Why I Love Blogging – Discovering Whats Cool on the Web

Blogging although sounding funny to many people (and sounded funny to me some years ago) has become my best friend. Blogging as a business is more than just normal content posting and linking, there is so much it involved than just blogging. This article can be read by anyone who is interested in blogging. Being a blogger is not about magic, it is more about being practical about the way in which you tackle some issues. There is no way you can go down when you plan right with blogging. I love blogging for so many reasons and this is what makes me keep on going day and night. Below are some of the reasons why I love blogging.

 

  1. I get to connect with new and old customers. With my blog, I am able to connect to new clients and also old customers as well as provide them with important information that they can make use of. Being able to share and impact knowledge into people is always enlightening and perfect.
  2. Link with partners like Sebuzz, a website design and Search engine marketing firm I found in alabama. You can check them out by clicking here. SEO has helped my blog be able to link me up with influencers as well as leaders who are able to help in enlarging the business and also investing money. This has helped me a lot to branch into other aspects of online marketing.
  3. Generating traffic. Due to the fact that my blog is planned right and all keywords I use are well chosen, I have the best search engine rankings which help to drive traffic to my website and other websites I link content on my blog to.
  4. Launch authority. My blog is a center where all my content helps in marketing the products of other businesses and this help to link me to the right companies.
  5. Am able to inspire my social media. Since I use social media the right way, I get to share my blog posts on a regular basis and use it as an advantage to make me feel better.
  6. Widen and expand reach. My blog is shared and I get to find eyeballs on a daily basis.
  7. I am able to grow my email database. My blog inspires people to choose the right email newsletter lists. Also, all my emails are able to feed traffic to my blog.
  8. Blogging helps to give my company a voice. For me, my blog is my pulpit, my journal and publication which is the place where I discuss any topic I want to discuss in however way I want to.
  9. Improve my company. Great bloggers are perfect and I consider myself to be one of those. I use the voice I have to improve other companies as well as my company. If it is you have the aim to make real connections, personality works.
  10. Trade ideas. With my blogs, I am able to trade ideas with my customers and other companies. Also, this leads to a lot of interaction, comments and response. This helps me to create conversations.
  11. I get to stay customer focused. Through blogging I have been able to learn how to speak in the language of customers to help in improving this very important skill and become in touch with the needs and wants of your audience.
  12. It helps me to inspire productivity and content. Being a blogger has so much to do with working hard. It also makes me stay committed and consistent. I have been able to define exactly where my strength lies and who I am.
  13. Produce publicity. I am able to establish authority as a blogger and gain publicity for my blog and other blogs and websites too.
  14. I am able to plan very well and also have the ability to examine other websites to give the advice on what they need to do and what they do not need to do if they aim at ranking high in search engines.
  15. It gives me the opportunity to learn more and enhance my knowledge of some matters as well as the world around you.
  16. I have so much fun posting contents unto my blog and having people read it from all over the world.
  17. I get to make so much money.

Web Browsers

Questions and Answers

What is the most secure web browser?

I'm an ex-Firefox user and a current Google Chrome user. The best three browsers I have found are Chrome, Firefox, and Opera. I've heard that Chrome isn't very secure, is this true? Which is the safest?

Posted by Stay Classy
jove

First Most Secure Web Browser is Safari 4.0.5 Http://filehippo.com/download_safari/

Safari is a graphical web browser developed by Apple and included as part of the Mac OS X operating system. First released as a public beta on January 7, 2003[1] on the company's Mac OS X operating system, it became Apple's default browser beginning with Mac OS X v10.3 "Panther." Safari is also the native browser for the iPhone OS. A version of Safari for the Microsoft Windows operating system, first released on June 11, 2007, supports Windows XP, Windows Vista, and Windows 7.[2] The latest stable release of the browser is 4.0.5, which is available as a free download for both Mac OS X and Microsoft Windows. As of 2010, Safari was either the third or fourth most widely used browser, tied with Google Chrome.[3]

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Web browsers?

What is the history of web browser?

