Rs 50 per cylinder rise in LPG prices, as the Finance Ministry was unwilling to cut duties to cushion the impact of crude prices on oil companies.

Oil Minister Murli Deora, who first met Finance Minister P Chidambaram seeking lowering of customs and excise duty, also called on External Affairs Minister Pranab Mukherjee and finally Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to explain the Rs 225,000 crore burden the spike in global prices was putting on oil PSUs this fiscal.

Chidambaram is believed to be against cutting customs duty on crude to zero, reducing import duty on petrol and diesel to 2.5 per cent from 7.5 per cent and halving excise duty on the two fuel as sought by the Petroleum Ministry, official sources said.

A proposal to levy a cess or surcharge on all direct and indirect taxes also did not find favour with Chidambaram, as he felt it is tantamount to taxing people not using subsidised fuel.

Sources said even after the hike in petrol, diesel and LPG prices, duty cuts, giving retailers oil bonds worth Rs 35,000 crore and upstream firms like ONGC chipping in Rs 30,000 crore, a gap of Rs 51,000 crore was left to be covered.

BPCL and HPCL have cash to buy crude oil only till July while Indian Oil can finance imports till September. The three firms face huge liquidity crisis as they are unable to realise full value of products sold.

"We don't want to see scarcity of petroleum products particularly kerosene and LPG," Deora told reporters. "PSUs are in a precarious state and a solution needs to be found."

Deora said some proposals were discussed but "nothing has been agreed."

CBSE class X results on May 29

The Central Board of Secondary Education (CBSE) will declare the class 10th examination results on May 29th, at 8:00 am IST.

After announcing the class 12th results for the Delhi, Guwahati and Allahabad regions today, CBSE Chairman Ashok Ganguly said that the results of one or two regions could be announced on May 28th.

CBSE Results 2008


He further added that, "The official date for publishing the class 10th results has been fixed as May 29th. The results of one or two regions may be declared on May 28th."

A beta release of Flash Player 10 is available for download. What has Adobe got for us to look forward to?

GPU hardware acceleration is high on my list. There seem to be too much Flash content around that consumes a huge proportion of the available CPU cycles to carry out what appears to be fairly simple animations. This probably means they are badly written, but with any luck offloading some of the work to the GPU will free up my CPU for more useful work.

A comment made by an early user is encouraging. Grant Skinner, CEO and chief architect of gskinner.com said "With Flash Player 10 beta, developers can enable SWF content to render through the memory bandwidth and computational horsepower of the GPU hardware processor, freeing up the CPU to do more - such as render 3D content and intricate effects, and process complex business logic."

Designers will probably be more impressed with provision for custom filters and effects to augment those provided by Flash. Adobe is also providing the Pixel Blender toolkit to allow creation of these filters and effects.

Flash 10 also features a new text engine to give greater control over the appearance of text, including vertical, right-to-left and bidirectional layout.

If you want to dip a toe into the waters of Flash 10, the beta can be downloaded here and once it is installed, you can see some demonstrations here.

In related news, Google this week announced the Google Maps API for Flash, allowing developers to incorporate Google Maps into Flash projects.

A Zero-day exploit has been identified that redirects the Adobe Flash Player to malware infected servers. The threat is expanding.

Investigations are continuing around a known Zero-Day exploit of Adobe Flash Player versions 9.0.124.0 and older.

According to a Security Focus advisory recently released; “Adobe Flash Player is prone to an unspecified remote code-execution vulnerability.

An attacker may exploit this issue to execute arbitrary code in the context of the affected application. Failed exploit attempts will likely result in denial-of-service conditions.

Adobe Flash Player 9.0.115.0 and 9.0.124.0 are vulnerable; other versions may also be affected.”

The exploit consists of redirection scripts posted in infected websites. The script does a quick check of the version of Flash Player installed, based on the result it then runs an associated .SWF file (shockwave) to take control of the users computer

A further announcement from Security Focus expands on the threat indicating that though the exploit was firstly discovered in a couple of Chinese language websites, it looks to be spreading. According to Security Focus; “Continued investigation reveals that this issue is fairly widespread. Malicious code is being injected into other third-party domains (approximately 20,000 web pages), most likely through SQL-injection attacks. The code then redirects users to sites hosting malicious Flash files exploiting this issue.”

