Archive for August 10th, 2008

(Credit: Pixelpost)

There are plenty of free ways to build an average photoblog, but if you have dreams of creating one that meets your needs and not just the masses, check out Pixelpost 1.7.1. Updated earlier this year with a bunch of new features including an Install Assistant, this MySQL/PHP-based application is a free download and needs only a modicum of technical knowledge and some server space to use.

Everything is tweakable and functionality can be extended with a number of free downloadable add-ons for everything from the capability to use PayPal to let visitors buy photos to adding histograms to images to an Adobe Lightroom exporter. All of them have easy-to-follow instructions for installing them, too.

If you’re not the tweaking type, simply pick one of the available templates (also free) and begin publishing your photos.

To see what I mean, pop over to GatheringOfPixels.com (click the skull above the pic at the right to see “before” shots) or any of the Pixelpost featured photoblogs.

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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Social network MySpace has signed a promotional deal to bring free Wi-Fi to its users…but only in the U.K., and only to access MySpace-owned pages.

It’s partnered with The Cloud, a European wireless provider that powers broadband access in establishments like hotels, fast-food joints, and airports. MySpace …

Source [The social]

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melted chocolate

Coffee, cheese, and chocolate have gotten increasingly fancy and esoteric over the past 20 years. It’s not just about Hershey bars anymore.

Artisanal chocolate is everywhere, and now some of it comes with a sustainable spin as well. Plenty magazine discovered an interesting Boston-area chocolatier called Taza Chocolate, which prides itself on using gentle roasting techniques and stone mills to process its Mexican cacao beans. The end product is intense dark chocolate suitable for eating alone or melting into recipes.

Taza sources organically grown beans directly from small farmer cooperatives and makes sure they receive more than fair trade prices. The company claims to be “uniquely positioned as one of the only independently owned, socially and environmentally responsible chocolate makers in the country.”

By that the company means it has set up streamlined supply chains, makes local deliveries by bicycle, packages everything in recycled paper, and even donates its organic waste to a local community garden organization.

And just to top it off: “It only takes one glimpse of our pile of bikes at the factory to discover that all of our employees either ride or walk to work.”

How sweet!

Don Willmott’s blog posts are provided by LifeWire, a part of The New York Times Company.

For more visit Source:[green.yahoo]

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Russia accuses U.S. of orchestrating conflict Russia has taken over their oil ports/pipeline, ports have been bombed, the Georgian president claims Russia fired at the pipeline but missed (that one could be propaganda on behalf of Georgia so it is as of yet unconfirmed) this is the important news for investors being left out. Georgian civilians […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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Facebook security chief Max Kelly has assured members in a blog post that the social network is “fighting the good fight” when it comes to several malware attacks discovered on the site in recent days.

“We spent most of last night working on a fix for a worm, which was …

Source [The social]

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Facebook is announcing later on Thursday a complete revamp of the analytics system it offers to developers for measuring the performance of their applications on its platform. It’s more extensive than the company’s current decision to switch from publicly reporting daily use to monthly use.

It’ll be …

Source [The social]

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Dollar extends broad rally as euro withers Combination of factors contributes to greenback’s gains By William L. Watts & Lisa Twaronite, MarketWatch Last Update: 8/8/2008 4:18:00 PM SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) — A sell-off in crude-oil futures, surging stocks on Wall Street and U.S. economic data showing a rise in productivity further fueled a dollar rally Friday initially sprung by concerns about […] For more visit Source:www.investment-blog.net

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Updated 2:30 p.m., with comment from Microsoft.

It had become a ritual for Microsoft’s consumer unit. Each year it came out with a new version of Microsoft Money and sent new boxes to retail stores.

That tradition is now dead.

Microsoft, via a newsgroup posting from one of its enthusiasts, announced it will no longer update Money each year and, more importantly, it will stop selling the product at retail stores.

It’s the latest indication that Microsoft is seeing a shift in the way people, particularly consumers and small businesses, purchase their software.

(Credit: Microsoft)

“More and more retail consumers are going on the web to shop the endless rows of digital shelves,” Microsoft said, according to the newsgroup posting, which was noted earlier Friday by ZDNet blogger Mary Jo Foley. “In response to our retail partners’ needs, consumer behavior and business efficiencies, Microsoft is focusing distribution efforts for Microsoft Money Plus software online via download and discontinuing traditional box sales of the software at retail.”

Money is not the first consumer title to see its fortunes change in current years. Another perennial shelf space occupant, Microsoft Digital Image Suite, was discontinued altogether last year.

However, Microsoft added in the posting that it isn’t abandoning packaged software companywide.

“Microsoft does not see shrink wrapped software going away anytime soon and we are always talking to customers about different ways to price and package our software offerings,” it said in the posting. “The company is evolving its strategy and product solutions to meet customer demand and optimize business efficiencies.”

Indeed, the company has seen very strong sales of the latest version of Office and its OneCare security software is also sold heavily at retail stores. The company just introduced Equipt, which is a subscription service combining the two, but sold as a packaged product at retail.

The company has been eyeing this shift for some time and looking at options like subscriptions, on the web services, and even advertising-funded software on the Computer. After years of weighing the issue, the company went ahead with Microsoft Works SE, an ad-supported free version of its consumer productivity package.

Intuit, another massive name in consumer software, has already seen a huge shift to both on the internet sales as well as selling its personal and small business finance programs as on the internet services, rather than packaged software.

The company already gets more money from its TurboTax on the internet service than it does for the packaged product, with more than 10 million people doing their taxes on the web. The company also has 128,000 small business customers using its on the internet services, according to spokeswoman Heather McLellan.

It has also debuted niche products that are online-only such as a medical account expense manager product.

Update: I spoke this afternoon with Chris Jolley, a product manager in Microsoft’s financial products group. He added some details on the trends that prompted Microsoft’s move.

In the past 12 months, half of the sales for Money Plus, the latest version of Microsoft Money, have come via digital download. That’s roughly three times the rate of a year earlier, he said.

Even though the company laid the ground work for less-than-annual updates when it renamed the product a year ago, Jolley said that the decisions to go digital and to skip this year’s update were made more recently.

Fore more visit Source: [webware]

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Social network MySpace has signed a promotional deal to bring free Wi-Fi to its users…but only in the U.K., and only to access MySpace-owned pages.

It’s partnered with The Cloud, a European wireless provider that powers broadband access in establishments like hotels, fast-food joints, and airports. MySpace …

Source [The social]

Comments No Comments »

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