Archive for March, 2010

MacBook Pro 15inch

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010
User Reviews Send this to a friend
MacBook Pro 15inch 2.53GHz/4GB/250GB/GeForce 9400M/SD
 
Manufacturer: Apple
Customer Rating:
 
List Price: £1,299.00
Sale Price: £1,300.50
Availibility: View Product Availability
Buy Now
 

Product Description

Product Details

No details are available for this product

Video Reviews

No video reviews found for this product.

Customer Reviews

Love it
 
Review Date: January 10, 2010
Reviewer: Mr. O. Cifci, Time, Space
I've had a Macbook Pro 15inch (Late 2008) for 14 months and it stills works superbly! Beautiful design, great OS you really cough up serious money for serious computing experience. Some people may moan that for that price you could get 3 laptops from the likes of Acer, HP and all the rest. Sure, you could but you'd be missing out on nice extras. Even after 14 months I still get 4-5 hours (only internet browing/documents/etc) from the battery while all my friends get 1.5 hours from their 6 month old laptops (supposedly 4 hour battery). It's pretty, light, balanced, thin and doesn't overheat - You won't need a "cool mat" for this laptop. One of the main arguments against the Snow/Leopard OS is that you can't run programs that are on XP/Vista/7 machines but I don't see that as a big thing. Every application I need is available for the Mac and I don't have to worry about pesky applications that take up resources while doing nothing (iTunes doesn't count :D) Also, with iLife you get great applications that you are sure to use. And if you still miss Windows or Linux then you can Bootcamp (free) or install it via VMWare. One feature I haven't addressed is the backlight keyboard. I never knew I needed this before Apple made it possible (Seems true for all of Apple products) It helps a lot when everyone is sleeping and you need check your mail without switching on the light.
Macbook Pro
 
Review Date: December 8, 2009
Reviewer: William Lee,
An absolute joy to use. Needs a bit of getting used to after years of Microsoft computers but no sweat. Looks good as well.
Excellent Laptop, where design, hardaware and software simply shine
 
Review Date: November 25, 2009
Reviewer: T. Roider,
Having owned an iBook G3, an iMac G5 (PPC) and a MacBook, I can say that the MacBook Pro is a gem. Its aluminium casing is both elegant and sturdy, having withstood everything down to the accidental drop. The mouse works fluidly and is extremelly reactive. The mix of RAM, graphics card, internal memory and overlaying OS make every task, from surfing, text generation, audio playback to video editing an absolute joy. No program lags or unexpectedly quits due to overload.

The latest iteration of Mac OS X (Snow Leopard) is stunning. I own the 'barebone' version, without extras like iLife or Final Cut and etc and it does everything I need, from listening to music, to doodling with homemade videos to writing. The last I do using the Text Edit software, as it does what I need: type text. On those occasions when I need something snazzier to beautify a piece of work or produce a worksheet I use the open-source NeoOffice, which works flawlessly on my computer.

The minimalistic desktop is aboslute quality. As I don't like clutter, I love how they did away with the Macintosh HD icon, replacing with an applications folder in the dock. And Spotlight is a lifesaver when I need to find something quickly within the mass of my files.

The only thing I'm not too keen on is Safari. Yes, it's fast, pretty and etc, but there's something about it that just irks. So I use Firefox. But, that's just me. Safari still beats many of the other browsers alternatives out there.

Using Windows at work, I'm happy to say that both operating systems are interoperable. I can transfer and edit text, sound, video and date files without issues. This means I do not need to compromise and can experience the best of both worlds.

Hooking up my MacBook Pro to my TV via mini-DVI makes for a wonderful IPTV settop-box, watching internet content on my telly. Moreoever, adding HW and SW from Elgato I can capture and record terrestrial telivision, which is great if you don't want to miss a show.

For all those users looking for a high-end laptop give the MacBook Pro a go. You won't be dissapointed.
Great Mac
 
Review Date: August 19, 2009
Reviewer: Mr. I. Watson,
A first class product - you know what you're getting when you order a Mac. And the new Pro range are excellent. The computer is actually for my son, and he loves it, although we had a slight problem initially, with Mozilla Firefox not working properly, but the support line was very helpful and we got this fixed after a while. I would not have been too happy if I had to call the 0870 support number, but I phoned the London Apple shop, and you can access IT support from there on a landline number - shhhh, don't tell anyone that though. Mac's have a professional, robust feel, and the price on Amazon was great too. I might have given a 4 star because of the initial problem with internet access, but the computer is certainly worth a 5 star. Well done!
wonderful laptop but buy something smaller AND a Cinema display instead
 
