Friday, August 29th, 2008 at
18:39
When i tried to write a post about advantages of “online” work and quiting your day time job,i surfed to find some post and inspiration and i found excellent post by Guy Kawasaki about this topic.
I recommend you to read his post, here
Here is some pat of his post..
- Thinks that the rules are different for him For example, a parking space for handicapped people is really for handicapped people plus him because his time is so valuable that he can’t walk fifty additional feet. Or, the carpool lane is for cars with multiple people, hybrids, and her because she’s late for a meeting.
- Doesn’t understand the difference between a position making a person and a person making a position. The vice-president of acquisitions for a big media company is a big deal, but all her power, and therefore the ability to act like an asshole, evaporates without this title. Assholes usually don’t understand that their current position affords them temporary privileges.

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Monday, August 25th, 2008 at
09:00
Widgets are bits of interactive HTML code that gather certain information from designated websites so you don’t have to continually check each website for new posts. Pre-scripted widgets are available for Facebook and require no knowledge of HTML coding, but if you want custom widgets and you have some experience with HTML, you can create Widgets and post them to your Facebook site.
Step 1
Choose an online widget editor like Widgetbox to use in creating the widget. The widgets it creates need to be compatible with Facebook. Widgetbox is free and the widgets made there are compatible with Facebook.
Step2
Log in to the Widgetbox site. Click the “Make a Widget” link at the bottom of the page.
Step3
Select the type of content you want to use for the Facebook widget. Choices are “Flash,” “HTML/JS,” “Web Page,” “Blog/Feed” and Gadget.
Step4
Enter a name for the Facebook widget if you are creating it from HTML code. For all other selections, enter the source URL for the content. Click “Continue.”
Step5
Designate the width and height of the HTML Facebook widget in the boxes provided. Select a setting for the Widget from the “Insert Widget Setting” drop-down menu.
Step6
Insert a pre-coded “Snippet” code. Select either “Proxy Request” or “Links in New Window” from the “Snippet” drop-down menu. This inserts prewritten HTML code for either of these options.
Step7
Enter the HTML code in the box at the bottom half of the page. Click “Apply Changes.” Preview the Facebook widget in the “Preview” box at the upper right of the screen.
Step8
Log in to Facebook.
Step9
Click on the “Developers” link in the fine print at the very bottom of the page. Select the “Get Started” link at the middle left of the Developer page.
Step10
Add the developer application to your Facebook profile by clicking the link “Add Facebook Developer Application.” Click on the “Feed Profile Console” tab.
Step11
Plug your widget code into the console for posting to your Facebook site.

Tags:
Facebook Widgets
Sunday, August 24th, 2008 at
19:05
A Yahoo Answers user was concerned about the recent Russian invasion of South Ossetia and Georgia. She lives in the U.S. state of Georgia and is worried whether Russians will attack her home state.
Yahoo Answers is a free service, where the questions and answers are posted by members and they share knowledge with each other. And those who post good answers earn points. Those who earn more points get the rights to answer first or answer exclusively at all levels. Some questions and answers are very helpful but some are trivial and silly.
In the latter category, a question was posted by a girl named “Jessica B” in Yahoo Answers. This question has been deleted by Yahoo Answers, and the link points to a cached image of the question.

I justt google it…..lame

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