Disqus is probably the first to consider comments platform that helps you build an active community from your website’s audience. This service has an automated installation for WordPress, but of course, you can insert its JavaScript code on any platform. Having a Disqus commenter profile you can take back control of what you’ve written by tracking and managing your comments all in one place. You can also use Disqus profile to follow and reply to what people are talking about, on and across different sites having Disqus installed. This comment system also provides the features like real-time comment system, notification and reply system, gravatar support, comment threading and pagination, mobile commenting, plus you can define a custom CSS for it. Disqus service as well lets you have full integration with Facebook, Twitter and other social networks, and media services such as Youtube, Flickr, and more.
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Looking for business card templates, unique business cards, personal business cards,business cards staples and business card design.
Monday, 16 May 2011
Friday, 22 April 2011
How The CSS Syntax Is Built Up
A CSS tag or the CSS syntax is built up using three elements:
1. Selector
2. Property
3. Value
Example:
selector{property: value;}
The selector is generally the HTML element or tag that you wish to style or define
Example:
body{property: value;}
The property is the part of the selector that you wish to change.
Example:
selector{background: value;}
The value is the properties element which can accept single or multiple elements/values.
Example:
selector{property: #000000;}
From our 3 examples we tell the <body></body> tag that it has to have a black background
Example:
body{background: #000000;}
1. Selector
2. Property
3. Value
Example:
selector{property: value;}
The selector is generally the HTML element or tag that you wish to style or define
Example:
body{property: value;}
The property is the part of the selector that you wish to change.
Example:
selector{background: value;}
The value is the properties element which can accept single or multiple elements/values.
Example:
selector{property: #000000;}
From our 3 examples we tell the <body></body> tag that it has to have a black background
Example:
body{background: #000000;}
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Thursday, 17 March 2011
Sunday, 13 March 2011
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Bulk Data Entry, Online Data Entry, Offline Data Entry, Image Data Entry, OsCommerce Data Entry, Product Data Entry
Ecommerce Data Entry, Auction Data Entry, Directory Data Entry, Data Entry for Mailing List, Insurance Data Entry,
Legal Data Entry, Subscriptions Data Entry, Affordable Data Entry, Online Data Entry
http://www.websitedesign1.com/
Tuesday, 22 February 2011
Roseman: Samsung's customer service scrapes by again
Penny and Frank Berger have a new 52-inch Samsung TV to replace their 50-inch LCD set, whose screen stopped working soon after the warranty expired.
After writing about the couple in a Jan. 29 column, I heard from others with fairly new Samsung TV sets that had gone on the fritz.
Readers poured out their frustration about deteriorating product quality and the never-ending pressure to buy extended warranties to protect themselves.
Bonnie and Gene Beaudry had a 46-inch Samsung LCD TV, which started having problems with screen distortion right after the two-year point.
Both Samsung and their local repair shop told them the screen was defective, but it would be cheaper to buy a new TV.
The couple got a replacement TV when I sent their complaint to Samsung.
“We had been left with what amounted to a very expensive boat anchor,” they said. “Our new TV has a spectacular picture. We’re very happy Samsung customers once again.”
Jamie Dillon, who lives in Sarnia but works part-time in Fort McMurray, Alta., had tried to get help for his 50-inch Samsung plasma TV.
“It contains about 130 black lines that got progressively worse over a very short period of time and made the screen unfit for viewing,” he said.
“I thought I was a patient, intelligent consumer until I tried to stickhandle through the circus that Samsung calls customer service.”
Dillon was surprised to get three phone messages from Samsung in one day, saying he’d get a new 50-inch TV, delivered to his northern Alberta home.
David Lau told me that his 52-inch Samsung TV, bought in December 2008, began to behave erratically about 18 months later.
“The Samsung approved service company said the screen had to be replaced at a cost of about $1,500. It would be better if I just purchased a new TV.
“I’ve called customer service a number of times, but they just said the set was out of warranty and I should have bought an extended warranty.”
Lau was happy to hear that Samsung would pay for replacing the screen if he paid for the labour.
Donald Wu also ran into screen problems 18 months after buying a 40-inch Samsung TV. He was about to discard it when he saw my column.
He, too, will get his screen replaced if he pays for the labour.
Frank Martino, director of Samsung’s service division, said most customers haven’t had any service interruptions with their large-screen TVs.
“We’re always sorry when a customer has a problem. We put a lot of emphasis on customer service,” he said.
Last May, Samsung launched its Star Service program, which gives an extra 90-day warranty on TVs with screens larger than 37 inches – or 15 months of protection in total.
Consumer Reports magazine’s list of most reliable flat panel TVs, based on customer feedback, showed that LCD and plasma TVs had “an impressive record for reliability.”
Only 4 per cent, on average, were repaired during the first three years of use, the magazine said. Samsung had a 4 per cent repair rate for its LCD TVs and 5 per cent for plasma TVs.
Laurie Budd had a 55-inch Toshiba TV, purchased last September, that started having intermittent blackouts by early December. She’d also bought a three-year extended warranty from The Brick for $210.
The manufacturer’s authorized repair service had come to her Barrie home six times and couldn’t find the source of the problem.
“Toshiba wants me to continue with all these service calls until a solution has been found,” she said.