Adobe have briefly acknowledged the issue.

In direct response to this issue Symantec have raised their ThreatCon indicator to 2 (medium: increased alertness). An indication that malicious code threats have reached a moderate risk level.

Network administrators should be aware of the issue and be prepared to block ip addresses in firewalls and proxy servers as they come to hand.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Blogging and the Wisdom of Crowds!

One of the most highly touted features of the Web 2.0 era is the rise of blogging. Personal home pages have been around since the early days of the web, and the personal diary and daily opinion column around much longer than that, so just what is the fuss all about?

At its most basic, a blog is just a personal home page in diary format. But as Rich Skrenta notes, the chronological organization of a blog "seems like a trivial difference, but it drives an entirely different delivery, advertising and value chain."

One of the things that has made a difference is a technology called RSS. RSS is the most significant advance in the fundamental architecture of the web since early hackers realized that CGI could be used to create database-backed websites. RSS allows someone to link not just to a page, but to subscribe to it, with notification every time that page changes. Skrenta calls this "the incremental web." Others call it the "live web".

Now, of course, "dynamic websites" (i.e., database-backed sites with dynamically generated content) replaced static web pages well over ten years ago. What's dynamic about the live web are not just the pages, but the links. A link to a weblog is expected to point to a perennially changing page, with "permalinks" for any individual entry, and notification for each change. An RSS feed is thus a much stronger link than, say a bookmark or a link to a single page.
The Architecture of Participation

Some systems are designed to encourage participation. In his paper, The Cornucopia of the Commons, Dan Bricklin noted that there are three ways to build a large database. The first, demonstrated by Yahoo!, is to pay people to do it. The second, inspired by lessons from the open source community, is to get volunteers to perform the same task. The Open Directory Project, an open source Yahoo competitor, is the result. But Napster demonstrated a third way. Because Napster set its defaults to automatically serve any music that was downloaded, every user automatically helped to build the value of the shared database. This same approach has been followed by all other P2P file sharing services.

One of the key lessons of the Web 2.0 era is this: Users add value. But only a small percentage of users will go to the trouble of adding value to your application via explicit means. Therefore, Web 2.0 companies set inclusive defaults for aggregating user data and building value as a side-effect of ordinary use of the application. As noted above, they build systems that get better the more people use them.

Mitch Kapor once noted that "architecture is politics." Participation is intrinsic to Napster, part of its fundamental architecture.

This architectural insight may also be more central to the success of open source software than the more frequently cited appeal to volunteerism. The architecture of the internet, and the World Wide Web, as well as of open source software projects like Linux, Apache, and Perl, is such that users pursuing their own "selfish" interests build collective value as an automatic byproduct. Each of these projects has a small core, well-defined extension mechanisms, and an approach that lets any well-behaved component be added by anyone, growing the outer layers of what Larry Wall, the creator of Perl, refers to as "the onion." In other words, these technologies demonstrate network effects, simply through the way that they have been designed.

These projects can be seen to have a natural architecture of participation. But as Amazon demonstrates, by consistent effort (as well as economic incentives such as the Associates program), it is possible to overlay such an architecture on a system that would not normally seem to possess it.

RSS also means that the web browser is not the only means of viewing a web page. While some RSS aggregators, such as Bloglines, are web-based, others are desktop clients, and still others allow users of portable devices to subscribe to constantly updated content.

RSS is now being used to push not just notices of new blog entries, but also all kinds of data updates, including stock quotes, weather data, and photo availability. This use is actually a return to one of its roots: RSS was born in 1997 out of the confluence of Dave Winer's "Really Simple Syndication" technology, used to push out blog updates, and Netscape's "Rich Site Summary", which allowed users to create custom Netscape home pages with regularly updated data flows. Netscape lost interest, and the technology was carried forward by blogging pioneer Userland, Winer's company. In the current crop of applications, we see, though, the heritage of both parents.

