How To Make A Website That People Will Notice
Now, having a website is just about as common as having a cell phone. Websites can help families keep in touch with one another and websites help business owners, who can now showcase and sell their goods online. There are more than a million reasons that can persuade people to learn how to make a website.
Web Hosting Reviews and Ratings
Have you ever wanted to know which are the best hosting services available without having to sign up to find out?. The right approach to this question is off course 'Ask current members and users!'.
A Picture Paints a Thousand Words and Creates Auction Euphoria on eBay
Ever since I sold my first item on ebay I have been addicted to the site and I have steadily developed it as a supplementary source of income over the last two years. As I gained experience from listing items, I rapidly became aware that the inclusion of pictures in the listings was a major selling point as buyers could literally see what they were buying and as such create a greater interest and desire within them which in turn led to greater selling prices.
SellyourCell.com Makes Cell Phone Recycling Easier with Radical New Website
SellyourCell.com, America's Original Wireless Recycler, announces the long anticipated launch of it's radical new website. The site, at www.sellyourcell.com, incorporates many new features and tools that make it easier for consumers, businesses and charities to profitably recycle cell phones and other wireless devices online.
Why Its a BAD Idea To Promote Hot Selling Products on eBay
Do a quick search on Google, Yahoo, or your favorite auction resource site, and you'll quickly discover there are several software programs targeted to vendors who want to promote hot selling products on eBay.The infatuation with hot selling products exists because sellers believe if you target items that have a robust sales pattern, you'll have a better chance at profiting on eBay.
DipidyDawg, the 'Gourmet Dog Bakery' Unveils its New Website Design
DipidyDawg revealed the new design of its website www.dipidydawg.com offering a wide variety of all Natural Gourmet Dog Treats and other healthy dog bakery products. The company is an exclusive dog bakery utilizing all natural and organic ingredients for making cookies, biscotti, bagels, bones and many more treats for canines. The company was formed with the primary objective of providing dog owners with fine quality dog bakery products without any artificial flavors, preservatives or artificial colors. The treats are not only sumptuous but also healthy and handmade. In fact, they are packed full of vitamins, proteins, amino acids and other nutrients b...
Should My Home Business Have a Blog?
It's fair to say that blogging has taken the Internet by storm over recent years. And it's no surprise that today there are hundreds of thousands of new blogs being launched every day.
LawInfo Announces the Launch of a Redesigned Website, Featuring Online Video
After a vast collaboration by media professionals, marketing executives, and internet and design specialists, LawInfo.com has launched an expansive, redesigned website to provide the most accessible, up-to-date legal resources-- including an interactive legal blog and chat forum, a Premium legal forms center, and informative and topical legal videos--for the public and professionals alike.
Traffic - The Life Blood Of Every Single Web Site
So you have spent days building a killer website and you've published it to your webspace. You sit back and sip on your hard earned cup of tea and wait for the visitors to arrive at your site. But... guess what they don't come! What have I done wrong, you ask yourself.
Exciting New Website Focuses on History Travel
Jackson, CA (PRWEB) September 6, 2007 -- Although America's living history is intriguing to a large population of people -- including armchair travelers and school kids as well as history buffs and retired baby boomers -- the process of identifying the best history-oriented visitor attractions has been surprisingly difficult. History travelers want a good story and tend to favor specific time periods or cultures. Once they've exhausted their own wish-list and the recommendations of friends, where do they turn for new ideas? Conventional guidebooks take a soup-bowl approach, tossing in every kind of destination rather than focusing on historical places. What's more, they organize destinations by cities/states/regions -- that's not good when location is secondary for the history traveler.
A new website -- www.AmericasLivingHistory.com -- offers a wealth of information, including travel articles, historical tidbits, color photographs and an online store, all focused specifically on America's early years. Special sections are tailored to the interests and needs of various types of readers, especially the following:
armchair travelers, RVers and road trippers, families of all ages, educators and librarians, homeschoolers, ethnic and religious explorers, foreign travelers and immigrants.
This unusual and educational website is a spin-off of the innovative new traveler's guide, 'America's Living History-The Early Years.' (http://www.americaslivinghistory.com/intro.html) It was created by the book's authors, Suzanne and Craig Sheumaker, who have a passion for history travel and love to share insights about the premier historical places. "Our goal is to encourage people to have fun with U.S. history -- to discover new things, be entertained and be enlightened. In the end, we hope they will see both America's past and its present through very different eyes," Suzanne notes. "The important thing is to gain something of lasting value when traveling -- such as increased knowledge and personal growth -- along with great scrapbook pictures and happy memories. History travel is a great choice," adds Craig.
What is history travel? It is one of the fastest growing forms of leisure travel in the U.S. and is defined as travel to places that celebrate a people's heritage or historic identity. The best destinations offer a dynamic, real-world opportunity to bring the past to life. They are either historic sites or authentic reconstructions, typically staffed by costumed interpreters. Here, travelers do more than see important places. They also learn through interpretive programs how our ancestors lived, worked and enjoyed life in a time and place that was very different from today. Many offer special classes where the public can make early American crafts, spin thread and weave cloth, learn about heirloom gardening, build handcrafted furniture and even do blacksmithing.
About the Authors
Suzanne and Craig Sheumaker (http://www.americaslivinghistory.com/ALH_Authors.html) are history-travel experts who have explored more than 125,000 miles of the U.S. by car and RV. They created the new guidebook 'America's Living History-The Early Years' (http://www.americaslivinghistory.com/ALH_SamplePages.html) to bring together in one place historical and tourist information about destinations that recall what is arguably America's most formative years -- the time before the 1840s westward movement. The colorful 224-page book is receiving high praise for its unique approach to both U.S. history and U.S. travel. With insightful text and 500 destination photographs, it enables readers to page through America's early years chronologically -- from a land occupied by Native Peoples, to European colonization and the formation of a new nation, to the initial stages of westward expansion. Along the way, readers discover an enormous variety of exciting places that can be enjoyed today. Regional maps and tourist information make travel planning easy for those who want to see these attractions in person.
'America's Living History-The Early Years' was released in May 2007 by Red Corral Publishing and is available wherever travel books are sold, including Amazon.com, BarnesAndNoble.com and other online bookstores. Autographed books, gift-wrapped free upon request, are available direct from the authors via their online store (http://www.americaslivinghistory.com/store.html) at the website AmericasLivingHistory.com. ISBN: 978-0-9792598-0-7