Archive for the 'Web Development' Category

Freelance sites

February 18th, 2009 By krastev

For Freelance Photographers

iStockPhoto - the leading stock photos site.

Fotolia - a “web 2.0″ version of iStockPhoto.

PhotoStock Plus - Sell your photos worldwide to a large variety of clients.

eXpress Digital - Set up your own online store front for selling your photography.

SmugMug - Take pictures, set your prices and earn a profit selling from your own virtual gallery.

ImageKind - Setup a free online gallery and sell your art online as framed prints.

Shutterstock - Submit your photos and get paid a commission every time they are downloaded.

ImageCatalog - Earn a forty percent commission when someone downloads your photos.

Big Stock Photo - Submit your images for review and if approved you will get paid for others downloading them.

StockXpert - Earn fifty percent commission for selling your stock digital photos through their website.

For Freelance Writers


Blue Mountain Arts - Pays you up to $300 dollars for accepting and publishing your poetry in their greeting cards.

WritingCareer.com - Hundreds of freelance writing jobs plus articles and career advice for freelance writers.

PoeWar.com - Small directory of freelance writing jobs and resources for freelancers.

Recycled Paper Greetings - Greeting card manufacturer that hires freelance writers and artists to create their cards.

Helium - Select a topic, write an article and earn a commission from the advertising revenue.

Online Writing Jobs - Fairly extensive, well maintained job directory for freelance writers.

WritersWeekly - Popular freelance writing ezine. Great for finding jobs, news and resources in the freelance market.

For Freelance Programmers


RentACoder - Locate and bid on open ticket coding jobs and get paid when you fulfill their request.

DesignQuote - Free job search for freelance programmers and web designers.

ScriptLance - Hundreds of new programmer projects listed daily. Place your bids on open projects and pick up some side work.

iFreelance - Many available opportunities for programmers, web designers and graphic artists.

Heritage Web Solutions - Hosting company that hires freelance designers and programmers to build their customers sites. Must submit your portfolio for consideration.

Freelance Auction - Freelance web designers can place bids on proposals. Requires you pay them a commission from your earnings if you get the job.

Misc. Freelance Job Resources


Elance - Freelance job search database covering positions in writing, website development, graphics art and more.

Go Freelance - An extensive database of freelance positions. This is a paid service.

Guru.com - Very large free online marketplace for freelancers. Many freelance job types available.

GetAFreelancer - Huge selection of freelance jobs for programmers, web designers, graphic artists, writers, photographers and many more.

Craigslist - The internet classified giant has listings for freelancers too.

Freelance Portfolios - Free service that allows you to create a virtual portfolio highlighting your expertise as a freelancer.

SoloGig - Nice directory with everything listed from senior software developers to at home wine tasters. Worth taking a look.

FreelanceJobs.org - Freelance directory for web designers, adminstrative, sales, writing, translations and more.

Project4Hire - Ton of different job categories for freelancers. Bid on proposals and make some money.

Popularity: 65% [?]

Content Management System

July 5th, 2008 By albena

By Itglobalsolution Supremus
Content Management Software is a system used for content management, which includes audio files, computer files, electronic documents, image media and web content. The purpose of content management software is that of making inter-office files available even while being online. (more…)

Popularity: 100% [?]

The 7 E-Millionaire Myths

July 4th, 2007 By albena

By Marty Dickinson
There are two types of business owners, the E-Millionaire who will make $1,000,000 or more in
business this year originating from the Internet and those who make virtually nothing from their web sites again, just like last year. There’s not a lot in between. You either “get it” or you don’t when it comes to the Internet marketing process. (more…)

Popularity: 84% [?]

Today having a web site online is not enough!

July 4th, 2007 By albena

By Paris Paraskeva
Many companies, as part of their marketing strategy, have their own website published online. However, just having a website published online is not enough to strengthen a company’s image and successfully promote their services and products. There are many factors which contribute to having a successful online presence. In this article we will only scratch the surface of the most important factors. Searching for something on the internet through various search engines can at time prove a nightmare. (more…)

Popularity: 81% [?]

DOT NET Frame Architecture

July 3rd, 2007 By albena

By Adam Sturo
The .Net framework consists of two main component one of them is .Net framework class library and another is CLR. The .Net framework class library common for all .Net language .We can use this to develop different application such as console applications, windows and Web Forms and Web Services.
(more…)

Popularity: 78% [?]

Apogee search – the company which will help you succeed

May 8th, 2007 By krastev

Apogee search – the company which will help you succeed

The following is a paid review:

A few days ago I was asked to write a review about this company, so I started by reading what is apogee search working with. Well I saw some amazing things like that they are one of the largest online marketing services firms today. One important part of the work of the company is the main view of their web site. (more…)

Popularity: 54% [?]