Review Date: December 12, 2009
Reviewer: Dr. K. Billen, UK
Bought mine 5 months ago when I set up my business, where most of the time I work from home but I travel away every two weeks or so. I therefore wanted a good quality laptop that was robust, powerful, had excellent battery life and had a good enough screen to be useful for desktop work as well. Of course, it had to be a Mac as well. :-) Being an experienced user of both Windows and Mac, there was no question that I'd get an Apple. Of course, there is the potential for a client to insist on using a Windows environment, and time to time I expected to receive some kind of .exe file to look at, but all Macs these days can have Windows installed on them as well. After looking at the entire Mac range, and considering whether perhaps a combination of iMac and smaller laptop made more sense, I decided to go for the 15.4" MacBook Pro as the best all-round choice. I have not been disappointed by my purchase. I got excellent support and a small discount (I was buying it for business use) from my local Apple Store. This laptop has a powerful processor, fast RAM, a useful HDD, and an astounding battery life for such a machine (it can last an whole working day, depending of course on intensity of use). It runs Snow Leopard, so it does not crash, and boot-up and -down times are very quick (2x faster than the Windows7 partition on the same machine). The screen is excellent as well. I have found a few downsides: I'd have preferred a non-glossy screen if available (it isn't), with the lid down (e.g. when I am using it with a monitor) the bluetooth performance is very poor when the wifi connection is running flat-out, and it is perhaps a tad too big and heavy to be used on the move (e.g. on a train or aeroplane). And (for health reasons) I now use it at home with an excellent 24" Apple Cinema display, so the 15.4" screen is not so important any more. So, whilst this is an excellent machine that does what I originally wanted, in retrospect I should have bought the Cinema display and a 13.3" MacBook Pro with the same spec. instead from the beginning.

Viral Marketing 101 – Not Using It Could Kill Your Business!

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Creativity.

This is one virtue a site must possess to lead the race in the ruthless competition in the Internet based business. With so many competition and rivalry going on, every method of marketing must be employed and utilized.

It doesn’t matter if you have a killer product or a fantastically designed website, if people don’t know that you exist, it doesn’t matter, and you are not going to make it big. Worse of all, you business could just get killed.

While there are so many methods and schemes used by so many e-commerce sites today, there are still some of those that can help you with an extra boost in the popularity ratings. One of these is the so called Viral Marketing.

While the term Viral easily depicts a virus, a word very much dreaded by all computer owners, it is not what it seems. You do not actually use a computer virus to spread your business; on the contrary it just might kill you. Everyone has had enough of all those pop up ads and spywares.

Viral Marketing Overview

Viral Marketing also known otherwise as Viral Advertising is a marketing technique used to build the public awareness of one’s product or company. They use many forms of media to reach out to the public without actually promoting the product by riding on in other forms of addictive means that could get a person hooked and be obliged or amused to actually pass it on, with the product or company advertisement along with it.

In a nutshell, companies ride on the idea that if people like the content of a media they will pass it on to their friends and family. They sponsor the certain media, such as a cool flash game, funny video, amusing story and such, which one may pass on to another with the company brand or logo or the products description or any other content to help promote the company or its product.

Viral marketing has become a popular means of advertising and marketing because they are relatively low cost. To avoid being tagged as spam mail, viral marketing counts on the eagerness of one person to pas on the product. If a person sees the name of the person they know as the sender, they won’t block it and open it as well.

Many companies offer incentives such as discounts and rebates when they help in spreading their viral marketing. They rely on the number of recipients a viral marketing gets from one person in determining the amount or number of incentive they can be attributed with.

Using Viral Marketing to your advantage

The main and foremost advantage of viral marketing is that you get a lot of publicity and public awareness about your site and your company. You get to generate a flow of traffic that are potential customers. With a little ingenuity and imagination, plus some incentives or prizes, you can reach out to a great number of people and announce your existence.

Most companies are catching on to the effectiveness of Viral Marketing and Advertising. Not using it could kill your business. Along with other schemes and methods in promoting your site, like Search Engine Optimization and such, viral marketing could easily push you ahead in the rating games.

Viral Marketing could be a sneaky way to get people to know about you and your company. You get them to pass your advertisement along. They are also very low cost that not investing in it could be downright a business suicide. All it takes is a great idea, a good addicting game, a funny story many ideas are still out there. Create a gossip or a buzz, many movies are promoted by using scandals and gossips to make them more popular. Remember the movie ‘The Blair Witch Project’?

Many big companies have tried viral marketing and have had many success stories with it. A classic example is Microsoft’s Hotmail. They were the first known big company to utilize the scheme and it has worked wonders for them.

Now it’s your turn to use viral marketing to work wonders for you. Act now and reap the benefits Viral Marketing will provide for you and your sales figures.

Have you lost your data? How Important is your data to you?

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

What would happen if you lost all your data? How would this effect your business? Think of all the time and energy you have put into your business only to loose the information?

