flickr Marketing

November 30, 2006

What’s Flickr I hear you say? Well basically it’s a web site where you can upload photos of your holidays, loved ones or maybe even drunk pictures from a night out with your mates!

It doesn’t sound like anything new or exciting until someone comments on your photos or adds them to their favourite’s.

Flickr works because people actually take the time to look at your photos, if you join, you will too. It has a wide range of users, from teenagers as you would expect, CEO’s and Comedians (Dave Gorman the Google Whack guy) etc.

On a day to day basis it is very easy to use, my Dad worked it out for himself!

http://www.flickr.com/tools/

Now and again you come across photos from shops displaying their latest products, graphic designers, models, old football programs, charities and professional photographers etc.

Jewellery | Pro Photographer | Model | $100 Laptop Charity

We’ve even started one for a bit of fun, here is us with the Mayor of Folkestone at exhibition we did back in May.

The new office in Edinburgh we open this year

And a exciting picture of our cash registers and EPoS systems in the Hastings office!

http://www.flickr.com/photos/terinea/

I’ve always thought this could be nice way to sell indirectly to potential customers. So I was inspired to write this blog when I came across a posting from a blogger called Jackal, on the 26th of November 2006.

3. I have been commissioned to design a logo for a restaurant in New York. I was approached after my work was seen on ‘flickr’. I will give more details once things are finalized.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/jackal1/

I’m sure that’s she is not the first to find work this way? It’s worth noting that Jackal is from Scotland, not New York! Like any indirect marketing approach you must add value or not been seen to direct sell, because in the digital world this is called spamming, and everyone hates spam!

You can sign up for a free account (20MB per month upload) or purchase a pro account for about 75p per month with 2,000MB upload limit.

http://www.flickr.com/

Jamie

Wallpaper for your desktop http://www.flickr.com/groups/wallpapers/pool/

The flickr logo maker came from these guys http://flickr.nosv.org/

Best Flickr Photos http://flickrsbestphotographers.blogspot.com

Flickr Toys and Hacks http://bighugelabs.com/flickr/

Most popular cameras on Flickr http://tech.cybernetnews.com/2006/11/21/popular-cameras-on-flickr-including-cameraphones/

Flickr Camera guide http://www.flickr.com/cameras/

Author: Jamie @ 1:21 pm
Category: Uncategorized




My 5 top Ten Blogging Tips

November 22, 2006

Over the last two months I’ve come across a list of good posts on blogging advice. A lot do repeat themselves but I like to refresh my mind a little, and quite often pick up a new tip. I’ve highlighted my favourite’s…

Top Ten Things You Can Do To Get Blogged

Be descriptive. Tell me what your product does immediately in crisp and interesting prose that is FOA (Free Of Acronyms). FaceBook is a social networking site for college students. Pandora is a music recommendation engine. See? I need more details down the road, but give me something to hold on to before you jump into the cool way you’ve implemented ajax into the FAQs, or whatever.

http://www.techcrunch.com/2005/09/08/top-ten-things-you-can-do-to-get-blogged/

Ten Tips on Successful Blogging

This is my number favourite tip, Find a niche - and evolve it. I originally started this blog to provide advice on all thing to do with computers, from iPod’s to computer programming. This isn’t really Terinea’s niche market. So now we only provide advice on IT issues concerning people who run or work for small to medium businesses in the UK.

4. Find a niche - and evolve it

There’s no point writing on some esoteric subject from the off. What are the chances of anyone coming by you? Write about a few things that interest you to start with. Focus on the one you have your eye on, by all means, but include other stuff too.

Really importantly, be regular. Keep the posts coming. If you are going to be away, let your readers know. The last thing you want is people thinking the blog is dead and unsubcribing. It’s a commitment to be taken seriously.

Over time, your blog will evolve, and its niche will become clear, if you want one. It’s an organic process. But unless you are a total weirdo, if stuff interests you, the chances are that there are other people on the web who will be interested too. But you have to cast a wide net to begin with.

http://blogsmart.wordpress.com/2006/10/19/ten-tips-on-successful-blogging/

Top 10 Best Designed Blogs

Okay not really a tip, but this site shows you a gallery of pretty blog sites

http://elliottback.com/wp/archives/2006/04/16/top-ten-best-designed-blogs/

Ten blogging Hacks (Geek talk for tips, not hacking)

6) Tell the World Where They Can Find You
Where’s Waldo? Who cares. Where’s Stowe Boyd? Ah, I definitely care about that. Normally it would be hard to know when this blogging legend is actually in a town near you. But Stowe, being the enterprising guy that he is, he has a map on his blog that gives us his coordinates. You can add one to your blog using Plazes. Here’s a related bonus hack. You can find other bloggers who live near you using feedmap.

