Archive for the 'Web' Category

How Is Pretexting Dangerous in Matters Related to Child Care and Protection?

Pretexting is a criminal act where the perpetrator obtains confidential client information from telephone companies by impersonation or false pretenses. Pretexters acquire important information about a person like his bank accounts and credit card details.

Over the years, pretexting has become so widespread that pretexting scammers can now steal a person’s medical records and school records like a student’s class schedule. They may even steal your child’s dental records!

Children have the right to enjoy a life of freedom. They should be free to go to places they want to; free to choose which schools to go to; free to roam around the park on a Saturday afternoon. What happens if one of these rights is violated? What happens if pretexters pretending to be good people obtain personal information that can endanger the life of your child?

Pretexters can sell your personal information, including that of your child’s, to private investigators who might be working on a child custody or divorce case. If the child is a victim of physical abuse, he can be tracked down by the enemy. If the pretexter is able to get details of the child’s class schedule, the information may be passed on to a person or a group planning to kidnap him, or to steal his identity. If this happens, your child will not be safe anymore. He won’t be able to go to the park on Saturdays and might not even be able to ride his bike on the way to school.

The best way to protect your children is to avoid divulging confidential personal information to people you haven’t met personally. Explain the matter to your child as well, and ask him to be extra careful in dealing with strangers, too.

Simple Web Design Practices that Can Save Your Time

Never Use Caps

Its a good practice to use all lower case characters in a url.
Never try using all caps or first letter caps.Its really
confusing.

Kill the spaces

Never use spaces in ur file names.Spaces can lead to the awful
%20 signs in your filenames.Avoid using spaces for the same
reason.

Use underscores and hyphens

You can use the underscore character and hyphen in place of
spaces in your filenames.

Use URL encoding if necessary

Suppose space is unavoidable in the file name, then you must use
url encoding for the same so that the space is replaced by a
plus(+) sign.

Avoid @#$%&^

Avoid characters like the dollar sign and ampersand symbol.

Use short to-the-point filenames

Use filenames that are precise, yet simple.

Organize your content based on filetype

Split your site into many folders like images, scripts, media,
files and pages.

Organize your content based on use

Split your content based on use and requirement.

Protect premium content / Restrict access

Restrict access to certain parts of your website if you dont want
public access to them

Take regular backups

Taking a regular backup of your entire website is a good
practice.

Get people to review your site

Criticism is definitely constructive. Get others to speak up
about your website

Never put up confidential info online

Never ever try putting your confidential info like credit card no , bank accounr no etc online.

Varun Krishnan http://www.varun.vk123.com is a mobile phone/web enthusiast. He is a web developer and SEO consultant. He’s currently heading http://www.fonearena.com

Templates: Building Your Own Website? Don’t Even Bother

Small and Medium size business are always looking for a way to save a couple of bucks, these days, who isn’t? However… When it comes to the image that will represent your business and bring you even more clients, you can afford to be cheap.

Needless to say, there are literally thousands of websites out there where you can find a “nice-looking” template, but… is more likely that it will be useless.

Why?

Well, if you are looking for templates, you probably don’t know much about web design and development, right?

Let’s be honest, even if you have a “pretty” site, it will be useless if you don’t know how the search engines work, the proper use of keywords and other details that don’t come with your template.

If your website is not optimized for search engines, why would you even spend money on hosting your website when is more than likely that will not even be visited?

When your business is ready to grow you need to invest a little on it, marketing is the most effective way to let people know about your products and services!

When I design website for my clients, the first thing on my mind is “how can i bring people to this website, and keep it coming back?”, and then, I think about all the colors, design and other decorative stuff.

The internet market is growing day by day; it has already replaced the classic “yellow book” for many reasons.

Is time for you to think about your business, is time for your business to grow.