What business leaders should ask from distributed web teams

April 4th, 2007 By krastev

Many large public sector agencies have groups of web coordinators/publishers/masters
that serve as a kind of formal or informal web council. I was recently asked
to suggest some "talking points" for the head of such an agency speaking
to an annual meeting of their web council. Of course, leaders should listen
as well as talk, but leaders should challenge, too, so this is what I suggested
the CEO communicate to the council:

The web is increasingly important to Agency X’s mission. Our constituents
are watching what we do here closely
We all need to think more strategically about the management of
web content
To the extent management means standardization, then I ask you to identify
best practices from your peers in government and industry and push agency
leadership to instill those practices
To the extent management means continuous operational maturation, I
ask you to develop effective and auditable processes that we can apply agencywide
To the extent management means enablement, I ask you to help us test
and implement new web publishing tools that can make you more effective
Throughout the journey we must be guided by the needs of our customers,
and continue to measure and adapt to their feedback

And of course it never hurts to thank people…

Popularity: 28% [?]

Announcing latest version of The Web CMS Report

April 4th, 2007 By krastev

Today we released The Web CMS Report - 2007. That’s Version 11 if you’re counting.
I have so much to say about the new trends, tools, and challenges
we found that I’ll write up a longer article about that next week. In the meantime,
for a quick review of deltas from Version 10, in this new update we:

Assess how Web CMS vendors are adapting Web 2.0 tools into their stacks
(and find them coming up a bit short — see press release)
Introduce coverage of Enonic, Drupal, Joomla!, and Alfresco WCM
Evaluate MOSS 2007 as a successor to Microsoft CMS
Expand our coverage of standards, development models, and tool testing

Plus of course we update all our product evaluations, drawing heavily on the experiences of you, the customer.

Popularity: 28% [?]

Question CMS Consolidation

April 4th, 2007 By krastev

Your enterprise accountants may get very excited calculating how
much money could be saved by consolidating disparate content management systems.
Graham Oakes argues, however, that once you ask some key questions, the cost
savings — and business benefits — might not add up….

Popularity: 28% [?]

Rethinking PaperThin’s value

April 4th, 2007 By krastev

CMS vendor PaperThin
likes to tout the fact that CMS Watch cited their CommonSpot tool (among others)
twice for good value (2005,
2004).
See, for example, the closing "About PaperThin" paragraph in this
or other company
press releases. However, vendors and marketplaces constantly change — the Web CMS market
faster than many others. In the last several editions of The
Web CMS Report we have questioned CommonSpot’s value, citing comparatively
slower R&D and problems with customer support at PaperThin. The company
has since lowered its pricing a bit and is moving to shore up tech support.
Value is important, but always a moving target. In the end, make sure to factor
in "fit" for your business scenarios when assessing the value of any
vendor’s solution. [Update, 26 March: PaperThin tells us that this release language was a mistake and that it had removed its CMS Watch reference from other releases dating to last year.]

Popularity: 28% [?]

Rethinking RedDot’s usability

April 4th, 2007 By krastev

On its website, CMS vendor RedDot (now an Open Text subsidiary) points out that 3 years ago we lauded their CMS product
for its localization and authoring capabilities. Well, we learn over time as we talk to more customers. And products change over time — or rather don’t always change with the times. So it is with RedDot CMS, whose European customers tell us that its localization capabilities are aging, and its globalization facilities surprisingly underdeveloped. It will be interesting to see whether RedDot can make needed usability improvements over the next year while it tries to reconcile codebases with Open Text’s other WCM and ECM tools, and still upgrade its back-end to .NET. You can find more details in The CMS Report.

Popularity: 33% [?]

Why do IAs hate their Web CMS tools?

April 4th, 2007 By krastev

This past weekend, Theresa Regli and I presented at the 2007 IA Summit. In
a room full of about 80 information architects I asked how many worked with
a Web CMS tool. Approximately 60 hands went up. And of those I asked, who was
pleased with their current CMS. Every hand went down. Without exception. And
what about enterprise portals? About 30 hands went up and 5 stayed up (hurrah!)
when I asked if they were pleased. An informal survey 4 years ago showed similar frustrations.
What’s going on here?
At one level, I think vendors have had a tendency to remain distant from the
IA and user experience communities, and their tools have suffered as a result.
But I also think IAs tend to shy away from technology selection and understanding
how the tools work (that’s what we were presenting about) to the detriment of their projects. More fundamentally,
enterprises underestimate the potential as well as the cost to making CMS and
portal software more adaptable — and therefore adoptable. That’s actually good
news. Poor software can be impossible to fix. Poor implementations can be avoided,
or remedied.

