Earn Money Online through Small Scale Online Businesses – 44th Edition

The global financial situation has experienced a sharp decline recently, and more and more people are looking for ways to ensure financial stability in the face of the major recession and to effectively ensure safety amidst news of massive lay-offs that have been plaguing the headlines in print media, the television, and even the online newsgroups. One of the most frequently travelled path that people today are making in order to ensure their financial success is through the use of the internet. Read more »

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Monitor Any Page with Website Monitor Google Gadget

Do you want to be the first to know when your site goes down? Or once your page goes off Digg front page? Here’s one handy Google desktop gadget for you to use when you are running some solid social media promotion: Website Monitor (by Random Geek).

Here’s what it can do:

(1) Monitor the availability of a URLs;
(2) Check your web servers are up and running; and responding;
(3) Confirm the contents of the webpage, looking for specified text in the body of the page;
(4) Check the performance of the page, by setting a response time threshold.

To try it, you need Google desktop installed. Now, download the tool and open it with Google Desktop. You will instantly be offered to add URLs to monitor, or you can add/edit URLs to track from the tool “Options” menu:

  • Provide the name of the project;
  • Provide the URL to track;
  • Set the frequency of checks;
  • Set the response time threshold;
  • (Optionally) Provide the term to track on-page.

Website monitor: add URLs to monitor

Like I said, the tool turned useful to me to monitor my submission progress on Digg:

  • First, once your URL hits Digg front page, you might want to monitor if your servers will handle the traffic spike;
  • Secondly, the tool will let you know once your URL is off the front page (set digg home page tracking for your domain name as the key word).

The tool visualizes the URL status by using three colors: red (error), yellow (warning), green (all is fine).

Website monitor

Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal.

Monitor Any Page with Website Monitor Google Gadget


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Steve Jobs More Popular Than Oprah, Ashley Olsen, Teen Study Shows

Junior Achievement surveyed US kids aged 12-17 and asked them to choose the entrepreneur they most admired from a list provided. Surprisingly, teens chose a business legend from the technology sector over fashionistas, Facebook and even the Queen of Daytime. Steve Jobs was selected over Tony Hawk, Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen, Kimora Lee Simmons, Oprah Winfrey and Mark Zuckerberg.

More on Mark Zuckerberg


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Obama’s Favorite Phrases

WASHINGTON — For all his flourish, President Barack Obama sure falls back on a few familiar phrases.

Make no mistake. Change isn’t easy. It won’t happen overnight. There will be setbacks and false starts.

Those who routinely listen to the president have come to expect some of those expressions to pop up in almost every speech. (That includes you, cynics and naysayers, the ones Obama mentions all the time without identifying who is saying nay.)

Yet in the portfolio of presidential phrases, none is more pervasive than Obama’s four-word favorite: Let me be clear.

It is his emphatic windup for, well, everything.

“Let me be clear,” he said in describing his surprise at winning the Nobel Peace Prize. “I do not view it as a recognition of my own accomplishments, but rather as an affirmation of American leadership on behalf of aspirations held by people in all nations.”

“Let me be clear,” he said in one of his dozens of pitches for a health insurance overhaul. “If you like your doctor or health care provider, you can keep them.”

Presidents talk so much in public that is not surprising to find rhetorical patterns. Although Obama is known for a flair with the written and spoken word, his hardest mission is often to make complicated matters relevant to the masses.

So clarity, it seems, is of the highest order.

Terrorists? “Now let me be clear: We are indeed at war with al-Qaida and its affiliates.”

Student testing? “Let me be clear: Success should be judged by results, and data is a powerful tool to determine results.”

Iran? “Let me be clear: Iran’s nuclear and ballistic missile activity poses a real threat, not just to the United States, but to Iran’s neighbors and our allies.”

Auto bailouts? “Let me be clear: The United States government has no interest in running GM.”

The president takes the phrase everywhere.

In Moscow: “Let me be clear: America wants a strong, peaceful, and prosperous Russia.”

In Ghana: “Let me be clear: Africa is not the crude caricature of a continent at perpetual war.”

In Italy, bemoaning poor U.S. leadership on climate change: “Let me be clear: Those days are over.”

In Trinidad, announcing new aid: “Let me be clear: This is not charity.”

Obama has used the same phrase, or a variation of it, to make his point about the strategy in Iraq, the war in Afghanistan, U.S.-China relations, bipartisanship, pet legislative projects and Turkey’s bid to join the European Union.

He has relied on it to look ahead (”Let me be clear: We pay for this plan,” Obama says of his college initiative) and to look back (”Let me be clear: Those ideas have been tested, and they have failed” he says of economic models he dislikes.)

White House spokesman Josh Earnest says Obama’s style, which he referred to as presidential throat “clearing,” is purposeful.

“While some in Washington seek political advantage by hiding behind ambiguity,” Earnest said, “the president regularly seeks to make it clear where he stands and what he intends to do.”

Perhaps the nation should have seen this coming. Candidate Obama set the tone.

“Let me be clear: It’s outrageous that we find ourselves in a position where taxpayers must bear the burden for the greed and irresponsibility of Wall Street and Washington,” Obama said in September 2008.

There must be something catchy to all this. The people around Obama are just as insistent.

Here’s Vice President Joe Biden, assuring members of Georgia’s Parliament that U.S. efforts to reset relations with Russia wouldn’t come at their expense: “Let me be clear: They have not, they will not, and they cannot.”

And senior adviser David Axelrod, on missed legislative deadlines on health care: “Let me be clear. We’re less interested in hard deadlines than in moving the process forward.”

Lest anyone get too serious about this, Obama has lightened the mood with the phrase, too. He made state lawmakers laugh when he said the massive taxpayer-financed stimulus plan wouldn’t be spent on frivolous projects such as dog parks.

“Now, let me be clear,” Obama said in March, before Bo the dog arrived. “I don’t have anything against dog parks.”

Clearly.

___

Associated Press writer Philip Elliott contributed to this report.

More on Barack Obama


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Monitor Any Page with Website Monitor Google Gadget

Do you want to be the first to know when your site goes down? Or once your page goes off Digg front page? Here’s one handy Google desktop gadget for you to use when you are running some solid social media promotion: Website Monitor (by Random Geek).

Here’s what it can do:

(1) Monitor the availability of a URLs;
(2) Check your web servers are up and running; and responding;
(3) Confirm the contents of the webpage, looking for specified text in the body of the page;
(4) Check the performance of the page, by setting a response time threshold.

To try it, you need Google desktop installed. Now, download the tool and open it with Google Desktop. You will instantly be offered to add URLs to monitor, or you can add/edit URLs to track from the tool “Options” menu:

  • Provide the name of the project;
  • Provide the URL to track;
  • Set the frequency of checks;
  • Set the response time threshold;
  • (Optionally) Provide the term to track on-page.

Website monitor: add URLs to monitor

Like I said, the tool turned useful to me to monitor my submission progress on Digg:

  • First, once your URL hits Digg front page, you might want to monitor if your servers will handle the traffic spike;
  • Secondly, the tool will let you know once your URL is off the front page (set digg home page tracking for your domain name as the key word).

The tool visualizes the URL status by using three colors: red (error), yellow (warning), green (all is fine).

Website monitor

Check out the SEO Tools guide at Search Engine Journal.

Monitor Any Page with Website Monitor Google Gadget


Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • NewsVine
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  • YahooMyWeb
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • TwitThis
  • Live
  • LinkedIn
  • Pownce
  • MySpace

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