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Website Hosting Tips to Generate More Traffic

Fri, 18 Jul 2008 07:12:29 GMT
Web hosting services facilitate to put a website (domain name) on the internet. After registering a website and picking a domain name, the next step is to find a perfect web hosting service. For successful business campaign a website must be always up and running, only a quality website hosting provider can do this.

July/August 2004

Thu, 15 Jul 2004 14:30:06 -0400

Web Host Industry Review Magazine - July/August 2004Table of Contents


Already a Reseller?

Mad Cap Marketing


Internet Crime

Add-ons Add Up


Windows or Linux?

Sun and the Data Center







Good (Free) Help is Hard to Find

Tue, 09 Sep 2008 20:26:00 -0500

Let me start with my specific problem. I want to let users of my PmWiki based web site (www.words2u.net) search a GPS coordinate database, and view the results on a map in a different window or tab. This involves generating queries to MySQL database from a PHP form, taking the resulting data set, and invoking dynamic calls to Google Maps server, using the Google Maps API. Obviously, this demands a good technical understanding of the Google Maps API, as well as PHP (and possibly Javascript or Ajax) programming.

Since I am not a programmer, I posted at several Linux and Open Source Software (OSS) user groups for people interested in working on the project (no upfront pay, share in any future profits), and also checked with coders I know.

Of several hundred people I contacted, I got one possible contact. Folks wanted to use their language of choice (perl, java, ruby). Or they lost interest when they learned there is no pay upfront. People were busy at work, or would rather rewrite a puzzle solver for free.

Why is that a big deal? Because it means that free OSS based web sites are, and will continue to be, driven by coders and techies. As a (non-IT) technical person I know that enginners' interests are frequently very different from those of their customers, and products they create are more often then not hard sells.

For programs and sites to be successful, input from sales, marketing and product development, is needed as well. This is why the most popular Linux distributions are from commercial outfits (Ubuntu, Fedora and OpenSuse are supported by Canonical, RedHat and Novelle, respectively). It is also the reason that while Microsoft sells and gives away tools that allow non-programmers to develop applications quickly and easily, Linux/BSD tools have higher learning curves and are harder to use (even if they are superior in many other ways). The same is true for databases, collaboration suites, and other applications, which are easy to use and well supported with manuals, books, and training programs.

Until OSS developers join people with end-user perspective, the penetration of OSS-based technologies will be limited, and commercial products will continue to rule the marketplace. I hope the day soon comes when OSS focus turns to creating tools for dummies, with documentation to match, so folks like me can create all they want without large cash outlays.





John Prince, CEO of HotelPlanner.com remarked, ”I feel very confident in CFDynamics. CFDynamics has been growing with us each year. Their platform gets better and better with no points of failure that could take our website down.”



Fujitsu Computer Systems Corporation
The Missing Sync for your BlackBerry - Download now at Handango


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