Posted by GuReiSu
jove

Dozens of innovative web browsers have been developed by various people and teams over the years.

The first widely used web browser was NCSA Mosaic. The Mosaic programming team then developed the first commercial web browser called Netscape Navigator, later renamed Communicator, then renamed back to just Netscape. The Netscape browser led in user share until Microsoft Internet Explorer took the lead in 1999 due to its distribution advantage. An open source version of Netscape was then developed called Mozilla, which was the internal name for the old Netscape browser, and released in 2002. Mozilla has since gained in market share, particularly on non-Windows platforms, largely due to its open source foundation, and in 2004 was released in the quickly popular FireFox version.

A chronological listing of some of the influential early web browsers that advanced the state of the art is provided below:

WorldWideWeb. Tim Berners-Lee wrote the first web browser on a NeXT computer, called WorldWideWeb, finishing the first version on Christmas day, 1990. He released the program to a number of people at CERN in March, 1991, introducing the web to the high energy physics community, and beginning its spread.
Libwww. Berners-Lee and a student at CERN named Jean-Francois Groff ported the WorldWideWeb application from the NeXT environment to the more common C language in 1991 and 1992, calling the new browser libwww. Groff later started the first web design company, InfoDesign.ch.
Line-mode. Nicola Pellow, a math student interning at CERN, wrote a line-mode web browser that would work on any device, even a teletype. In 1991, Nicola and the team ported the browser to a range of computers, from Unix to Microsoft DOS, so that anyone could access the web, at that point consisting primarily of the CERN phone book.
Erwise. After a visit from Robert Cailliau, a group of students at Helsinki University of Technology joined together to write a web browser as a master's project. Since the acronym for their department was called "OTH", they called the browser "erwise", as a joke on the word "otherwise". The final version was released in April, 1992, and included several advanced features, but wasn't developed further after the students graduated and went on to other jobs.
ViolaWWW. Pei Wei, a student at the University of California at Berkeley, released the second browser for Unix, called ViolaWWW, in May, 1992. This browser was built on the powerful interpretive language called Viola that Wei had developed for Unix computers. ViolaWWW had a range of advanced features, including the ability to display graphics and download applets.
Midas. During the summer of 1992, Tony Johnson at SLAC developed a third browser for Unix systems, called Midas, to help distribute information to colleagues about his physics research.
Samba. Robert Cailliau started development of the first web browser for the Macintosh, called Samba. Development was picked up by Nicola Pellow, and the browser was functional by the end of 1992.
Mosaic. Marc Andreessen and Eric Bina from the NCSA released the first version of Mosaic for X-Windows on Unix computers in February, 1993. A version for the Macintosh was developed by Aleks Totic and released a few months later, making Mosaic the first browser with cross-platform support. Mosaic introduced support for sound, video clips, forms support, bookmarks, and history files, and quickly became the most popular non-commercial web browser. In August, 1994, NCSA assigned commercial rights to Mosaic to Spyglass, Inc., which subsequently licensed the technology to several other companies, including Microsoft for use in Internet Explorer. The NCSA stopped developing Mosaic in January 1997.
Arena. In 1993, Dave Raggett at Hewlett-Packard in Bristol, England, developed a browser called Arena, with powerful features for positioning tables and graphics.
Lynx. The University of Kansas had written a hypertext browser independently of the web, called Lynx, used to distribute campus information. A student named Lou Montulli added an Internet interface to the program, and released the web browser Lynx 2.0 in March, 1993. Lynx quickly became the preferred web browser for character mode terminals without graphics, and remains in use today. Resources include the Browser.org Lynx page, the ISC Lynx page, and the Lynx User Guide.
Cello. Tom Bruce, cofounder of the Legal Information Institute, realized that most lawyers used Microsoft PC's, and so he developed a web browser for that platform called Cello, finished in the summer of 1993.
Opera. In 1994, the Opera browser was developed by a team of researchers at a telecommunication company called Telenor in Oslo, Norway. The following year, two members of the team — Jon Stephenson von Tetzchner and Geir Ivarsøy — left Telenor to establish Opera Software to develop the browser commercially. Opera 2.1 was first made available on the Internet in the summer of 1996.
Internet in a box. In January, 1994, O'Reilly and Associates announced a product called Internet In A Box which collected all of the software needed to access the web together, so that you only had to install one application, instead of downloading and installing several programs. While not a unique browser in its own right, this product was a breakthrough because it distributed other browsers and made the web a lot more accessible to the home user.
Navipress. In February, 1994, Navisoft released a browser for the PC and Macintosh called Navipress. This was the first browser since Berners-Lee's WorldWideWeb browser that incorporated an editor, so that you could browse and edit content at the same time. Navipress later became AOLPress, and is still available but has not been maintained since 1997.
Mozilla. In October, 1994, Netscape released the the first beta version of their browser, Mozilla 0.96b, over the Internet. On December 15, the final version was released, Mozilla 1.0, making it the first commercial web browser. An open source version of the Netscape browser was released in 2002 was also named Mozilla in tribute to this early version, and then released as the quickly popular FireFox in November, 2004.
Internet Explorer. On August 23rd, 1995, Microsoft released their Windows 95 operating system, including a Web browser called Internet Explorer. By the fall of 1996, Explorer had a third of market share, and passed Netscape to became the leading web browser in 1999.

