The First Dose: New knowledge for today - learning and doing initial Site Promotion using Go Daddy's Traffic Blazer.
The new knowledge that I picked up today was the basic fundamentals of how to promote my newly published site: http://www.besthomecareproviders.com. This is really not rocket science and nothing new to many internet entrepreneurs but to a newbie like me, this certainly was new ground: learning and doing search engine optomization, website analysis, and finally site submission and registration with the major search engines and directories. A great help is the service package I purchased from Go Daddy, their Trail Blazer Deluxe Package. I'm not going into the details of that here - you can check that one out for yourself - but it was a thrill to be "registered" for the first time with Google and Yahoo - with hundreds of other search engines and directories still to follow. It just made me realize the immensity of the world wide web - and the many details, procedures, protocols that anyone serious in this business has to go through and understand. Good thing the Support provided by Go Daddy was really excellent. They're there when you need them for any question or clarification and the steps that one has to do. An internet geek can probably figure this out on his own - but for one in a hurry to get moving and without the luxury of allocating longer time for self-study and experimentation, I have been taking the easier route - just go to Daddy for answers to questions and guides on what to do next.
Just to let you have a sense of where I'm coming from: I am new at this internet business thing - designing and publishing a website, blogging, podcasting (I haven't done any of these things before.). Although I've been using the PC for many years - as early as when it was still in that original large rectangular box with a separate green monitor - and where the biggest thing for me then was knowing how to do "Wordstar" wordprocessing. To compound my learning situation, I have just shifted from the PC to the Mac, and there is a whole new world of difference in doing things with the computer that is somewhat akin to the differences between Apples and Oranges. I have my transition pains and agitations - but that's another story.
Still another element that compounds the situation and makes me move this forward just a bit faster is the fact that I am going for a three week semestral break not only from school work, but I will also be out of the country - and away from my work station by Tuesday next week (that 08/12/08). So I really had to get the ball rolling, at least on the major search engine registrations, pronto!!! I realized here that, just like in any other major undertaking in life, you really have to think long-term. I was advised, (and I took it), to adjust my domain registration from my cautious month-to-month initial "testing" phase that I signed up to about a week ago, to a five-year Domain Registration - in order to signal to the search engines and all other internet search players that I'm not about to quit soon, and therefore give me a higher search ranking than if I had remained as a month-to-month entrepreneur. The logic of this view made sense to me, so I heeded Go Daddy's suggestion to upgrade to 5 years domain registration. Like it or not, ready or not - I'm committed here, so that's that.
The Second Dose: Something Funny
Here are three jokes I found today:
"My husband won a thousand dollars at poker the other night and he split with me."
"He gave you half?"
"No, he took his thousand and left!"
- - - - - -
She came into the police station with a picture in her hand.
"My husband has disappeared," she sobbed. "Here is his picture. I want you to find him."
The inspector looked up from the photograph.
"Why?" he asked.
- - - - - - - -
"John, dear, I'm to be in amateur theatricals. What will people say when I wear tights?"
"They'll probably say, I married you for your money."
- - - - - - - -
Now here's the Third and Final Dose for the Day: An inspiring story.
Source: From a collection of favorite writings about enjoying and keeping friends, by Peter Seymour, published in a small but very substantial book entitled 'The Treasure of Friendship," copyright 1968 by Hallmark Cards, Inc. The story is by Robert Hardy Andrews:
To Be A Friend.
In India 2500 yearts ago, a man named Gautama Buddha walked the roads and preached and taught. His teachings are still remembered by five hundred million Buddhist believers in Asia and the Orient.
I am not a Buddhist. But I find no disloyalty to my faith in accepting advice as practical today as it was when Buddha first offered it. In a mango grove in Bihar he told one of his disciples that five things are necessary to achieve release from unhappiness and fear. These, he said, include: restraint, proper discourse, energy in producing good thoughts, firmness in pursuing them, and acquisition of true insight. But first of all, and above all, he said, the seeker must learn to be a good friend.
When people asked for a definition of friendliness, Buddha answered, "It means to have hope of the welfare of others more than for one's self . . . . It means affection unsullied by hope or thought of any reward on earth or in heaven."
