My Thoughts On Everything…..

It's all about my jourey and my pursuit to the happyness. In finding my ways to a total freedom. I wish that my life couldn't be any easier than others...For every action, for every reason and for everytime goes by, I always stand out amongst the crowds. Being ordinary is very simple and easy but lame...but being extraordinary it takes more than usual...it's not that simple as much people can see me right now.....Things that makes me difference are;- I Always Try To Upgrade The Value of My Time and I Never Ask "How Much Does It Cost, But How Much Will It Make To Me?" ....

Archive for February, 2009

February 13th, 2009

I’m still no. 1




Yeah…it’s February 13th…and I’m still here relaxing…just enjoying my time, watch things happen and changes. ..But too many changes is definitely not a good things. Ok stop, am I just getting bored? Write something stupid…ok now let focus 3x…

By the way It’s never too late for me to say a very good happy new year since my last post on the late 2008…which I’m quite busy…damn busy for a serious business, it’s actually a government funding project, and one thing that I learn is all about commitment…ok stop.

In this post I just want to share my knowledge and experience all about How to Stay on Top in Google and Yahoo…(huh am I just made a ‘self-esteem ‘ statement)… in this case I want to write down about my pilot project on Internet Marketing;- I want to share about how I start, get listed, stayed on top and definitely get the damn money…

1. When I start the project, many said I’m wrong… (Referring to the Internet Marketing fellows)…because my project is too niche, and some more my expertise in computer consider as too many already, so just too conclude; it’s quite impossible for me to get listed.

2. People say the domain name is important, so by trying to get the domain name same with the project title is a good thing that you can try. I did that and it’s works….seriously work. I’m no good at lying but what I said is proven and to be honest that’s also why my project is still on the top.

3. Make it simple, short, and straight forward; on this part what I did is learn from the expert…I just made a copy from the successfully proven, do the refinement accordingly to the project and upload the file, let peoples judge it!

4. Call the expert to assist, many said to be success n Internet Marketing is to trust yourself…use the instinct (pay per click), and test, test, test and learn. But since I’m already copy what the expert been doing, refer to no.3 so what I need is just to call for a help line…I call an expert in PR to help me. As a result I get caught on Yahoo News, Google News and other online PR websites….FREE Traffic, that’s my objective.

5. Waited to get listed…from the day that I send the PR kit to the media..I start to climb…from out-of-a-list to the listed, then move to get listed (I’m in Google & Yahoo already but still hard to be seen), then get into 1st Page!..Last but not least is now I’m NO. 1 …..And still No.1….(and hopefully can continue…for a longer time). – to get this besides expecting some luck from the PR, what I also did are; by creating a reciprocal links with other websites, it’s a tedious job but thanks to IBP Aerelis software that had made my life easier.

That’s it…a very simple and short story about how I can still can stay on top of Google and Yahoo…no fancy secret, no fancy drama just a story… I just believe in myself, I believe in teamwork but somehow it’s rather to be alone in the wrong company….my attitude had define my altitude success…and now I just prepare for the best in 2009.

February 9th, 2009

How Google Has Changed Our Lives




Google’s official birthday is September 7, 1998. If Google were a person, it would have started elementary school late last summer (around August 19), and today it would have just finished the first grade. In other words, we’re just getting started.” – An expired version of Google’s When is Google’s birthday? page.

Google wasn’t one of those revolutionary technologies because it provided a search engine. Google changed the game because it did search so well. At the time, Yahoo! was doing just fine as the hub of the Internet. But if the Internet was a galaxy, Google became the black hole at its center: all of its information was inevitably sucked in, and the traffic and attention generated a technical sort of gravity, forcing its rivals to react, and, over time, orbit it.

As it turned out, AOL’s and Yahoo!’s business models were partially wrong: paying for and owning content doesn’t generate as much revenue as simply owning the first step of accessing it, and selling ads on it. And today, what’s easier: to scroll down a list of bookmarks, or just type the site’s name into a Google search box?

A digital video recorder allows individuals or families to watch TV on their schedule. A mobile phone connects people virtually anywhere they are. Google affected society by aggregating an overwhelmingly vast quantity of information in a single virtual space, with tangible cultural, economic, and legal effects.

Today, a publication like The New York Times can spend thousands of dollars researching a major story. But a major blog can simply rewrite the story, with the barest attribution, and receive a significant boost in revenue from the traffic and links it in turn receives—which Google values, and assigns importance to. In many cases, the blog is more important than the source material, according to Google.

That same interconnectedness rapidly disseminates memes, whether they be relatively harmless ones like the “five things you don’t know about me” or more insidious, such as “Al Gore said he invented the Internet.” In the latter case, the only counterattack to a prevalent meme is to start a countermeme. The hope is that it too receives enough attention to warrant a high enough ranking in Google that unbiased observers will see it and make up their own minds.

Likewise, by phrasing the query with the right parameters, a wealth of information can be dug up via Google: unannounced product information hiding on a corporation’s Web site or in government records; a list of John Denver’s albums; credit card numbers; MP3s; legal settlements; photos of Britney Spears; campaign contributions; crime data—the list goes on. It’s all just data; the significance and context is assigned by the user, not Google. And that means the world’s population has realized that the dark side of having such a treasure trove of information at one’s disposal is the realization that your information may be at someone else’s. That, of course, has placed a greater value on privacy.

But that’s just Google’s search engine. Read the rest of this entry &raquo