Budd was happy to learn that she’ll get a new TV and an extra nine months of warranty from Toshiba. The Brick will transfer the money paid for the extended warranty to her company credit card.
source. http://www.thestar.com/article/941651--roseman-samsung-s-customer-service-scrapes-by-again
After writing about the couple in a Jan. 29 column, I heard from others with fairly new Samsung TV sets that had gone on the fritz.
Readers poured out their frustration about deteriorating product quality and the never-ending pressure to buy extended warranties to protect themselves.
Bonnie and Gene Beaudry had a 46-inch Samsung LCD TV, which started having problems with screen distortion right after the two-year point.
Both Samsung and their local repair shop told them the screen was defective, but it would be cheaper to buy a new TV.
The couple got a replacement TV when I sent their complaint to Samsung.
“We had been left with what amounted to a very expensive boat anchor,” they said. “Our new TV has a spectacular picture. We’re very happy Samsung customers once again.”
Jamie Dillon, who lives in Sarnia but works part-time in Fort McMurray, Alta., had tried to get help for his 50-inch Samsung plasma TV.
“It contains about 130 black lines that got progressively worse over a very short period of time and made the screen unfit for viewing,” he said.
“I thought I was a patient, intelligent consumer until I tried to stickhandle through the circus that Samsung calls customer service.”
Dillon was surprised to get three phone messages from Samsung in one day, saying he’d get a new 50-inch TV, delivered to his northern Alberta home.
David Lau told me that his 52-inch Samsung TV, bought in December 2008, began to behave erratically about 18 months later.
“The Samsung approved service company said the screen had to be replaced at a cost of about $1,500. It would be better if I just purchased a new TV.
“I’ve called customer service a number of times, but they just said the set was out of warranty and I should have bought an extended warranty.”
Lau was happy to hear that Samsung would pay for replacing the screen if he paid for the labour.
Donald Wu also ran into screen problems 18 months after buying a 40-inch Samsung TV. He was about to discard it when he saw my column.
He, too, will get his screen replaced if he pays for the labour.
Frank Martino, director of Samsung’s service division, said most customers haven’t had any service interruptions with their large-screen TVs.
“We’re always sorry when a customer has a problem. We put a lot of emphasis on customer service,” he said.
Last May, Samsung launched its Star Service program, which gives an extra 90-day warranty on TVs with screens larger than 37 inches – or 15 months of protection in total.
Consumer Reports magazine’s list of most reliable flat panel TVs, based on customer feedback, showed that LCD and plasma TVs had “an impressive record for reliability.”
Only 4 per cent, on average, were repaired during the first three years of use, the magazine said. Samsung had a 4 per cent repair rate for its LCD TVs and 5 per cent for plasma TVs.
Laurie Budd had a 55-inch Toshiba TV, purchased last September, that started having intermittent blackouts by early December. She’d also bought a three-year extended warranty from The Brick for $210.
The manufacturer’s authorized repair service had come to her Barrie home six times and couldn’t find the source of the problem.
“Toshiba wants me to continue with all these service calls until a solution has been found,” she said.
Budd was happy to learn that she’ll get a new TV and an extra nine months of warranty from Toshiba. The Brick will transfer the money paid for the extended warranty to her company credit card.
source. http://www.thestar.com/article/941651--roseman-samsung-s-customer-service-scrapes-by-again
Monday, 21 February 2011
VMware May Develop Products for Apple's IOS, CEO Maritz Says
The Palo Alto, California-based company is developing software for Google Inc.’s Android operating system and plans to begin product trials this year, Maritz said at a briefing in Tokyo today. He declined to give a specific schedule.
“Android is our first, something that hasn’t been done before, so we will try it out in that environment and go from there,” Maritz said. It would be “great if we could have” an offering for iOS, he said.
The Android product will allow a user to have two phones in one -- a handset for work and a private line with separate numbers and operating environments, Maritz said. The company demonstrated a prototype made by LG Electronics Inc. earlier this month at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain.
To contact the reporter on this story: Pavel Alpeyev in Tokyo at palpeyev@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Young-Sam Cho at ycho2@bloomberg.net
source. http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-02-22/vmware-may-develop-products-for-apple-s-ios-ceo-maritz-says.html
“Android is our first, something that hasn’t been done before, so we will try it out in that environment and go from there,” Maritz said. It would be “great if we could have” an offering for iOS, he said.
The Android product will allow a user to have two phones in one -- a handset for work and a private line with separate numbers and operating environments, Maritz said. The company demonstrated a prototype made by LG Electronics Inc. earlier this month at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain.
To contact the reporter on this story: Pavel Alpeyev in Tokyo at palpeyev@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Young-Sam Cho at ycho2@bloomberg.net
source. http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-02-22/vmware-may-develop-products-for-apple-s-ios-ceo-maritz-says.html
Wednesday, 16 February 2011
Defining the audience is a key step in the website planning process.
Defining the audience is a key step in the website planning process. The audience is the group of people who are expected to visit your website – the market being targeted. These people will be viewing the website for a specific reason and it is important to know exactly what they are looking for when they visit the site. A clearly defined purpose or goal of the site as well as an understanding of what visitors want to do or feel when they come to your site will help to identify the target audience. Upon considering who is most likely to need or use the content, a list of characteristics common to the users such as:
Website Maintenance
- Audience Characteristics
- Information Preferences
- Computer Specifications
- Web Experience
Website Maintenance
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