Visual Basic ADVANCE WEB BROWSER?

I Want To Make A Very Very Advance Web Browser In Visual Basic10 With All Features Like Mozila,Chrome IE7. So Please Help Me Out To Do It
My Skype : shubhankar717
Please Answer Me How To Make It?

Posted by Delight
jove

Writing a complete web browser from scratch is too big of a project for a single individual.

Just as a point of reference: The source code for the Firefox browser contains around 10,970 files, adding up to over 2 million lines of code (see first link). How long would it take you to write 2 million lines of (nearly bug free) code?

What you can do is embed a browser engine inside your VB application. The easiest way to do this is to use the WebBrowserControl. The drawback of that is that it will be IE, and by default it uses a rather old version of IE (6 I think). So it doesn't make for a very good browser.

An alternative to WebBrowserControl is Awesomium. See second link. Awesomium is built from the Chromium/WebKit, so it is a modern browser. I have never used it myself, so I don't know just how much work is involved in getting it to work, but it is probably what I would start with if I were you.

Haiku – Appserver Webkit Speed

Connect Internet World Wide Web

Questions and Answers

What are the diffrences between the internet and world wide web?

Posted by kyoko
jove

Many people use the terms Internet and World Wide Web (a.k.a. The Web) interchangeably, but in fact the two terms are not synonymous. The Internet and the Web are two separate but related things.

The Internet is a massive network of networks, a networking infrastructure. It connects millions of computers together globally, forming a network in which any computer can communicate with any other computer as long as they are both connected to the Internet. Information that travels over the Internet does so via a variety of languages known as protocols.

The World Wide Web, or simply Web, is a way of accessing information over the medium of the Internet. It is an information-sharing model that is built on top of the Internet. The Web uses the HTTP protocol, only one of the languages spoken over the Internet, to transmit data. Web services, which use HTTP to allow applications to communicate in order to exchange business logic, use the the Web to share information. The Web also utilizes browsers, such as Internet Explorer or Netscape, to access Web documents called Web pages that are linked to each other via hyperlinks. Web documents also contain graphics, sounds, text and video.

The Web is just one of the ways that information can be disseminated over the Internet. The Internet, not the Web, is also used for e-mail, which relies on SMTP, Usenet news groups, instant messaging and FTP. So the Web is just a portion of the Internet, albeit a large portion, but the two terms are not synonymous and should not be confused.

What's the Difference between The internet and the World Wide Web?

What's the Difference between The internet and the World Wide Web

I know that the Internet is hardware and the WWW is software and there not the same thing but what sets them apart?

Posted by Awezumi
jove

Many people use the terms Internet and World Wide Web (aka. The Web) interchangeably, but in fact the two terms are not synonymous. The Internet and the Web are two separate but related things.