But RSS is only part of what makes a weblog different from an ordinary web page. Tom Coates remarks on the significance of the permalink:

It may seem like a trivial piece of functionality now, but it was effectively the device that turned weblogs from an ease-of-publishing phenomenon into a conversational mess of overlapping communities. For the first time it became relatively easy to gesture directly at a highly specific post on someone else's site and talk about it. Discussion emerged. Chat emerged. And - as a result - friendships emerged or became more entrenched. The permalink was the first - and most successful - attempt to build bridges between weblogs.

In many ways, the combination of RSS and permalinks adds many of the features of NNTP, the Network News Protocol of the Usenet, onto HTTP, the web protocol. The "blogosphere" can be thought of as a new, peer-to-peer equivalent to Usenet and bulletin-boards, the conversational watering holes of the early internet. Not only can people subscribe to each others' sites, and easily link to individual comments on a page, but also, via a mechanism known as trackbacks, they can see when anyone else links to their pages, and can respond, either with reciprocal links, or by adding comments.

Interestingly, two-way links were the goal of early hypertext systems like Xanadu. Hypertext purists have celebrated trackbacks as a step towards two way links. But note that trackbacks are not properly two-way--rather, they are really (potentially) symmetrical one-way links that create the effect of two way links. The difference may seem subtle, but in practice it is enormous. Social networking systems like Friendster, Orkut, and LinkedIn, which require acknowledgment by the recipient in order to establish a connection, lack the same scalability as the web. As noted by Caterina Fake, co-founder of the Flickr photo sharing service, attention is only coincidentally reciprocal. (Flickr thus allows users to set watch lists--any user can subscribe to any other user's photostream via RSS. The object of attention is notified, but does not have to approve the connection.)

If an essential part of Web 2.0 is harnessing collective intelligence, turning the web into a kind of global brain, the blogosphere is the equivalent of constant mental chatter in the forebrain, the voice we hear in all of our heads. It may not reflect the deep structure of the brain, which is often unconscious, but is instead the equivalent of conscious thought. And as a reflection of conscious thought and attention, the blogosphere has begun to have a powerful effect.

First, because search engines use link structure to help predict useful pages, bloggers, as the most prolific and timely linkers, have a disproportionate role in shaping search engine results. Second, because the blogging community is so highly self-referential, bloggers paying attention to other bloggers magnifies their visibility and power. The "echo chamber" that critics decry is also an amplifier.

If it were merely an amplifier, blogging would be uninteresting. But like Wikipedia, blogging harnesses collective intelligence as a kind of filter. What James Suriowecki calls "the wisdom of crowds" comes into play, and much as PageRank produces better results than analysis of any individual document, the collective attention of the blogosphere selects for value.

While mainstream media may see individual blogs as competitors, what is really unnerving is that the competition is with the blogosphere as a whole. This is not just a competition between sites, but a competition between business models. The world of Web 2.0 is also the world of what Dan Gillmor calls "we, the media," a world in which "the former audience", not a few people in a back room, decides what's important.

How To Keep Your Website Fresh With RSS!

One of the biggest reasons people visit websites is to get information. If you can regularly provide fresh, quality content on your website you can expect to be rewarded by visitors and return visitors. What's more, you will be rewarded by the search engines. I recommend that you add new and original content to your site as often as possible, ideally once a day.

Regularly adding fresh and original content:

* Keeps your site visitors coming back
* Continually adds value to your website
* Makes people more comfortable buying from your site
* Establishes yourself as an authority in your industry
* Greatly helps your site rank higher in search engines

All of the above factors translate into revenue.

We all know how hard adding original and fresh content is, especially if you're the business owner. You have to be original, creative, organized, thoughtful and motivated, and above all, able to write. So what's a website owner or business owner supposed to do? RSS may be the answer.

What Is RSS?

