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JoomlaHosting.co Announces New Joomla Hosting Basics Section

JoomlaHosting.co expands their knowledge base to include a Joomla Hosting Basics section which has articles, guides and tutorials to inform consumers about Joomla hosting.

Atlanta, Ga (PRWEB) February 22, 2012

JoomlaHosting.co, (http://joomlahosting.co) was established in 2011 with the goal of helping people find the best hosting company for their Joomla website. The site provides a place for posting customer reviews along with expert how-to guides and news. They are very pleased to announce their site's latest addition to the expert advice section, Joomla Hosting Basics.

The Joomla hosting basics (http://goo.gl/iSuo0) has been added to expand the information about Joomla and hosting on the website. The editors of the site constantly update the section in order to stay up to date on current trends and practices.

This section includes a few articles about technical hosting and Joomla subjects but also covers more in-depth how-to’s. They tackle problems Joomla commonly face. Guides like, “Types Of Joomla Hosting Plans” help consumers figure out which plan will help them get what they need.

David Blane, site editor, said “It’s absolutely great feeling to provide useful information to consumers. Our rating and review methods are nothing without the thoughtfulness we have put into JoomlaHosting.co. The goal of this section is to pass along information so people can get the best information and find the best Joomla hosting.”

About JoomlaHosting.Co -- JoomlaHosting.Co was established in 2011, is owned by Intown Web Design and managed by David Blane Studios both located in Atlanta, GA. The site was created as a place for Joomla! users to post reviews and learn about the best Joomla hosting companies. It is a website that helps to the Joomla hosting community.

About Intown Web Design (http://www.intownwebdesign.com) and David Blane Studios (http://davidblanestudios.com) -- Located in Atlanta, Ga, they are web design and development companies with a focus on creating functional websites for business. Clients range from startups to corporations traded on the NYSE. They specialize in open source technologies including PHP, Joomla and WordPress. They have continued to expand their expertise into improving site performance, usability and search engine rankings.

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Steven Johnson
JoomlaHosting.co
404 530 9995
Email Information

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JoomlaHosting.co Announces New Joomla Hosting Basics Section

WordGrinder: Good, Old-Fashioned Text Editing Power

By Jack M. Germain
LinuxInsider
02/22/12 5:00 AM PT

WordGrinder is not a word processor or even a fully functional text editor. In the sense of what Abiword and OpenOffice or LibreOffice offer, WordGrinder falls far short. But its just-over 6,000 lines of code running within a terminal window environment gives you a light and lively tool that runs in the skimpiest of hardware.

If you spend endless hours at a keyboard crunching words, avoiding distractions is essential. Sometimes, the worst offender in causing distractions comes from all the bells and whistles in the word processor itself. That is where WordGrinder comes to the rescue.

WordGrinder

(click image to enlarge)

In today's Linux world of GUI-filled desktops, using a text editor that runs within a terminal window may seem like a big step backward. It did not take me very long to discover that writing with WordGrinder is actually a big step in a better direction.

I use a variety of text editors to generate content. My favorites list of text editors includes Leafpad, gEdit and Geany. But after working this week almost exclusively with WordGrinder, it now tops my list.

I open a fully powered word processor only to enhance the displayed appearance of what I write. Not every document needs gussied-up, dressed-up treatment. WordGrinder has all the tools I expect in a writing-class text editor. But it hides them out of site to keep me from getting distracted.

WordGridner is simple to use but is still feature-sufficient. It avoids fancy tool buttons and sinuous menus. Instead, it packages one menu activated with the escape key.

Sorted History

WordGrinder is the brainchild of David Given. He wrote it as a tool to write his own novel. His driving passion was creating a tool that lets words flourish without the distracting him from the flow of language.

I do not know if the author completed his opus. But if he did not, it is not the fault of the writing tool he authored. WordGrinder does its intended job well.

WordGrinder is not a word processor or even a fully functional text editor. In the sense of what Abiword and OpenOffice or LibreOffice offer, WordGrinder falls far short.

But its just-over 6,000 lines of code running within a terminal window environment gives you a light and lively tool that runs in the skimpiest of hardware. Once you adjust to its focus on putting words to paper -- er, screen -- your fingers will fly nonstop across the keyboard without detours to mouse or mousepad to interrupt the creative energy of writing.

A Different Style

If you are familiar with Unix-style text editors the likes of pyroom, pico, nano, vi and Vim, or Emacs and oleo, you will feel right at home with WordGrinder. But the similarity ends there.

Many of these editors are designed for code writers. WordGrinder is for word writers. That is an important distinction for anybody looking for a handy, quick and simple text processor.

You need to adjust your mindset to use it effectively. For instance, WordGrinder saves your work in its own format. It is not a plain text structure. So before you can load the saved file in a standard word processor for visual embellishments -- or printing -- you must first use WordGrinder's export function.

Hands-on Touches

Two other anomalies are WordGrinder's lack of printing support and its unconventional key combinations. To get up to speed quickly, you need to remember just a few steps.