The Internet is a massive network of networks, a networking infrastructure. It connects millions of computers together globally, forming a network in which any computer can communicate with any other computer as long as they are both connected to the Internet. Information that travels over the Internet does so via a variety of languages known as protocols.

The World Wide Web, or simply Web, is a way of accessing information over the medium of the Internet. It is an information-sharing model that is built on top of the Internet. The Web uses the HTTP protocol, only one of the languages spoken over the Internet, to transmit data. Web services, which use HTTP to allow applications to communicate in order to exchange business logic, use the the Web to share information. The Web also utilizes browsers, such as Internet Explorer or Firefox, to access Web documents called Web pages that are linked to each other via hyperlinks. Web documents also contain graphics, sounds, text and video.

The Web is just one of the ways that information can be disseminated over the Internet. The Internet, not the Web, is also used for e-mail, which relies on SMTP, Usenet news groups, instant messaging and FTP. So the Web is just a portion of the Internet, albeit a large portion, but the two terms are not synonymous and should not be confused.

What are the “internet” and the “world wide web?”?

Are “internet” and the “world wide web” the same thing?
In what year, was the “internet” and the “world wide web” created and by who.

Posted by KingsaintsirgascoDaMaster
jove

A major service on the Internet. To understand exactly how the Web relates to the Internet, see Web vs. Internet. The World Wide Web is made up of "Web servers" that store and disseminate "Web pages," which are "rich" documents that contain text, graphics, animations and videos to anyone with an Internet connection.

The heart of the Web technology is the hyperlink, which connects each document to each other by its "URL" address, whether locally or in another country. "Click here" caused the Web to explode in the mid-1990s, turning the Internet into the largest shopping mall and information source in the world. It also enabled the concept of a "global server" that provides a source for all applications and data (see Web 2.0).

The Browser

Web pages are accessed by the user via a Web browser application such as Internet Explorer, Netscape, Safari, Opera and Firefox. The browser renders the pages on screen, executes embedded scripts and automatically invokes additional software as needed. For example, animations and special effects are provided by browser plug-ins, and audio and video are played by media player software that either comes with the operating system or from a third party.

HTML Is the Format

A Web page is a text document embedded with HTML tags that define how the text is rendered on screen. Web pages can be created with any text editor or word processor. They are also created in HTML authoring programs that provide a graphical interface for designing the layout. Authoring programs generate the HTML tags behind the scenes, but the tags can be edited if required. Many applications export documents directly to HTML, thus basic Web pages can be created in numerous ways without HTML coding. The ease of page creation helped fuel the Web's growth.

A collection of Web pages makes up a Web site. Very large organizations deploy their Web sites on inhouse servers or on their own servers co-located in a third party facility that provides power and Internet access. Small to medium sites are generally hosted by Internet service providers (ISPs). Millions of people have developed their own mini Web sites as ISPs typically host a small number of personal Web pages at no extra cost to individual customers.

The Intranet

The public Web spawned the private "intranet," an inhouse Web site for employees. Protected via a firewall that lets employees access the Internet, the firewall restricts uninvited users from coming in and viewing internal information. There is no difference in intranet and Web architectures. It has only to do with who has access.

HTTP Can Deliver Anything

HTML pages are transmitted to the user via the HTTP protocol. A Web server stores HTML pages for a Web site, but it can also be a storehouse for any kind of file delivered to a client application via HTTP. For example, the Windows version of this Encyclopedia is available as an HTTP application. The text and images are hosted on The Computer Language Company's Web server and delivered to the Windows client in the user's PC. The Windows client is an HTTP-enabled version of the popular interface first introduced in 1996 for stand-alone PCs and client/server LANs.

Where It Came From – Where It's Going
The World Wide Web was developed at the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) in Geneva from a proposal by Tim Berners-Lee in 1989. It was created to share research information on nuclear physics. In 1991, the first command line browser was introduced. By the start of 1993, there were 50 Web servers, and the Voila X Window browser provided the first graphical capability. In that same year, CERN introduced its Macintosh browser, and the National Center for Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) in Chicago introduced the X Window version of Mosaic. Mosaic was developed by Marc Andreessen, who later became world famous as a principal at Netscape.