Popularity: 34% [?]

A Tale of Two (Oracle) Portals

April 4th, 2007 By krastev

Oracle’s not the only vendor with overlapping offerings. IBM and Open Text support multiple Web CMS offerings, BEA sells multiple portals, and so on. In most cases, overlapping offerings result from an acquisition, whereas in Oracle’s case, even though the new WebCenter product includes external component, it not acquired from another company.
WebCenter is targeted at organizations that want to build a portal (a website, an intranet, or a traditional enterprise portal) using a J2EE framework as opposed to a Portal framework. It emphasizes so-called “Web 2.0,” and some of the key features in current version or planned in the roadmap are discussions, wikis, IM, VoIP, team spaces and mashups — features you won’t find natively in Oracle’s Portal product, but can be exposed as portlets. Currently, WebCenter is just a first release whereas the Portal is quite mature. But going forward, Oracle has great plans for WebCenter, including an integration with recently-acquired Stellent.
I suspect that it’ll be a long time (if ever) before the company merges its two portal products, and in the meantime, Oracle customers will need to decide between one or both.

Popularity: 28% [?]

Considering smaller ECM vendors

April 4th, 2007 By krastev

Currently on Intelligent
Enterprise you can read my recent review of Xythos
Document Manager Version 6. Though I have a short fuse with those who say
that "basic content services" (BCS) are all that any enterprise needs
for their ECM requirements, I remain nonetheless supportive of "lite"
offerings. ECM is such an overblown and overused term (but it’s the only
one we have) that encompasses everything from huge imaging and case management
deployments to simple document collaboration projects. There is room for all
the vendors who want to deliver value; the problem comes for the buyer to make
sense of apparently similar, but actually widely divergent ECM products in this
confused market. Many niche vendors such as as Xythos,
Saperion, FormTek
or Cimage can tend
to be overlooked as a result, and that’s a shame, because under the right circumstances
they may offer a better fit for your needs than the likes of IBM,
Interwoven or Open
Text…

Popularity: 28% [?]

BEA ships WebLogic Portal 10

April 4th, 2007 By krastev

Last week BEA announced the release of WebLogic Portal 10. Unlike BEA’s last major WebLogic Portal release, this release was timed with the version 10 update to the underlying WebLogic application server. Support for the new application server seem like the major news, but WebLogic Portal 10 also brings a bit of its own candy: Web 2.0 tools such as AJAX portals and mashup functionality, alongside better support for content management, and improved administration. All talk of merging WebLogic with AquaLogic, BEA’s other enterprise portal, seems to have disappeared, also witnessed by the fact that BEA keeps WebLogic product management in San Francisco, while AquaLogic is run from Boulder, Colorado. As previously noted BEA WebLogic sales hit a bump last quarter and new buyers should consider themselves warned: Experience with the new release is still very limited, and in many regions of the world almost non-existent. Proceed with care.

Popularity: 30% [?]

Developing a practical intranet development methodology

April 4th, 2007 By krastev

Managing an intranet seems inherently an overwhelming task. First, there’s
the word, intranet. It sounds important, huge, nebulous, and boundless
at the same time. In most enterprises, the opportunities for internal information
sharing, collaboration, and process improvements are, well, limitless…but
also very difficult to pull off.
That’s why I very much like Step Two Designs’ new guide, 6×2 methodology for intranets. It’s a practical approach to agile intranet development that emphasizes six-month chunks in the context of a longer plan. I especially liked the part about how to create a 1-page “intranet concept,” to replace lists of unreachable goals and supplant vague, windy strategy documents. For about the cost of one developer-hour, this guide is well worth it.

Popularity: 27% [?]

CMS vendor Synkron is bought by local competitor

April 4th, 2007 By krastev

In news from the Nordic market, Danish CMS vendor Dynamicweb has bought all shares of local competitor Synkron. Except for a press release in Danish, few details are out on the sale. It seems like Synkron CEO will lead the new organization and both brands and product lines will be kept. While Dynamicweb has focused on simple scenarios, Synkron has tried to tackle the more complex ones and has worked to line up resellers across Europe. The press release talks about the beginning of market consolidation, something that vendors and press alike has predicted for years and we have still not seen. The joint company will have about 80 employees and less than $9 million revenue, still comparatively smaller than regional competitor EPiServer. Integrating local fierce competitors and still maintaining multiple brands and product lines is an ambitious project. Local buyers may want to evaluate their options carefully until more details are available. Microsoft’s new edition of SharePoint was perhaps looming in the background of this deal, but buyers should remain patient and not rush to Redmond on the strength of one merger…

Popularity: 28% [?]

