Archive for June 10th, 2009

Author: Ethan
• Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

To become a full-time network and internet marketer, you must act a certain way and do certain things. Whether you sell a product or a service, there are some things that are crucial to your success and you have to be aware of them.

To become a full-time online marketer, you must master basic promotion techniques and figure out how things work online.

Here are some of the things that are an absolute imperative.

1. Getting quality backlinks

Backlinks are the most important thing you can do for your long-term online success. For someone to reach your network marketing or affiliate website, you have to have backlinks out there. Thusands of them, in fact.

Therefore, you must get those backlinks using various methods. Some of the best ways are blogging, social bookmarking, article marketing, forum marketing, posting comments on other people’s blogs and building Squidoo lenses.

2. Branding yourself

Branding is a big part of becoming a full-time marketer online. One of the most popular ways to do this is by participating in forums. By participating in the discussions, you develop your credibility and brand yourself as an expert in the theme of your internet business.

3. Building a list

An email list of targeted subscribers can be worth thousands of dollars to you in revenue every month.

Therefore you want to focus your efforts on building your list in any way you possibly can. That means promoting splash pages and giving away free reports and affiliate marketing ebooks in exchange for your visitor’s name and email address.

Naturally, these three things will not be the total of your activities online, nor should they be. But they are very important and if neglected, your business could suffer dramatically. Also, getting the proper network and affiliate marketing training to help you in your further development are essential. You need to grow and expand to become a full-time marketer online.

Category: Lucky Break  | Comments off
Author: Ethan
• Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

Video conferencing is traditonally touted as a money-saving technology in a down economy. Companies can slash their travel budgets by using video conferencing, but meeting with partners and suppliers outside of your own network requires interoperability of video conferencing systems. eWEEK Labs tests the ability of two very different systems to work together.

In a down economy, video conferencing makes a lot of sense economically. Companies can slash their travel budgets, redirecting some of that money to the acquisition of room-based or desktop conferencing solutions that allow parties to “meet” and share presentations while still being able to read participants’ body language and facial expressions (video quality permitting).

But what happens when you want to extend these video conferencing capabilities outside of your own network—to pull partners, customers or suppliers into the mix? It is unlikely that you will want to spend your own capital budget to outfit partners with a solution known to work with your equipment. But as your partners are facing the same economic pressures as your organization, they quite possibly may also be considering the technology.

The question then becomes one of interoperability between systems purchased at different times from different vendors. The legacy perspective was that disparate video solutions don’t play nicely together. But codec utilization and signaling have become more standards-based, and video conferencing purveyors have pursued partnerships with other vendors to plug holes in their product portfolios.

These moves should result in improved interoperability, but has that really been the case?

With these conditions in mind, I set out to test interoperability of video conferencing systems, at least on a small scale. My interoperability goals were modest, but would likely reflect the goals of two companies that wanted to take advantage of video conferencing to do business together. The plan was to take a pair of room-based conferencing systems from different vendors—acquired by the companies separately, without consultation—and get a video conference going between the two. Voice and video would be a must, as would data presentation sharing. Anything else would be gravy—at least for the short term.

In the end, achieving interoperability between disparate systems was easier than I thought it would be.

I conducted the interoperability test between two recent-model conference room solutions: the LifeSize Room 200 and Polycom’s QDX 6000.

The two products are aimed at different market segments: QDX 6000 is significantly cheaper than Room 200 and is aimed at smaller offices or businesses; the Room 200 unit offers a full high-definition experience and packs in additional features that allow the host to extend the conference to more than one other party. That said, there is certainly a good chance that the two products would meet out in the world—for example, as a larger business tries to hold a conference with its customers or suppliers.

Room 200 supports both SIP (Session Initiation Protocol) and H.323 for signaling, while QDX 6000 supports H.323. The vendors of both products market claims of interoperability, and I felt it was warranted to test those claims.

While I assumed it would take some tweaking to get the units talking to each other via H.323, the products connected right away. The units automatically negotiated mutually supported audio and video codecs—in this case, H.264 at 708 by 480 resolution with G.722 audio. While these settings were inferior to what either product could optimally achieve, the video conference did work.