Picture 1-20

http://www.micropersuasion.com/2005/11/ten_blogging_ha.html

My 50 Favourite Blogging Resources

And for everthing else I’ve missed then check out this post from Pronet Advertising.

http://www.pronetadvertising.com/articles/my-50-favorite-blogging-resources.html

 Plus one extra one, Top 10 Places to Find Free Images For Your Blogs

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Author: Jamie @ 2:49 pm
Category: Uncategorized




Lets Do Business 2006

November 20, 2006

http://letsdobusiness.org/

Thank you to everyone that visited us at “Lets Do Business 2006″. I hope anyone that received a copy of 50 Simple IT Ideas For Increasing Your Business Competitiveness & Productivity found it useful and interesting article.

You can find out more interesting IT articles specifically aim at Small to Medium Sized Businesses at http://www.terinea.co.uk/blog .

 

Author: Jamie @ 11:29 am
Category: Uncategorized




Protecting Your Self Against Bad Web Sites

November 18, 2006


The guys over at McAfee have produce an excellent little tool that will advise you against bad web sites that may contain adware, spyware, phishing sites and other unwanted programs.

You can download it for either Internet Explorer or Firefox.

Then next download the pluggin from the McAfee depending on your web browser preference

http://www.siteadvisor.com/download/ff.html - Firefox

http://www.siteadvisor.com/download/ie.html - Internet Explorer

Personally I think you should be using Firefox, download from here Get Firefox.

Author: Jamie @ 4:28 pm
Category: Uncategorized




Profile and Folder Redirection In Windows Server 2003

November 7, 2006

This post is really for our own reference, but Windows Networking is worth checking out!

 

Windows Networking logo

Profile and Folder Redirection In Windows Server 2003

Launched: Mar 01, 2005

Updated: Mar 01, 2005

Section: Articles & Tutorials :: Windows 2003

Author: Brien M. Posey

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Assigning roaming profiles to users can greatly reduce your day to day workload. However, implementing roaming profiles can become a nightmare unless you know how to avoid the performance problems associated with them. In this article I will discuss the advantages and the common pitfalls associated with roaming profiles.

I’ve always considered dealing with end users to be about as much fun as a trip to the dentist or a tax audit. Fortunately, there are some things that you can do to help keep the users happy (a happy user is a quiet user). The techniques that I am going to be showing you in this article center around the use of roaming profiles and folder redirection. Right now you might be wondering how something like roaming profiles can make your life easier. Well, there are several situations in which roaming profiles and folder redirections pay off big time.

For example, any decent administrator will instruct their users to save their data on a network drive so that the data gets backed up each night. Inevitably though, some users will save data to the local hard drive. If that hard drive happens to crash, then the user will lose all of their data and will be upset because you didn’t back it up. One of the techniques that I will show you will redirect the user’s My Documents folder to a network share.

Another example of how roaming profiles and folder redirections can make your life easier involves a situation in which the user gets a new PC. Normally, you would have to manually move all of the user’s documents and settings from the old PC to the new one. You would have to be careful not to leave anything behind to avoid upsetting the user and to accidentally exposing the user’s files to whoever inherits the user’s old PC. With roaming profiles though, each user’s files and settings follow them from PC to PC, so there is no need to move anything.

Another situation in which roaming profiles and folder redirections come in handy is when a user’s workstation crashes. Management can easily have the user whose computer crashed use someone else’s PC for the day and all of the user’s normal files and settings will be there. This frees up your time so that you can focus on resurrecting the dead computer.

I could go on and on with more examples of how roaming profiles and folder redirections can improve the quality of your life, but I think you probably get the idea. Instead, I want to move on and show you how it’s done.

The Anatomy of A Profile

Before I show you how to set up a roaming profile, you need to understand that any time a user logs into a Windows XP workstation, Windows automatically creates a profile for that user (unless the machine already contains a profile for the user). The profiles are stored in the Documents and Settings folder and are contained within a sub-folder bearing the user’s name. For example, if I logged onto a machine as Brien, then Windows would place my profile in a folder named C:\Documents and Settings\Brien.

The profile itself is fairly intricate because it contains the user’s documents and any settings that are user specific. For example, a profile contains things like the user’s application settings (EX: how Outlook is configured to allow that user access to their E-mail), Internet Explorer favorites and cookies, the user’s desktop, and the user’s Start Menu. Figure A shows the contents of a profile directory, and should give you a better idea of what all information is stored within a user’s profile.


Figure A: This is a user’s profile folder

Defining A Roaming Profile

Now that you know what a profile looks like, let’s talk about making the profile mobile. The basic technique behind creating a roaming profile involves creating a shared folder on the server, creating the user a folder within the share, and then defining the user’s profile location through the group policy.

For example, suppose that you wanted to implement roaming profiles in your own organization. The first thing that you would have to do is to create an empty folder on one of your file servers. You can call the folder anything that you want, but I have traditionally named this folder PROFILES. After you create the Profiles folder, you must share the folder. I recommend sharing the folder in a way that gives everyone full control at the share level. I would then recommend controlling permissions at the NTFS level.