Just what is Convergence, anyway?

April 4th, 2007 By krastev

For the past two decades I’ve heard about the “coming convergence” in enterprise software between the data and content sides — or, if you like (I don’t like, but other people do) — between structured and unstructured information management. This always seemed like more of a vendor fantasy than real enterprise need, but let’s acknowledge that CRM and ERP systems use free-form text fields and document attachments, while Web CMS and Records Management systems need good data to run. At various points, people have promoted Portal, EAI, and (most recently) Search tools to unify these two worlds. But the whole idea still see,s rather fuzzy. So I’m pleased to be moderating a panel on convergence at the forthcoming AIIM Expo in Boston, where 4 leading lights on this issue will hold forth. I’m going to challenge them to turn the concept around, away from technical capabilities, and make it relevant for you, the buyer. I plan to learn a lot, and hope you will too!

Popularity: 19% [?]

State of the Art for Enterprise Portals

April 4th, 2007 By krastev

CMS Watch evaluates technology according to common business scenarios. But is it possible to identify a set of baseline capabilities and attributes for tools in a reasonably mature marketplace like enterprise portals? Janus Boye thinks so, and lays out “state of the art” for portal software, circa 2007…

Popularity: 28% [?]

How to Learn HTML

March 31st, 2007 By albena


Popularity: 44% [?]

Hello there fellow webmasters. I know how frustrating and tiring

March 31st, 2007 By albena

by Cliff Posey
If you want to create a web site, you better be prepared for
competition. There are numerous people out there who have
started a business online or brought their business to the web.
Many of them have found out that it takes more than basic
knowledge of web design to build a web site that makes money. (more…)

Popularity: 40% [?]

Life of a Webmaster: Managing Multiple Websites or Domains

March 31st, 2007 By albena

by Mary Markell

Hello there fellow webmasters. I know how frustrating and tiring
can be to manage multiple websites or domain names or client
accounts so I decided to outline the most important parts of
process. Remember, you are not alone. There are thousands of
webmasters like you and me struggling to stay on top of their
website maintenance and management. (more…)

Popularity: 28% [?]

What is Ajax?

March 7th, 2007 By albena

By Ajay Sharma
We were getting a number of querries from our clients and friends, asking about what AJAX is?
With the development of Microsoft’s Live, everyone is going crazy about AJAX. So, we at Xaprio Solutions thaught of publishing this small article about AJAX, which will help you guys understand it better. (more…)

Popularity: 32% [?]

Importance of Website Design and Development

March 1st, 2007 By albena

By Sharon Lepcha
A website is an online identity of a company or of an individual involved in Internet Marketing. The task associated with the website is to represent a company, sell company’s name, attract more visitors, generate more business leads, promote more sale of company’s products and services and ultimately, help to gain more return on investment. (more…)

Popularity: 44% [?]

Converting a MySQL Injection Script for Use in Microsoft SQL Server

February 28th, 2007 By albena

By Lucas Green
MySQL Server is the most widely used database management system in the world, primarily because it is open source and free. Hence, most databases you may get from outside sources will probably be in the form of a MySQL injection script. This is fine if you use MySQL for your own website databases, but if you use Microsoft SQL Server the script will require a little editing before it will work. (more…)

Popularity: 34% [?]

How to Install a MySQL Database using a MySQL Injection Script

February 22nd, 2007 By albena

By Lucas Green
Whenever you purchase or acquire a MySQL database (such as from a website like WebContents.org), chances are it will come as a MySQL injection script. An injection script is simply a SQL script that, when executed, creates the appropriate database tables and inserts the data using INSERT statements (one statement per record of data). Because of this, a SQL injection script is usually very large, but this is the easiest way to export and import a database so this is how it is usually done. (more…)

Popularity: 28% [?]

Most Popular in 'Web Development'

  • Content Management System
  • The 7 E-Millionaire Myths
  • Today having a web site online is not enough!
  • DOT NET Frame Architecture
  • Freelance sites
  • Apogee search – the company which will help you succeed
  • Importance of Website Design and Development
  • How to Learn HTML
  • Hello there fellow webmasters. I know how frustrating and tiring
  • Converting a MySQL Injection Script for Use in Microsoft SQL Server
  • Why do IAs hate their Web CMS tools?
  • Rethinking RedDot's usability
  • What is Ajax?
  • BEA ships WebLogic Portal 10
  • Question CMS Consolidation
  • A Tale of Two (Oracle) Portals
  • Announcing latest version of The Web CMS Report
  • CMS vendor Synkron is bought by local competitor
  • Rethinking PaperThin's value
  • What business leaders should ask from distributed web teams
  • Exchange.bg

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

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