Here's the Wikipedia definition of RSS:

RSS is a family of web feed formats specified in XML (a generic specification for data formats) and used for Web syndication. RSS delivers its information as an XML file called an "RSS feed", "webfeed", "RSS stream", or "RSS channel". These RSS feeds provide a way for users to passively receive newly released content (such as text, web pages, sound files, or other media); this might be the full content itself or just a link to it, possibly with a summary or other metadata (data describing the content).

RSS feeds are operated by many news web sites, weblogs, schools, and podcasters.

"RSS" can stand for any of the following phrases:

* Really Simple Syndication (RSS 2.0)
* Rich Site Summary (RSS 0.91, RSS 1.0)
* RDF Site Summary (RSS 0.9 and 1.0)

Your company homepage was very static. It didn't change very much since the services we offer stay basically the same. Why should any visitors come back if every time they come to our site, the content is exactly the same? They don't have much of a reason.

Interestingly, that's the way search engine spiders were programmed to "think" as well. Spiders are programs written for search engines to regularly surf the Web and record what's there. That recording goes into the search engine's databases ready to be accessed by the next searcher. This process is called indexing.

For example, Google will send out a spider to your site and index a lot of it, but not always all of it. It determines how often to revisit and index your site by how often you update it. If you update it every day, then it will visit much more often than if you rarely update it. Engines also consider the homepage to be the most important page, so it's good to update it even more often than the rest of your site.

Again, if you struggle with adding fresh content, then RSS may be the answer. We didn't write the headlines under 'Latest Tech News' on our homepage. Instead, the RSS feed automatically grabbed it from another site that had created them. Once we set the feed up, we don't have to do anything more, and our homepage has regularly updated content. Every time those headlines change, it updates its feed, which is then updated on any other websites displaying that feed, as well as ours.

RSS feeds can be more than news headlines. They can be lists of any kind. They can be press releases, articles, blog entries, product releases, or almost any other grouping of changing or growing data.

How Do I Set An RSS Feed Up?

There are a number of ways in which you can display an RSS feed on your website. You can use JavaScrípt or various other scripting languages. Unfortunately, RSS that uses JavaScrípt is not seen at all by search engines when they come and index your site, so don't use JavaScrípt.

Instead, use a scrípt that can be handled by your Web server besides JavaScrípt. Ask your hostíng company or IT people what platform your Web server uses and what software or modules are loaded onto the machine. This will determine what scripting language you can use for your RSS.

Chëck if your Web server has PHP capabilities. If so, then there are hundreds of scripts written in PHP that you can use for free that properly display RSS feeds that are recognized by search engines. There are RSS scripts written in ASP.NET, Perl and numerous other languages, so you have a wide variety to choose from.


Which one would you choose? After you've determined which languages your Web server supports, conduct a search such as 'PHP scrípt for displaying RSS feeds in html' or 'ASP and RSS', for example. Try a few and see which ones run on your server. If one runs on your server properly, and you chëck this by simply seeing if it displays RSS feeds on your Web page, then use that one.

When you download the scrípt, look at the code and find where to add an RSS feed URL. There should be a dummy one in there already, so just replace that one with the RSS feed you want to use. Here's what a typical RSS feed URL looks like: http://nytimes.com/services/xml/rss/userland/Technology.xml
The URL's often end in '.rss' as well.

After we inserted the RSS feed URL into the scrípt, we wanted to display the feed in HTML on our homepage. To do this we added the following bit of code into the spot on our homepage html code where we wanted it to display:



Keep in mind that this is for a Windows Web server. The way in which you include it on a website powered by a UNIX Web server will be a little different. If you're not sure, ask your hostíng company. Where can I find feeds that are relevant to my website's content?

First you can try these:

* Syndic8
* Feedster

You can also do a search for your topic and RSS feeds. For example, search for "RSS feeds and pets', or 'football and RSS feeds', or 'small business news feeds'. Finally, you can go to specific websites that are related to your industry and look for a small, orange, rectangular icon that says 'RSS' or 'XML'. Click on that and you'll get a feed URL to enter into your RSS feed scrípt.