When I define the NTFS permissions, I allow everyone to have read access to the PROFILES folder. I then create sub folders for each user. The sub folder’s name should match the user’s name. As you create each user’s individual folder, you will need to define some NTFS permissions. I recommend granting the Administrator and the user full control over the folder. You should also make the user the owner of the folder. After you have set these permissions, you should block parent permissions from propagating to the folder. Otherwise, everyone will be able to read anything in the user’s profile folder.

In most situations, this will take care of the necessary permissions. However, I have seen at least one network in which the backup software was unable to backup the user’s profile directories until the backup program’s service account was granted access to each user’s folder. That is the exception rather than the rule though.

Once you have created the necessary folders and defined the appropriate permissions, it’s time to redirect the user’s profile. To do so, open the Active Directory Users and Computers console, right click on a user account, and select the Properties command from the resulting shortcut menu. When you do, you will see the user’s properties sheet. Now, select the properties sheet’s Profile tab. The very first field on the tab is the profile path. Enter the user’s profile path as: \\server_name\share_name\user_name. For example, if you created a share named PROFILES on a server named TAZ, then the path to Brien’s profile should be \\TAZ\PROFILES\Brien. Click OK and then the user’s profile will be roaming starting with the next login.

Folder Redirection

After you enable roaming profiles for a couple of users, the first thing that you will probably notice is that logins and log offs become extremely slow for those users. The reason for this is that the user’s profile is actually being maintained in multiple locations.

The first time that a user logs in after roaming profiles have been enabled, a roaming profile does not exist for the user, so Windows uses the profile that’s stored in the local C:\Documents and Settings\ folder. When the user logs off, the entire contents of the local profile (minus the Internet Explorer cache) is copied to the server. If the user has lots of big files, this process can take a long time to complete.

The next time that the user logs on, a roaming profile does exist. The roaming profile takes precedence over any local profile that might exist. Therefore, the entire profile is copied from the server to the local C:\Documents and Settings folder as a part of the login process. As before, if the user has a lot of large files, this can take a long time to complete. I have personally seen situations in which a login has taken over an hour because the user’s profile was so massive.

Once the login process completes, the user works off of the local copy of the profile (which is now a mirror of the network copy). However, it’s very possible that the user could modify the profile by creating a document, placing an icon on the desktop, changing wallpapers, or whatever. Therefore, Windows considers the local profile to be the most current and copies it to the network when the user logs off.

The solution to obscenely long logons and log offs is to use folder redirection. Folder redirection allows you to save portions of the user’s profile in a different location on the network. The advantage to using folder redirection is that once a folder has been redirected to an alternate location, it no longer has to be copied every time that the user logs on or off. Windows just understands that those particular folders will always reside on the network. Windows will only touch those folders when it needs to open a file from one of them.

You can’t redirect every folder in a user’s profile, but you can redirect the ones that tend to be the largest and take the longest to copy each time a user logs in or out. The folders that you can redirect are Application Data, Desktop, My Documents, and Start Menu.

You can actually redirect these folders to a user’s local profile, but that defeats the purpose of implementing roaming profiles. Therefore, I recommend creating a share point on the server to which you can redirect these folders. Creating a share point for folder redirection is a lot easier than creating a share point for roaming profiles. Basically, you can just create a folder, share it, and give everyone full control at the share level.

The actual folder redirection is done through the group policy. To redirect a folder, open the Group Policy Editor and navigate to User Settings | Windows Settings | Folder Redirection. The group policy requires you to redirect each of the four folders separately, but the procedure for doing so is the same for each folder. Set the folder’s Setting option to Basic – Redirect Everyone’s Folder To The Same Location. Next, select the Create A Folder For Each User Under The Root Path option from the Target Folder Location drop down list. Finally, enter your root path in the place provided. For example, on my test server, I just created a share called USERS on a server named TAZMANIA. Therefore, I entered \\TAZMANIA\USERS as the root path. If you look at Figure B, you will notice that in the example under the root path, Windows automatically fills in the user name and the folder name. This occurs because Windows will automatically create all of the necessary folders and will set the required permissions as well.


Figure B: Windows will automatically create the necessary folders beneath the root path and set the required permissions

Conclusion

In this article, I have explained how to implement roaming profiles and folder redirections in a way that gives you optimal performance while reducing your day to day workload. I do have one last bit of advice though. I recommend using a DFS (Distributed File System) server to store roaming profiles and redirected folders.

The reason why I recommend doing this is because DFS allows you to create replica servers. This means that you would have multiple servers containing copies of user profiles and redirected folders. These servers can work together to balance the workload. They also provide you with a measure of fault tolerance. If a server were to fail, the remaining DFS replicas would pick up the slack and the users would never be aware of the failure. Having multiple replicas also gives you the luxury of being able to take a server down for maintenance in the middle of the day without disturbing the users.

About Brien M. Posey

Brien Posey is an award winning author who has written over 3,000 articles and written or contributed to 27 books. You can visit Brien’s personal Web site at www.brienposey.com

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Author: Jamie @ 11:50 am
Category: Windows