Buddha admitted that such generous wholeheartedness would not be easy. Yet in the long run it is intensely practical. "Compassion and knowledge and virtue" he said, "are the only possessions that do not fade away."
"To be a good friend . . ." How simple it sounds - just five short words. Yet how much they represent! Think how much it could mean, a flowing out of new forces of friendship from person to person, and eventually from land to land.
Try as we may, there is no other form of security. As Buddha said, "Friendship is the only cure for hatred, the only guarantee of peace."
Let me just add to this story what Socrates said of friendship:
"Be slow to fall into friendship;
but when thou art in,
continue firm and constant."
Well folks, that's it - my Daily Dose for the Mind, for today.
Saturday, August 9, 2008
Friday, August 8, 2008
Here's My Prescription
Everyday of our life, we need somethings to keep us going. Actually, a lot of things, but to reduce it to its barest minimum, we need Food, Shelter and Clothing. But that is just on the physical side - the body. If you believe, as I and a great many others do, that we are not only body but mind and spirit as well, then certainly that basic need increases. I do not want to venture into the spirit side - that is something that is personal and individual, based on our own beliefs - but I can share with you my prescriptions for the mind.
In summary, my prescribed Daily Dose for the Mind consists of the following:
So, without much ado, here is my initial prescription for today:
First Dose: A Bit of Knowledge
Source: “The Origins of Hyperlink” - from a book by Biz Stone, “Who Let the Blogs Out” published in 2004.
This may already be known to most of you, veteran bloggers out there, but for a newbie like me, this is a new bit of information - so I am counting this as part of the First Dose. And in summary, here it is:
Biz Stone is described in the Foreword written by Wil Wheaton as: “Biz Stone is to blogging what Marconi is to radio . . . one of the very first people to bring blogging to the masses”
In Chapter 1, Biz Stone describes a castle built long ago by a particularly important sect of Buddhist monks. This castle had a very private room called the “Room of Knowledge,” where an elaborate web of strings crisscross throughout the space in a random pattern which “looked like a ridiculously complex and giant game of cat’s cradle.” The strings would link books to other manuscripts, drawings, and occasional small statue or wood carving. “There was more than sixty thousand feet of string in the room and more giant rolls of it out in the shed waiting to be used.” The monks, who were the only ones with access to this room were were actually developing the physical manifestations of hyperlinks - the “lifeblood of the web, and, by extension, the blogs...” Let me not steal the thunder from the story - you can read it for yourself.
Biz Stone traces the origins of the hyperlink from Vannevar Bush, visionary scientist who in the 1930s wrote about a machine he called Memex in an essay titled “As We May Think,” Douglas Engelbart who in 1940s picked up Bush’s concept and subsequently created the “Online System,” the legendary prototype of the “hypertext,” Ted Nelson who in the 1960s coined the term “hypertext” and ultimately Tim Berners-Lee who in the 1980s-1990s spearheaded a project called “WorldWideWeb,” which eventually led to the birth of what we now know as the internet.
That is as far as I will go with the “Knowledge Dose” - you can do your own research and reading on the rest of the story.
The Second Dose: A Joke
Source: Eleanor Doan’s “The Speaker’s Sourcebook of 4,000 Illustrations, Quotations, Anecdotes ...”published in 1960.
Definition of a “Bachelor”
“A bachelor is a man who has cheated some woman out of a divorce.”
“A bachelor never gets over the idea that he is a thing of beauty and a boy forever.”
The Third Dose: An Inspiring Story
Source: From “Fragile Moments” edited by Phyllis Hobe in 1980, a short story by Arve Hatcher.
Recently after a heavy blizzard my car was stuck in a snowpile, and my efforts to get it moving only dug its wheels in deeper and deeper. Down the street came a muscular teen-ager carrying a shovel. When he saw my problem he promptly got to work and set the car free.
“Many thanks,” I said gratefully as I reached to hand him some folded bills.
“No way,” he said with a smile. “I belong to the DUO Club.”
“Never heard of it,” I replied.