Arnoldo Tijerina - EzineArticles Expert Author

Arnoldo Tijerina is a professional website designer and developer.
Owner of Uncut Design http://uncutdesign.com, Affordable web solutions, and Creator of Amelia Island - Fernandina Beach Portal http://ameliaislandfernandinabeach.com

Website content & usability

Writing for the web is totally different to writing for printed matter. We tend to scan content on the web hunting for the information we’re after, as opposed to reading word-for-word. As a result of this, there are certain guidelines you should be sure to follow when writing copy for your website:

1. Use clear and simple language

Reading from computer screens is tiring for the eyes and about 25% slower than reading from printed matter. As such, the easier the style of writing the easier it is for site visitors to absorb your words of wisdom.

Some techniques for using clear and simple language include:

- Avoid slang or jargon - Get your grandmother and ten year old nephew to read your site - if both can understand the page content you’ve done well!
- Use shorter words where possible - ‘Begin’ rather than ‘commence’, ‘used to’ rather than ‘accustomed to’ etc.
- Avoid complex sentence structures - Try to include just one idea or concept per sentence
- Use active ahead of passive words - ‘We won the award’ is shorter and easier to comprehend than, ‘The award was won by us’

2. Limit each paragraph to one idea

If you assign just one idea to each paragraph site visitors can:

- Easily scan through each paragraph
- Get the general gist of what the paragraph is about
- Then move on to the next paragraph

All this and without fear that they’ll be skipping over important information, because they will already know roughly what the paragraph is about.

Limiting each paragraph to just one idea is especially effective when combined with front-loading paragraph content.

3. Front-load content

Front-loading content means putting the conclusion first, followed by the what, how, where, when and why. The first line of each paragraph should contain the conclusion for that paragraph, so site visitors can:

- Quickly scan through the opening sentence
- Instantly understand what the paragraph is about
- Decide if they want to read the rest of the paragraph or not

Because each paragraph contains just one idea, users can do all this safe in the knowledge that if they jump to the next paragraph they won’t be missing any new concepts.

Front-loading also applies to web pages, as well as paragraphs. The opening paragraph on every page should always contain the conclusion of that page. This way, site visitors can instantly gain an understanding of what the page is about and decide whether they want to read the page or not.

Unfortunately many websites don’t adhere to this guideline and end up writing page content in a story-format. On each page there’s an introduction, middle and conclusion, in that order. Unfortunately, when scanning through web content we don’t tend to read all the text nor read all the way to the bottom of the screen. As such, you may easily miss the conclusion if it’s left until the end.

So remember, conclusion first, everything else second! For a great example of front-loaded content, just read any newspaper article. The opening paragraph is always the conclusion of the article.

4. Use descriptive sub-headings

Breaking up text with descriptive sub-headings allows site visitors to easily see what each section of the page is about. The main heading on the page provides a brief overall view of what page is about, and the opening paragraph gives a brief conclusion of the page (because you’ve front-loaded the page content). Within the page though, there are various sub-themes which can be quickly put across with sub-headings.

There’s no hard and fast rule for how frequently to use sub-headings, but you should probably be roughly aiming for one sub-heading every two to four paragraphs. More importantly though, the sub-headings should group on-page content into logical groups, to allow site visitors to easily access the information that they’re after.

5. Bolden important words

Another way to help users locate information quickly and easily is to bolden important words in some paragraphs. When site visitors scan through the screen this text stands out to them, so do make sure the text makes sense out of context.

Bolden two to three words which describe the main point of the paragraph, and not words on which you’re placing emphasis. By seeing these boldened words site visitors can instantly gain an understanding of what the paragraph is about and decide whether or not they want to read it.

6. Use descriptive link text

In the same way that bold text stands out to screen-scanning web users, so does link text. Link text such as ‘click here’ makes no sense whatsoever out of context so is useless to site visitors scanning web pages. To find out the destination of the link, site visitors have to hunt through the text both before and after the link text.

7. Use lists

Lists are preferable to long paragraphs because they:

- Allow users to read the information vertically rather than horizontally
- Are easier to scan
- Are less intimidating
- Are usually more succinct

8. Left-align text
Left-aligned text is easier to read than justified text, which in turn is easier to read than centre- or right-aligned text.