One is that you can always use the mouse to click on the tool bar for shortcuts. The second is that besides pressing the ESC key to pop up the menu, you can keep your fingers on the letter rows and just use the Alt-F combination and arrow keys to navigate through all of the shortcut listings.

Another useful tip is to press the Enter key to execute the desired command. Press the space bar to cancel your present location in the menu or command structure. This returns you to the stark but non-distracting writing screen.

Multiple Platforms

I switch from various Linux distros and occasionally have to dwell in the realm of Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) Windows. WordGrinder is one of those must-have tools if you compute in multiple platforms.

The Sourceforge location provides downloadable versions for several platforms. The Windows binary package is called "wordgrinder-for-windows-X.X.zip." After you unzip it, be sure to read the README file.

WordGrinder is written in a combination of C and Lua. So if you have to set it up for other platforms, you will need Lua installed. Depending on what your OS includes, you might have to compile Lua 5.1 and LuaFileSystem 1.2.

Unix-based versions are available in the source package called "wordgrinder-X.X.tar.bz2." To use it be prepared to do some rebuilding work. Decompress the tarball and read the README file.

Linux Lineage

Installation on Linux is fairly straightforward. It is available from many of the distro repositories. But on most distros, do not look for WordGrinder in the menu after you install it.

To run WordGrinder, first open a terminal window and then enter the app's name to load it. You will quickly forget that it is running within a terminal window. Just drag the window to the size you want and start grinding your words.

I was pleasantly surprised to find a version of WordGrinder already waiting for Puppy Linux. That saved me the added work of using a Puppy utility to convert the installation files into a Puppy Pet package. The Puppy Linux PET package comes in the standard and large print size for small screens. Both are available here.

Not All the Same

The Puppy Linux distro handles the menu process a bit differently than I found with Ubuntu and Linux Mint. It actually lists WordGrinder in the Documents menu. When you select the application's name in the menu list, Puppy Linux opens a terminal window and automatically loads WordGrinder the same as it would a program that runs on any desktop.

In the other Linux distros, starting WordGrinder is a two-step process. You have to first open the terminal box and then issue the app's name to run it.

Thanks for that enhancement goes to ttuuxxx of the Puppy Linux Support Forum. He made that happen by converting the binary code for WordGridner into a PET package.

That said, I dragged the WordGrinder.desktop icon from its berth in the /usr/share/applications folder. When I click on this desktop icon, WordGrinder loads like any other app. In Linux Mint 12 and Ubuntu 11.10 that does not happen. WordGrinder is stored in /usr/bin. But it does not open or run without first going through the Terminal app.

GUI-Less Interface

WordGrinder's nearly blank workspace keeps distraction-free writing as a top priority. You can choose a white or a black background. A minimal menu bar sits at the top of the Terminal window. An even more minimalistic status bar stretches across the bottom of the window.

This status bar shows the saved file name and cursor's line and space position. It also shows a word count.

What's odd, however, is the word count. It is more of a character counter. Each press of the space bar tallies as a word.

Another oddity is the appearance of the writing space. It is bounded by a top and bottom border created with a bold horizontal line and equally-spaced carrot characters ( ___V___) on top and an inverted symbol on the bottom.

Bottom Line

Version 3.0.1 is the epitome of unfettered writing. WordGrinder has a pre-paragraph style feature that codewriters can use for writing documentation. Its raw paragraph style feature lets you embed arbitrary output in exported files.

WordGrinder is a far stretch from a What You See Is What You Get (WYSIWYG) design. But it saves all configuration settings automatically in your document. Plus, it provides you with enough character and paragraph style support to write your words without wasting your time configuring them.

Jack M. Germain has been writing about computer technology since the early days of the Apple II and the PC. He still has his original IBM PC-Jr and a few other legacy DOS and Windows boxes. He left shareware programs behind for the open source world of the Linux desktop. He runs several versions of Windows and Linux OSes and often cannot decide whether to grab his tablet, netbook or Android smartphone instead of using his desktop or laptop gear.

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WordGrinder: Good, Old-Fashioned Text Editing Power

Melbourne SEO Services Launches Corporate SEO Training for Australian Businesses

Recognised as an industry leader in search engine optimization practices, David Jenyns, Director of Melbourne SEO Services, has announced the businesses expansion into corporate SEO Training.

Melbourne, Australia (PRWEB) February 21, 2012

Melbourne SEO Services Director, David Jenyns, believes that it is way past time for businesses to recognise the need for their staff to undertake corporate SEO training.

“These days it goes without saying that every business should have a website” explains Mr Jenyns. “Astute business people know this, and already have an online presence, but whether their potential customers and clients can find those websites is a whole other matter.”

In order to rank well with the search engines, like Google, there are very clear strategies that need to be implemented, both on the website it self (on page) and through third parties, e.g. networks, forums and social media (off page).

