Archive for the ‘website developers’ Category
For starters, try getafreelancer.com, rentacoder.com, and guru.com. I’m listed on all three.
http://www.MeLoveMoney.com/WealthyAffiliate – This video covers the website development section of the Wealthy Affiliate University. Building your websites is a very important part of the internet marketing business, and WA covers all of the essential website development topics.
Also if you are more interested in drop shipping check out http://www.melovemoney.com/worldwidebrands
Duration : 0:2:48
a company that gives space in their servers for web develpers to make commercial websites there.
For my personal site, I use Netfirms, but for the sites I design, we always use Network Solutions. Great extra tools (I particularly like their UNIX web usage monitoring tool). I buy my domains and hosting from them.
Depends on the company you work for.
Even if you do it freelance, you still need to visit customers etc..
Part 1 of an interview with Arthur from Website Division on selecting a website design company
Duration : 0:5:44
http://www.web312.com Website Developers – Chicago, Evanson, Skokie, Schaumburg, professional assistance in creating a website or redesigning one for your business, check out our website portfolio today
Duration : 0:1:5
im interested in doing this when im older. what type of software do you use and how long does it take to create an average website. what what happens in an average week. do u work in an actual office or do u do it at home. how much do u get paid a year. are there any qualifications i will need to do this. btw im only 15
That’s a perfect age to start developing websites.
Do not expect riches right away. There are lots of young talented web designers. If you live in the US and make $20K a year, that’s nice spending money but not to live on. In India and other lower wage countries that’s a lot of money to live on. So understand the economics of low wage countries vs. those with higher wages (US, western europe).
You can work at home and communicate with your employers via IM or email. Typically you deploy your web sites on a staging server where your employer can look at the site.
More important than the $$ or qualifications is that you must really like what you are doing. Building good web sites is hard work, and there are too many technologies for doing so to master by a single person.
Most serious web sites involve some kind of server-side technology, in addition to static content (html, css, image files, flash videos).
You can pick LAMP (Linux, Apache webserver, PHP, mysql for database). Or you can go the Java/JSP with Apache or jboss and oracle or mysql route. Or the microsoft technologies: asp .net, IIS (web server), sql server, C# programming.
One step at a time: starting with HTML and CSS, and some basic image editing (photoshop elements is fine). You can purchase adobe dreamweaver, which is the pro’s choice. Microsoft has expression web 2.0, which is $99 and almost just as good.
Have fun.
http://www.toydeluxe.com
I just launched a new holiday toys site (I’m quite new at this) and want to know what everyone thinks?
Does it Look Search engine friendly? How is the design and content? Thanks!
The easiest thing you can do right away to make your website more search engine friendly is to use Alt tags on all your images. You should be using more text instead of all the images.
hi , i ve been surfing on the internet to know how to implement a mechanism so users can find something or someone near their own zip code ? how this method works ? i mean is there any relation or standard between zip code ? for example on match.com or yahoo classifieds search we can find goods and persons by zip code , thanks in advance
Forget about IP-to-location services, such as ip2location.com, as they don’t work in anything that could be called reliable. In some cases, you _may_ get something reasonably accurate. Or, as in my case, you get something that is off by 34 miles, and 3 counties away.
From the sound of your question, however, you’re talking about the user entering a zip code, and using that information. There are several places online that have zipcode-to-lat/lon databases. (Search for "zip code to latitude longitude".) Some have free interactive access, and others sell databases that you can use yourself. Either the census bureau and/or the post office probably has such databases available as well, though they probably charge for access.
Of course, the zip code databases will still only be approximate, as each zip code covers some area, not a single point.
- kb -
Visit http://headwayvideos.com for more info.