By 1994, there were approximately 500 Web sites, and, by the start of 1995, nearly 10,000. By the turn of the century, there were more than 30 million registered domain names. Many believe the Web signified the real beginning of the information age. However, those people who still use analog dial-up modems consider it the "World Wide Wait."

Everyone has some interest in the Web. ISPs, cable and telephone companies want to give you connectivity. Webmasters want more visitors. IT managers want more security. The publishing industry wants to preserve its copyrights. Hardware and software vendors want to make every product Web accessible. Nothing in the computer/communications field ever came onto the scene with such intensity. Even with the dot-com crash of 2000/2001, the future of the Web is going to be very exciting. Stay tuned! See Internet, HTTP, HTML, World Wide Wait and Wild Wooly Web.

Internet

(Lower case "i"nternet) A large network made up of a number of smaller networks.

(Upper case "I"nternet) The largest network in the world. It is made up of more than 350 million computers in more than 100 countries covering commercial, academic and government endeavors. Originally developed for the U.S. Military, the Internet became widely used for academic and commercial research. Users had access to unpublished data and journals on a variety of subjects. Today, the "Net" has become commercialized into a worldwide information highway, providing data and commentary on every subject and product on earth.

E-Mail Was the Beginning

The Internet's surge in growth in the mid-1990s was dramatic, increasing a hundredfold in 1995 and 1996 alone. There were two reasons. Up until then, the major online services (AOL, CompuServe, etc.) provided e-mail, but only to customers of the same service. As they began to connect to the Internet for e-mail exchange, the Internet took on the role of a global switching center. An AOL member could finally send mail to a CompuServe member, and so on. The Internet glued the world together for electronic mail, and today, SMTP, the Internet mail protocol, is the global e-mail standard.

The Web Was the Explosion

Secondly, with the advent of graphics-based Web browsers such as Mosaic and Netscape Navigator, and soon after, Microsoft's Internet Explorer, the World Wide Web took off. The Web became easily available to users with PCs and Macs rather than only scientists and hackers at Unix workstations. Delphi was the first proprietary online service to offer Web access, and all the rest followed. At the same time, new Internet service providers (ISPs) rose out of the woodwork to offer access to individuals and companies. As a result, the Web grew exponentially, providing an information exchange of unprecedented proportion. The Web has also become "the" storehouse for drivers, updates and demos that are downloaded via the browser as well as a global transport for delivering information by subscription, both free and paid.

Newsgroups

Although daily news and information is now available on countless Web sites, long before the Web, information on a myriad of subjects was exchanged via Usenet (User Network) newsgroups. Still thriving, newsgroup articles can be selected and read directly from your Web browser. See Usenet.

Chat Rooms

Chat rooms provide another popular Internet service. Internet Relay Chat (IRC) offers multiuser text conferencing on diverse topics. Dozens of IRC servers provide hundreds of channels that anyone can log onto and participate in via the keyboard. See IRC.

The Original Internet
The Internet started in 1969 as the ARPAnet. Funded by the U.S. Government, the ARPAnet became a series of high-speed links between major supercomputer sites and educational and research institutions worldwide, although mostly in the U.S. A major part of its backbone was the National Science Foundation's NFSNet. Along the way, it became known as the "Internet" or simply "the Net." By the 1990s, so many networks had become part of it and so much traffic was not educational or pure research that it became obvious that the Internet was on its way to becoming a commercial venture.

It Went Commercial in 1995

In 1995, the Internet was turned over to large commercial Internet providers (ISPs), such as MCI, Sprint and UUNET, which took responsibility for the backbones and have increasingly enhanced their capacities ever since. Regional ISPs link into these backbones to provide lines for their subscribers, and smaller ISPs hook either directly into the national backbones or into the regional ISPs.