Melbourne SEO Services’ new Corporate SEO Training brings those strategies to the training room, so that a businesses marketing, administration or public relations staff can discover what they are and how to implement them. They include:

Keyword research

Link building Use of Social Media Creating viral campaigns Video marketing Best practices

“Our corporate SEO training teaches strategies that can lead to our clients dominating their niches online - quickly and over the long term” said Mr Jenyns.

More information on the corporate SEO training offered by Melbourne SEO Services visit melbourneseoservices.com/seo-services-australia/

About Melbourne SEO

MelbourneSEOServices.com is a full service search engine optimization (SEO) consultancy, based in Australia, but with a worldwide client base.

Known for being at the cutting edge of strategic SEO practices, the company delivers a growing suite of services including: on-page and off-page search engine optimization, article distribution, Google Places listing, SEO press release service, web video production one-on-one consulting, and now corporate SEO training

Melbourne SEO Services Director, David Jenyns, has, over several years, built a team of experts who are niche experts to support the business, and who share his ethos for ethical, professional internet marketing.

More about David Jenyns at http://www.melbourneseoservices.com/seo-experts/

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David Jenyns
Melbourne SEO Services
+61 3 8060 5131
Email Information

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Melbourne SEO Services Launches Corporate SEO Training for Australian Businesses

Successful Internet Marketer Russell Brunson Announces New Webinars for People Looking to Make Thousands Working Part …

DotComSecrets Local Founder Russell Brunson announces limited openings in informational webinars to teach prospective millionaires how they can seek their fortune through offline internet marketing.

Boise, Idaho (PRWEB) February 21, 2012

With economic problems impacting nearly every city in the US, few industries are actually looking to bring in more people right now. But local sales jobs are available to the right candidates if they know where to look.

That’s according to Russell Brunson, president and founder of DotComSecrets Local, who announced today that he will be accepting a limited number of applications for his free webinar about positions available with his company.

Brunson, who is a self-made internet marketing success story, has opened 300 positions for each of three webinars he will be hosting during the coming week. Positions at past webinars went quickly, and thousands of people were turned away.

DotComSecrets Local specializes in matching struggling local businesses with internet marketing experts who can improve their sales dramatically. Webinar attendees will learn about how they can make more than $8,000 per month, or even more, by simply connecting businesses in their towns with Brunson’s company.

Those selected to be local affiliates of the company can earn thousands per week while working part time from their own homes with these offline internet marketing jobs.

Because more businesses are shifting their marketing to the internet, offline internet marketing is the new gold rush for entrepreneurs on the web, according to Brunson. The local marketing jobs created by DotComSecrets Local have helped hundreds of people earn paychecks on their very first day.

Plus DotComSecrets Local has helped thousands of struggling small business move away from costly and ineffective traditional advertising and transfer their marketing focus to the internet, which has exponentially more potential customers and where marketing dollars have a much better return on investment.

Brunson -- an associate of famed motivational speaker Tony Robbins and international business tycoon Richard Branson -- said the same internet marketing techniques that have proven successful for internet superstars Facebook, Google, Foursquare and Twitter can be applied to local business to make their revenues skyrocket.

DotComSecrets Local uses local agents to connect small business with the company so they can start building their business more quickly and more efficiently than they could with traditional marketing techniques.

During this week’s webinars, participants will learn how they can join DCS Local chapters in their own home cities and become highly paid consultants while working part time and from their own homes. These local sales jobs have resulted in some DCS consultants earning more than $8,000 per month while doing no actual work other than connecting small business owners with DCS Local.

Participants also will discover how people with no sales or marketing experience whatsoever were able to start earning paychecks beginning on the very first day with DCS Local.

“We want to help these small businesses and we have the resources to do it,” Brunson said. “We’re just missing one thing that we need to reach them: A local presence. We need somebody on the ground.”

That’s why DCS Local is expanding its offline internet marketing network into every major city and metropolitan area in the US. And it all begins with these webinars.

Brunson stressed that the webinars were expected to fill up fast. Only 300 positions for each webinar will be made available, so those people who want to learn how they can start making thousands of dollars per week while working part time from their own homes should sign up fast before all the positions are filled.

Participants can sign up for one of this week’s three webinars by visiting:

http://dcswebinar.dotcomsecrets.com/r/1/1#

For more information about this week’s webinars or about DotComSecrets Local, visit http://local.dotcomsecrets.com/letter/.

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Kelsie Green
DotComSecrets Local
208-323-9451 7102
Email Information

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Successful Internet Marketer Russell Brunson Announces New Webinars for People Looking to Make Thousands Working Part ...

Social Marketing Strategy Web 2.0 | MLM Web 2.0 Sharing Sites – Video

20-02-2012 16:51 http://www.AndyMedlam.com Inside this video are Social Marketing Strategy Web 2.0 are revealed so you can get a better understanding of different forms of social marketing platforms

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Social Marketing Strategy Web 2.0 | MLM Web 2.0 Sharing Sites - Video