Likewise, I found H.239-enabled data presentation sharing worked in both directions, and I could control movement of the far-side camera for either product. Also, because both units support H.235 AES (Advanced Encryption Standard) encryption, I was able to secure the call payload between the two products.

I suspect that most companies trying to get a couple of products (recently released ones, at least) to interoperate will find the same thing. Everything works, but perhaps not optimally. Given the specifications of the two products I tested and their supported resolutions, the video resolution during my tests was about what I expected it to be, although I expected audio to instead utilize the mutually supported Siren 14 audio codec. Although the codecs in use in today’s video conferencing gear are based on standards—or, failing that, are commonly implemented—the signaling for those codecs may not yet have the same level of standardization.

Differentaition Leads to Interoperability

Vendors have done significant work to differentiate their implementations, particularly to bring HD video and audio to the fore and create innovative ways to use less bandwidth to deliver that quality. However, this differentiation contributes to a lack of interoperability.

Take, for instance, Radvision’s recent announcement that it will be implementing H.264 SVC (Scalable Video Coding) in forthcoming versions of its Scopia conferencing equipment and desktop client software. SVC adds a multilayered element to the H.264 standard, effectively creating a thin base layer of content to which additional layers can be added to boost resolution, video quality and frame rate. That way, in lossy networks, the base layer can be more easily transmitted to provide a smooth, glitch-free transmission at a base quality level, with enhancements added as possible given network conditions.

Although SVC was ratified as part of the H.264 standard a few years ago, issues surrounding signaling have yet to be agreed upon, so don’t expect interoperability with any of the few other SVC-capable products available today (such as those made by Vidyo). However, Radvision does promise that its SVC-enabled systems will continue to interoperate with other vendors’ gear that supports the regular H.264.

Of course, the testing scenario I pursued here is rather simplistic when considering business use cases. Point-to-point connectivity between two video conferencing room systems will have its place, but meetings will more often than not need to have multiple participants attending from many locations. In my tests, I was able to simulate some of that perspective—conferencing a total of four endpoints together (via LifeSize Room 200’s six-party Multipoint Control Unit).

But as video needs grow, more room systems need to join a meeting or desktop video clients need to be pulled into the mix, video conferencing customers will need to look into purchasing stand-alone MCU devices. These devices may come in the form of hardware, like Radvision’s Scopia conferencing platforms, or they may come as software to be installed on commodity server hardware, like Avistar Communications’ Avistar C3 Conference. But it falls to the vendors of these MCU devices to ensure interoperability at native resolution with as many endpoints—be they room or desktop solutions—as possible.

Of course, in a case where many partners have similar small-scale video conferencing initiatives, the question becomes one of who will pay for the MCU through which everyone can join the conference. Thankfully, there are some hosted MCU solutions available in the cloud that can provide that service for a fee.

Category: Lucky Break  | Comments off
Author: Ethan
• Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

If to know about the 90 Second Website Builder then you can this 90 Second Website Builder review. Since websites are for internet marketing, is one of the desires for online marketers. If you are in the industry then the 90 Second Website Builder provides real help. This is a software application that can be accessed offline and contains a web-designing program. It works generating html codes and users having no knowledge of html can create websites easily. The features are automatic paypal checkout generator, instant subscriber forms, response form wizard that is automated, instant audio player, instant button tool, built in drawing tools, instant slide shows, instant site map maker, built in java script tools, and instant video stream builder.

The program is designed by same people who created WYSIWYG web builder 5.  Because of this , they have the same features. Today, this software is marketed by Teknon media. 

This is not an html editor but it is an html generator. the objects, text and images in your page and your page will be ready. However, you can add any existing html for your page using object html tools and advanced page. web designing programs like Dreamweaver and FrontPage, the users could add the texts, images and other objects to their websites by simply dragging and dropping into the template. After finishing the layout, you can publish it immediately . The 90 Second Website Builder software uses fixed page layout. You over lapping objects in web page. This software is very cheap and can be thought of good investment. Because this software is designed for those who don’t have much knowledge and skills about web design. It is just the thing for those who would like to try their luck in internet marketing.       

A review of 90 Second Website Builder is the best place where you will all the features of 90-second website builder. It gives full information about building a website quickly.

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