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website-hosting-plans.com - When choosing a hosting plan should you go for Linux or Windows hosting?
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647 pages |
SUSE Linux 10 unleashed CHAPTER 26 Managing Your Apache Web Server There is no World Wide Web ... la Recherche Nucléaire (CERN) in Switzerland, the Web could not become what it has ... |
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About this book Master the newest version of SUSE Linux with "SUSE Linux 10 Unleashed." This comprehensive guide to SUSE Linux includes a DVD with the full version of SUSE Linux 10.0 and provides you with intermediate and advanced information to guide you through the installation, management and maintenance of your SUSE Linux 10.0 system. You will gain expert insight into the most important topics, including: Configuring with YaST2 and SaX2 Launching your desktop Productivity tools Using the Internet and creating websites Secure file transfer Managing users and data Keeping your system current Setting up networks and Samba Managing databases Learn how to make the most of your SUSE Linux 10.0 system with the help of "SUSE Linux 10 Unleashed." |
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890 pages |
Linux administration handbook This is the first Linux administration guide specifically focused on the needs of administrators working in production/enterprise environments that may consist ... |
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About this book -- Covers all critical system administration tasks from confirmation and management of e-mail to security.-- Detailed coverage of RedHat, Debian, and Suse distributors.-- From the authors of the best-selling Unix System Administration Handbook (0-13-020601-6).Up until now, Linux administration books have focused on the management of a single server. This is the first Linux administration guide specifically focused on the needs of administrators working in production/enterprise environments that may consist of hundreds or even thousands of servers which must be managed centrally to deliver optimal availability and performance. The book contains extensive coverage of Linux security; working with drivers and the kernel; TCP/IP networking; routing; network hardware; and NFS configuration. It also presents comprehensive, step-by-step guidance for configuring and managing email with sendmail; network management and debugging; using Linux in Web hosting environments; automating administration... |
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100 pages |
InfoWorld Communique runs on platforms such as Solaris, Linux, Windows, and AIX, ... " Having the hosting, content delivery service, and underlying network is very ... |
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About this book InfoWorld is targeted to Senior IT professionals. Content is segmented into Channels and Topic Centers. InfoWorld also celebrates people, companies, and projects. |
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135 pages |
Software Engineering Approaches for Offshore and Outsourced Development, Third International Conference, SEAFOOD 2009, Zurich, Switzerland, July 2-3, 2009, Proceedings Other methodologies including Web conference products, ... testing windows OS- based training environments, and the other one with User Mode Linux (UML) for ... |
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About this book This book constitutes the proceedings of the Third International Conference on Software Engineering Approaches for Offshore and Outsourced Development, SEAFOOD 2009, held in Zurich, Switzerland, July 2-3, 2009. The 13 papers presented together with two keynote speeches were carefully reviewed and selected for inclusion in the book. The areas covered include industry challenges and best practices in offshore software development, measurement and estimation, business alignment and risk identification/reduction, communication and specification, and emerging technologies and future directions. |
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Business horizons In 1997, Infoworld magazine gave Linux the "Best Operating System" award and ... (To be fair, Apache is heavily deployed at hosting companies and ISPs that ... |
Hear that? It’s the sound of servers in Switzerland sucking down information from social networking sites.
Open-Xchange, an open-source e-mail and collaboration software maker, has set up a test Web site that allows people to pull in their contact information from various social networking services like LinkedIn and Facebook. The goal of the project is give people a chance to take control of their contacts and put all of their personal and work information in one place. By creating what amounts to a connections clearing house, Open-Xchange wants to spur to new types of networking services.
Shifting your Linkedin contacts to, say, your Outlook address book is hardly a novel concept. You can export the contact files from various services today.
Open-Xchange, however, argues that it has a fresh twist on this premise by creating a continuous stream of updating contacts as opposed to doing the occasional bulk transfer. In addition, the company hopes to bring all social networks -– rather than one here and one there -– into the same place.
“We will be able to import anything into one format,” said Rafael Laguna de la Vera, the chief executive of Open-Xchange. “We are the Swiss Army knife for social data.”
The underlying idea here is that your contacts are your contacts. Why should LinkedIn, Facebook or any other company put up boundaries for working with your information? And you might as well suck down those address books now before some of these services start charging for access to parts of your contact database, according to Mr. Laguna.
