Web Publishing 101
Your guide to web publishing

DB/Text WebPublisher

April 29th, 2008 by editor

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DB/Text WebPublisher makes it easier for you to search thousands of web pages and images using a browser in your internet. You don’t have to navigate through numerous layers of hyperlinks, WebPubisher has the power and grace of a database (DBMS) with much peed and efficiency. It provides web site administrators a substantially improved data management tool for web site creation, editing, maintenance and monitoring. WebPublisher permits an unlimited number of textbases with unlimited numberof searchers and moreover, programming is not necessary. With one click of your mouse, DB/Text WebPublisher textbase allows you to preview the indexes of all the words.

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Microsoft VS. Netscape

April 26th, 2008 by editor

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While the Internet Explorer’s browser market arrived at 10% only, Netscape reached 86%, in 1996. But with Microsoft incorporating its browsers with its operating system and bundling deals with OEM’s, the percentage of the two reversed. It is true that Microsoft faced antitrust litigation but Netscape’s irreparable declination in the market share trend thus, ending the browsers’ wars. But Netscape open sourced its product in creating Mozilla when it was incapable to maintain commercially funding their product’s development. It helped the browser continue their technical edge over Internet Explorer but did not slow Netscape’s declining market share. Microsoft announced in 2003 that Internet Explorer will be part of the Windows platform evolution and not a separate product. On the other hand, AOL in 2008 encouraged users to use Mozilla Firefox and will no longer support Netscape.

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Upgrade your website or redesign?

April 12th, 2008 by editor

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Web design styling does change from time to time so it’s more apt to redesign but the truth is, there is a general convention in website designing like logo placements, proper navigation, and so forth. The style of the setup does change but the basic setup of a quality web page always retains. It makes more sense and more practical to simply update your website than getting rid of the entire layout to start from scratch. You can change the colors, layout, add some additional designs but starting from the very beginning is quite impractical. Especially if you have a strong foundation already and have an established website, of course subtle redesigns may work best.

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Semantic Web

April 8th, 2008 by editor

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A semantic web is a developing extension of the World Wide Web wherein semantics of information and services on the web is defined thus, the web tends to comprehend and satisfy the requests of people and machines to utilize the web content. It was a product of Tim Berners-Lee idea of the Web as a universal medium for data, information and knowledge exchange. Being comprised of design principles, collaborative working groups, and a selection of technologies, some of its elements are expressed as prospective future prospect that have yet to be employed and realized. Other semantic web elements are expressed in formal specifications.

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Common mistakes in Web Designing (part 2)

April 1st, 2008 by editor

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•No SEO – without SEO on images, flash elements or other media means a great chance to place additional keywords without congestion your content. Adding titles and descriptions, and alts will give the spiders code side content to read in such locations that will up your search results

•KEYWORDS GALORE – Too much keyword will actually trigger the search engines to flag your site as overloaded. 7-9 well researched keywords are the suggested number for the search engines to locate you

•TOO MUCH JAVASCRIPT AND Iframes – Javascript and iframes both take substantial amount of time to load so if you have too much of these two, you’ll be losing half of your visitors immediately

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Common mistakes in Web Designing (part1)

April 1st, 2008 by editor

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•Too much advertisement – we often come face to face with websites leaping with ads. It looks much of a clutter than a website. If you mess up your site with advertisings, I don’t think your visitors will actually notice what you aim to say in your content. They’ll be wasting much time in finding their way through the messy ads.

•Wrong opt-in position – placing your opt-in form on the right results in lower numbers of opt-ins according to statistics. Majority of people in the world reads from left to right so naturally, the first place the eyes will notice in your site is the top left corner.

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