The TCP/IP Protocol

Internet computers use the TCP/IP communications protocol. There are more than 100 million hosts on the Internet, a host being a mainframe or medium to high-end server that is always online via TCP/IP. The Internet is also connected to non-TCP/IP networks worldwide through gateways that convert TCP/IP into other protocols.

Life Before the Web

Before the Web and the graphics-based Web browser, the Internet was accessed from Unix terminals by academicians and scientists using command-driven Unix utilities. These utilities are still used; however, today, they reside in Windows, Mac and Linux machines as well. For example, an FTP program allows files to be uploaded and downloaded, and the Archie utility provides listings of these files. Telnet is a terminal emulation program that lets you log onto a computer on the Internet and run a program. Gopher provides hierarchical menus describing Internet files (not just file names), and Veronica lets you search Gopher sites. See FTP, Archie, Telnet, Gopher and Veronica.

The Next Internet

Ironically, some of the original academic and scientific users of the Internet have developed their own Internet once again. Internet2 is a high-speed academic research network that was started in much the same fashion as the original Internet (see Internet2). See Web vs. Internet, World Wide Web, how to search the Web, intranet, NAP, hot topics and trends, IAB, information superhighway and online service.

Funniest 7 news Fails June 2013

http://www.jovefrancisco.com/world-wide-…

World Wide Web Google

Questions and Answers

Who invented the world wide web?

Posted by laura
jove

A British man named Tim Berners-Lee.

A quick google did the trick ;)

Apple App Store on the Internet(World Wide WEB)?

Google has Play store for all its apps

Does Apple Inc have an exclusive website devoted to iPhone and iPad apps only

Not the iTunes store or the Apple Store .I want a desktop version of that website devoted to iPhone and iPad apps only!!

Posted by uber
jove

Not really … But can browse here: (this is the US store, just change the "us" in the URL to switch to your country)
Https://itunes.apple.com/us/genre/ios/id…

Or try this search, type in the search bar of your web browser:
[Search term]:itunes.apple.com

For example there is an app called "adobe kuler", here is how to look it up
Adobe Kuler:itunes.apple.com.

Google ranking fundaa?

Hi guys,

I have a site ,which I got developed from a firm.
I noticed that the site has 110 external links(links pointing to sites outside my domain).The total no of pages in my website is around 375.
I want to know if external links have a positive or negative effect on my websites ranking.

Thanks in advance.

Posted by seeker
jove

The PageRank Concept

Since the early stages of the world wide web, search engines have developed different methods to rank web pages. Until today, the occurence of a search phrase within a document is one major factor within ranking techniques of virtually any search engine. The occurence of a search phrase can thereby be weighted by the length of a document (ranking by keyword density) or by its accentuation within a document by HTML tags.

For the purpose of better search results and especially to make search engines resistant against automatically generated web pages based upon the analysis of content specific ranking criteria (doorway pages), the concept of link popularity was developed. Following this concept, the number of inbound links for a document measures its general importance. Hence, a web page is generally more important, if many other web pages link to it. The concept of link popularity often avoids good rankings for pages which are only created to deceive search engines and which don't have any significance within the web, but numerous webmasters elude it by creating masses of inbound links for doorway pages from just as insignificant other web pages.

Contrary to the concept of link popularity, PageRank is not simply based upon the total number of inbound links. The basic approach of PageRank is that a document is in fact considered the more important the more other documents link to it, but those inbound links do not count equally. First of all, a document ranks high in terms of PageRank, if other high ranking documents link to it.

So, within the PageRank concept, the rank of a document is given by the rank of those documents which link to it. Their rank again is given by the rank of documents which link to them. Hence, the PageRank of a document is always determined recursively by the PageRank of other documents. Since – even if marginal and via many links – the rank of any document influences the rank of any other, PageRank is, in the end, based on the linking structure of the whole web. Although this approach seems to be very broad and complex, Page and Brin were able to put it into practice by a relatively trivial algorithm.

Source:
Http://bharathreddypunuru.wordpress.com/…

Man Dies On News

http://www.jovefrancisco.com/world-wide-…