In addition, Open-Xchange pitches the idea that separating more personal services like Facebook from business-oriented services like LinkedIn makes little sense in the Internet age. The company compares the current state of social networking affairs to the days when people were cordoned off in their CompuServe, Prodigy and AOL islands rather than running free across the Web.
“With HTML and the World Wide Web, a standards layer rose that leveled the playing field for everyone to get on board,” said Jürgen Geck, the chief technology officer at Open-Xchange, who goes by the nickname “Gecko.” “We think there is a need in the social networking market to play on another level and make something similar possible.
“Linkedin, Twitter -– no one knows what to do with this yet or how to make money. We want to give people a chance to figure out how.”
If you want to test drive the Open-Xchange Web site, you’re in for an underwhelming experience. The free site can only import LinkedIn and Xing contacts, along with hotel data from Germanplaces.com – a nod to Open-Xchange’s German roots.
I have 197 Linkedin connections, and it took about 8 minutes for the online service to grab them all. All you have to do is enter your LinkedIn login information and then the contacts start arriving.
Open-Xchange has a smoother service tied to its e-mail and collaboration software, which you can get from hosting providers or run on your own server, if you’re into that type of thing. Clearly, Open-Xchange sees this service as its big play in the collaboration market, where it hopes to offer companies more flexibility than companies like Microsoft, I.B.M. and Cisco Systems, which tend to keep more control over how workers use contacts.
Even with its collaboration product, however, Open-Xchange supports a limited number of services. A Facebook connection, for example, won’t arrive until later this year.
But since Open-Xchange relies on an open-source model, it can add services just about as quickly as outside developers create ways to tap into them.
The company would also like business software makers like SugarCRM to start feeding their data into the system.
“The revolution is that, all of a sudden, the Internet can be a network of intelligent agents, doing work for their users, rather than a place where big commercial interests aim to gather as many users on their platform as possible,” Mr. Geck said.
Interestingly, Open-Xchange relies on servers in Switzerland to “scrape” data from the other services. Comparis, a Swiss online price comparison service, has won court cases that protected its right to scour the Web for the best deals on things like health insurance, car insurance and motorbikes, according to Mr. Laguna, who is also on the Comparis board.
“They have been sued by at least four companies that said the machine consumption of their data is not allowed,” Mr. Laguna said. “They’ve won all the cases.”
The Open-Xchange folks have deep technical knowledge and have as good of a chance as anyone at getting the technology underpinnings right. Mr. Geck, for example, crafted SuSE’s Linux server product, making it a real force in the operating system market. (Novell now owns the SuSE software.)
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Long-tail keyphrases are typically related to your main strategic keywords and generally include three, four, or more words. For example, “web hosting linux,” “cheap web hosting,” and “web hosting control panel” might be typical long-tail phrases for a web-design business. Such phrases are known as long tail because the frequency with which they are searched on reduces as the length of the phrase increases (in a long tail that tends toward zero searches).
In the next chapter, on keyword attractiveness, I will show you how to assess the degree of popularity and competitiveness attached to each keyword and keyphrase. However, before we get there I can give you a sneak preview: Generally, the longer a phrase is, the more attractive it is, in relative terms.
Long-tail analysis seeks to identify, for your most common keyword categories (or “stems”), the phrases that pay where demand is relatively high but competition relatively weak; what I call relatively underexploited considers his business proposition and looks at the long tail in the light of this.
Nearly all of Sam’s customers have one big thing in common: They bring their children skiing with them. This might have something to do with the fact that Sam’s chalet is right next door to the local crèche. He reconsiders his keyword selection and (from ontological analysis) goes for “ski chalet crèche,” “ski chalet child care,” “ski chalet nursery,” and “ski chalet ski school.” It may not surprise you to learn that Sam more than doubled his customer conversions while almost halving his costs!
I will return to phrases that pay in the next section. However, at this point all you need to understand is that it is a good idea to have several keyword chains (that link two, three, or even four keywords together) in your optimization ingredients.
Returning to the Abakus Keyword Tool (or using your SEO software), it is now time to analyze your competitors’ sites more deeply. This time you are looking for the most commonly repeated two-, three-, and four-word keyphrases in the page text. Add these to your spreadsheet, again in Column A. Repeat the task for different sites and for different pages within the same site. You are aiming for a list of approximately 100 keywords and keyphrases at this stage.
For a typical small (10-page) site, you should now have approximately 35–40 one-word and two-word phrases and perhaps as many as 60–75 three-word and four-or-more-word combinations.