“Sure you have,” he grinned. “it’s the do-unto-others-as-you-would-have-them-do-unto-you club.” And with a wave of his hand and another big smile, he was on his way.
In summary, my prescribed Daily Dose for the Mind consists of the following:
- A Bit of Knowledge - something new that we learn each day.
- A Joke - something to that gives us smiles, (better yet, laughter) and amusement.
- An Inspiring Story.
So, without much ado, here is my initial prescription for today:
First Dose: A Bit of Knowledge
Source: “The Origins of Hyperlink” - from a book by Biz Stone, “Who Let the Blogs Out” published in 2004.
This may already be known to most of you, veteran bloggers out there, but for a newbie like me, this is a new bit of information - so I am counting this as part of the First Dose. And in summary, here it is:
Biz Stone is described in the Foreword written by Wil Wheaton as: “Biz Stone is to blogging what Marconi is to radio . . . one of the very first people to bring blogging to the masses”
In Chapter 1, Biz Stone describes a castle built long ago by a particularly important sect of Buddhist monks. This castle had a very private room called the “Room of Knowledge,” where an elaborate web of strings crisscross throughout the space in a random pattern which “looked like a ridiculously complex and giant game of cat’s cradle.” The strings would link books to other manuscripts, drawings, and occasional small statue or wood carving. “There was more than sixty thousand feet of string in the room and more giant rolls of it out in the shed waiting to be used.” The monks, who were the only ones with access to this room were were actually developing the physical manifestations of hyperlinks - the “lifeblood of the web, and, by extension, the blogs...” Let me not steal the thunder from the story - you can read it for yourself.
Biz Stone traces the origins of the hyperlink from Vannevar Bush, visionary scientist who in the 1930s wrote about a machine he called Memex in an essay titled “As We May Think,” Douglas Engelbart who in 1940s picked up Bush’s concept and subsequently created the “Online System,” the legendary prototype of the “hypertext,” Ted Nelson who in the 1960s coined the term “hypertext” and ultimately Tim Berners-Lee who in the 1980s-1990s spearheaded a project called “WorldWideWeb,” which eventually led to the birth of what we now know as the internet.
That is as far as I will go with the “Knowledge Dose” - you can do your own research and reading on the rest of the story.
The Second Dose: A Joke
Source: Eleanor Doan’s “The Speaker’s Sourcebook of 4,000 Illustrations, Quotations, Anecdotes ...”published in 1960.
Definition of a “Bachelor”
“A bachelor is a man who has cheated some woman out of a divorce.”
“A bachelor never gets over the idea that he is a thing of beauty and a boy forever.”
The Third Dose: An Inspiring Story
Source: From “Fragile Moments” edited by Phyllis Hobe in 1980, a short story by Arve Hatcher.
Recently after a heavy blizzard my car was stuck in a snowpile, and my efforts to get it moving only dug its wheels in deeper and deeper. Down the street came a muscular teen-ager carrying a shovel. When he saw my problem he promptly got to work and set the car free.
“Many thanks,” I said gratefully as I reached to hand him some folded bills.
“No way,” he said with a smile. “I belong to the DUO Club.”
“Never heard of it,” I replied.
“Sure you have,” he grinned. “it’s the do-unto-others-as-you-would-have-them-do-unto-you club.” And with a wave of his hand and another big smile, he was on his way.
Initial Trial Post
This is just an initial test post. I have actually finished what I thought was my first posting but for some reason, even after I have pressed Publish Post, I cannot seem to find. I am obviously new at this so if that first post - which took some time and effort to put together is "lost" somewhere, and I am unable to retrieve it, then it's just my luck. Perhaps all newbies like me must have gone through something like this. I must admit that it is frustrating - but I am keeping my "cool" and just pick it up from there. Perhaps I may have done something "wrong" or not in keeping with the sequence of things here.
So that's it.. This is my first blog - assuming the one I prepared before - which had a bit more of the substance than this narrative venting - is really lost. Hopefully it's not - but whatever it is - the fun begins.
So that's it.. This is my first blog - assuming the one I prepared before - which had a bit more of the substance than this narrative venting - is really lost. Hopefully it's not - but whatever it is - the fun begins.
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