When reading through justified text the spacing between each word is different so our eyes have to search for the next word. This slows down our reading speed. Right- and centre-aligned paragraphs slow down reading speed even more because each time you finish reading one line your eye has to search for the beginning of the next line.

Conclusion

These eight guidelines are nothing revolutionary nor are they difficult to implement. Yet so many websites structure their content so poorly to the detriment of their site visitors. Have a quick look over your website now - how does it do with regards to these content guidelines?

This article was written by Trenton Moss. He’s crazy about web usability and accessibility - so crazy that he went and started his own web usability and accessibility consultancy (Webcredible - www.webcredible.co.uk) to help make the Internet a better place for everyone.

Fast Web Design For The Skint Webmaster

About two years ago, I had a go at commercial web site design. I put a medium-sized ad in a London classified ad paper. Nothing fancy: “Web designer seeks work …” etc. This was expensive, about £500 for a month’s run.

Got a few replies. Lesson number one: advertise where clients of the calibre you want will see it. The clients I got thought £300 was a lot for a web site. They didn’t want to pay web hosting. They wanted a lot of bang for their buck. ‘Mission creep’ was a term I grew to know and loathe.

This set me thinking: how could I give these people all they could ever want, but not spend a lot of time and money? Lately, I realised how.

So how can you get a full featured site up in a day? Easy (ish!).

1. Mambo Content Management System http://mamboserver.com

I wish I’d found this software a couple of years ago. It’s freeware. The default set-up allows people without web design skills to update the site. It has a WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get) option. This adds HTMLArea code to text input form fields. Each HTML code input box becomes a mini HTML editor.

If you can use Microsoft Word, you can add formatted HTML code to the site.

To get it running you need to know how to install MySQL databases, or have PHPMyAdmin as part of your web-hosting package.

You can add articles, edit them, send emails to members, and be contacted by users.

The only criticisms I have of this software are:

1. The admin interface is confusing. It’s all there, just finding and using it is the problem!

2. You need to search around template sites to find ones suited to your site purpose. I wanted simple, clean, business ones. Most of those available seem to have a fat graphic which covers half the screen. There are more restrained ones out there.

These are minor gripes, compared to the relief of finding what is essentially a web site in a box. It can be installed in an hour, once you get familiar with it.

To add ecommerce to your site:

Oscommerce Shopping Cart http://www.oscommerce.com

Again, this is a full-featured, freeware software. You can add lots of freeware ‘plug-ins’ to it, to get a professional shopping cart.

Therein lies the danger. Some of these plug-ins require altering or overwriting the default cart files. When you try to upgrade the cart version later, you may ‘break’ it, by overwriting a plug-in, thus creating errors.

The trick here is to only install plug-ins that add files (rather than overwrite them) or that require minor alterations to existing files.

What I do is download all the versions of the plug-in type I need e.g. a WYSIWYG editor. I then choose the one which has the least files, or which creates a new directory for its files. If it requires that important files be overwritten, or is complex, I chuck it.

Mambo and Oscommerce. Don’t try to integrate them! Hyperlink from one to the other. I’ve tried integrations of other softwares, like PhpBB and PhpNuke. Fine, when it works, but when you upgrade one or the other, arrgh!

*Keep databases separate*. If one goes skew-whiff, then at least the other will still work. Same goes for adding chat rooms and the like. If they’re all running off the one database, and that database becomes corrupted …

It may offend your sense of tidiness for your visitors to have to sign up twice at your site, but you’ll thank me for this sage advice later.

Remember KISS is the basic rule of computing (Keep It Simple, Stupid!).

T. O’ Donnell ( http://www.tigertom.com ) is an ecommerce consultant and curmudgeon living in London, UK. His latest project is an ebook on conservatories, available at http://www.ttconservatories.co.uk T. O’ Donnell freeware may be downloaded at http://www.ttfreeware.co.uk