Remember, always be sure to include feeds that are relevant to your website's content. Once you get the hang of the concept, RSS can be a lot of fun, and it definitely keeps your website fresh and updated, just what search engines like, and more importantly, what website visitors like.

Monday, May 26, 2008

COMMUNAL WEBSITES

24Ways to Impress Your Friends
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Coudal
The site edited by Coudal Partners, a design, advertising and interactive studio in Chicago, as an ongoing experiment in web publishing, design and commerce.

Cpluv
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CSS Mania
The most updated CSS showcase all over the globe.

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Articles, tutorials, features, reviews, classified advertisements and other resources for webmasters.

Farm
A free Singapore’s online arts and design web network with local event listings, creative opportunities and websites featuring local creatives and their works.

FFFound
A web service that not only allows the users to post and share their favorite images found on the web, but also dynamically recommends each user’s tastes and interests for an inspirational image-bookmarking experience.

graphicPUSH
Contains articles on web design, creative management, hiring, freelancing, business of design, and free icons, including blog icons.

Information Aesthetics
The weblog explores the symbiotic relationship between creative design and the field of information visualization

JuicyStudio
Programming and web development tutorials, including ASP, PHP, and javascript.

K10K
The designers’ lunchbox, a global digital design portal. Updated weekly with a new issue, updated hourly with global design news.

MocoLoco
Featuring modern contemporary design news and views.

Monday by Noon
A resource established for those interested in Web development, Web standards, the semantics of Web, Web accessibility, and Web Design.

Pop URLs
The mother of aggregators, the ultimate source for the latest web buzz and news | by thomas marban.

Smashing Magazine
A weblog dedicated to web-developers and designers.

Style Boost
A showcase that exemplifies outstanding visual design and collects the very best design links on the web.

TechCrunch
Group-edited blog about technology start-ups, particularly the Web 2.0 sector.

The Big Noob
News, reviews and articles from Brad Smith, Keegan Jones and Ryan Sims.

The FWA
Favorite website awards.

Think Vitamin
Subversion for Designers by Chris Nagele.

WaSP Buzz Blog
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WebCredible
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Web Creme
Web design inspiration.

Microsoft Turns Search on Its Ear With Cash Rebates!

Microsoft is hoping that its new search feature is a key turning point in the evolution of search. The software giant has introduced a cash-back feature to its Live Search service in an effort to gain ground in the search marketplace.

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B2B in a Web 2.0 World, Part 3: TV Media Relations!

As familiarity with Web 2.0 features like video-sharing grows, businesses have found a new outlet for company-produced information. Corporate video material once made only for TV news outlets has found a new niche on the Internet. Business' relationship with the media has changed.

Broadcast, cablecast, simulcast, webcast, podcast, vodcast, mobilecast -- the melding of the realms of "lean back" (TV) and "lean in" (Web) technology can mean coming attractions for business-to-business (B2B) marketing E-Mail Marketing Software - Free Trial. Click Here. communications and video news generation -- if done straight-up, i.e., correctly and transparently.

Part 1 of this three-part series looks at how B2B enterprises can sharpen their public relations chops by engaging Web 2.0 communities. Part 2 explores marketing 2.0. Part 3 looks at the specific marketing and PR opportunities present in Internet-based TV.

Narrowcast B2B Web video programming has completely changed the old TV newsroom paradigm, and in doing so has affected the role of the Web as a business Over 800,000 High Quality Domains Available For Your Business. Click Here. news forum along with the way that companies relate to online media in telling their stories and selling their products and services.

"The concept of broadcast TV is on borrowed time," said Philip Sheldrake, director of digital agency Racepoint UK.

"Video over IP and associated technologies enable time-, place- and device-shifted viewing -- video when and where you want it," Sheldrake told the E-Commerce Times. "When married to the dramatic reduction in video production costs of recent years, niche B2B video programming is becoming an economically viable option for the first time. This is narrowcast. This is targeted."

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