What is Online Shopping? Online shopping is the process consumers go through to purchase products or services over the Internet. An online shop, e-shop, e-store, Internet shop, webshop, online store, or virtual store evokes the physical analogy of buying products or services at a bricks-and-mortar retailer or in a shopping mall. The metaphor of an online catalog [...]

The Economics of Free
I just came across a very insightful article from Chris Anderson, editor-in-chief of the Wired magazine, titled Free! Why $0.00 Is the Future of Business. If you have not read it yet, please do. Perhaps even print it out. Basically he is arguing that as the marginal cost of supplying processing power, storage and bandwidth gets closer to zero, a whole new economic environment will emerge. Blogs, Wikipedia, Google and other things that you probably use daily are right in the middle of this revolution. Here is a quote:

Medicare Online Search and Information Resource – Medicare – Medicare Provider Enrollment
Date : Tue, 19 Jun 2007 17:11:24 GMT RSS Parser Web Site Traffic Outdoor Search Resource Welcome to the Rangerrob Outdoor Search Information Resource site. With real personal treatment and effective packages. Find all types of outdoor activities and places. Date : Tue, 19 Jun 2007 16:11:39 GMT AARP Cites Racial Disparities in Medicare Immunization [...]

The Dynamics of the Subscriber Impulse: When Do People Decide To Grab Your RSS Feed?
This is a question that has been on my mind for some time already. When I started getting a good response from readers on my first blogs, I thought to myself: “Cool, they like the content. Now it is just a matter of getting mentioned on a blog with thousands of subscribers and these people will want to grab my RSS feed as well.” Interestingly enough, even a couple of years of blogging experience didn’t manage to dispel completely this belief I had. When I launched DailyBits, I thought that if I was able to get a guest post featured on a big tech blog I would automatically gain thousands of new RSS subscribers. It is a numbers game, after all. Imagine you score a guest article on a blog with 150,000 RSS subscribers. The article features a prominent link to your blog right on top of it. One would think that at least 10% of these readers would be interested in checking where that guest article is coming from. So we have 15,000 readers checking your blog. If your content is good and has value to that audience, similarly, one would assume that at least 10% of those visitors would grab your RSS feed. So at the end of the day you would have some 1,500 new RSS subscribers. Sounds about right in theory, eh? Unfortunately this model does not hold true in practice.

Lower School Teacher
Lower School Teacher August 2008 Founded in 1929, Country Day educates children in grades K-12. In August 2008. the School will add a [...]

C.R.A.P.:The Four Principles of Sound Design
This is a guest blog by Jacob Cass. Be sure to check out his $5000 prize giveaway. As a graphic designer, I could tell you if your website design is C.R.A.P. Not crap as in crap crap, but I mean C.R.A.P as in the underlying principles of good design. C.R.A.P stands for contrast, repeitition, alignment and proximity and these are the four principles of design that a blog design should adhere to.

PART TIME job (International Correspondence)
From The Desk Of David J. Slattery Little Saints Orphanage & Motherless Babies’ Home Tel: +44 70457 91058 , +44 70319 29962 E-mail: lsombh1@yahoo.com 79 Bridge Street, Manchester, M3 3BQ, United Kingdom In reference to your listing in an online…… Executive Director (TBI Rehabilitation [...]