It is very important that you create good effective passwords to keep your data secure and at the same time ALWAYS BACK UP YOUR DATA, this is the NO1 rule of thumb in the IT industry. But for you this is very very important.

This is for your benefit:

How to create good passwords

Here are some general rules for creating effective passwords:

- The only safe place to keep a password is in your head or a locked safe, which only you know the combination to.
- Effective passwords need to be fairly long, but not so long that you can’t remember them. Three-character passwords are too short.
- Use special characters, uppercase letters, and numerals in a logical manner. Here are some examples:
- Uppercase letters: Using uppercase letters in conjunction with lowercase letters will offer some protection if you have the functionality of “case sensitivity.” You could then use the password “HeyYou”, which is different from “heyyou”. Adding uppercase letters adds a layer of complexity making passwords harder to crack.
- Special characters: Using special characters such as “#”, or “%” also adds to complexity. Take the word “money”, add the pound sign after it (money#) and you have a fairly effective password.
- Numerals: Using numerals also adds complexity to the mix. If your social security number is 123-45-6789, you can use the last four digits with an easily remembered word such as “money”, making your password “money6789″.
- Substitution: You can use a number or sign in substitution for a word. If you know that the “$” sign equals the word “money,” then you can tie it into a password scheme such as “Ilove$”. This is simple-to-remember password that is difficult to crack.
- Hackers like to hack so make sure you have strong passwords.

DONT LET CONNIVANCE BE THE CAUSE OF LOST/HACKED DATA

- Back up your data
You can make entire backups of your site using your bigfanta control panel. Simple look under files for “back up/restore” and follow the instructions.

- If you have you have a database on your site, then click on the database i.e.”My Sql databases” and you will see a list of databases. Click on “back up now”

Back up your files and save this information in a secure place.

*Customer not using bigfanta hosting packs are advised to get in touch with their service provider and find out how back ups can be made.

Unless you have purchased a maintenance pack from us, you are Responsible for making backups of your site and data, and making sure you have created good passwords.

Apple iMac 27 – inch Desktop PC

Monday, March 29th, 2010
User Reviews Send this to a friend
Apple iMac 27 - inch Desktop PC
 
Manufacturer: Apple
Customer Rating:
 
List Price: £1,349.00
Sale Price: £1,325.00
Availibility: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Free Shipping Available
Buy Now
 

Product Description

Apple IMAC C2D306G 1TB 4GB 27IN DVDRW OSX MB952BA Desktops Desktops and Tower PC

Product Details

  • Apple iMac All-in-One PC
  • Intel Core 2 Duo 3.06GHz processor with 1066MHz
  • 27-inch (viewable) LED-backlit glossy 16:9 wides
  • 4096MB (2x2048MB) 1066MHz DDR3 SDRAM memory supp
  • 1TB (7200 rpm) Serial ATA Hard Disk Drive

Video Reviews

No video reviews found for this product.

Customer Reviews

MacBook Pro 13inch

Saturday, March 27th, 2010
User Reviews Send this to a friend
MacBook Pro 13inch 2.53GHz/4GB/250GB/GeForce 9400M/SD
 
Manufacturer: Apple
Customer Rating:
 
List Price: £1,149.00
Sale Price: £1,100.00
Availibility: View Product Availability
Buy Now
 

Product Description

Product Details

No details are available for this product

Video Reviews

No video reviews found for this product.

Customer Reviews

The Truth About The History Of E-Commerce

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

You might not realize it, but the history of e-commerce started before the first Internet connection.  Things started happening in the 1960s, over 50 years ago, that were crucial steps along the way bringing us to the level of e commerce we have today.

First, the EDI was developed in the 60s.  EDI means Electronic Data Interchange.  This is a set of standards for electronic transactions and the exchange of business information.  Even with this development, many companies still couldn’t do business electronically with each other because there were different EDI formats. But in 1984, one EDI, the ASC X12, became the standard for transferring large amounts of transactions, and was adapted quickly by those institutions who wanted to do business electronically.

Eight years later in 1992, the first point and click web browser was developed, called Mosaic.  Then the first downloadable browser, Netscape, was developed based on Mosaic, and this gave people with Internet access the ability to participate in electronic commerce. This was really the first step in the history of e commerce that lead to the widespread e-commerce usage we see today. (more…)

Basic Models Used For a Branding Plan

Saturday, March 20th, 2010

Branding is a product of intense planning and conceptualization. To come up with innovative marketing ideas and an effective way to brand your products, you need to carefully laid out the steps you need to get there. Doing so will also enable you to take note of the vital aspects involved in the creation of a brand. Brand models have been formulated to create the framework needed to build an effective brand that will be able to withstand market trends and competition.

What is a Branding Model?

There are basic models utilized in the process of brand planning. Each of them will cover different scopes and aspects of the process to create a sound branding strategy. Aside from the ability to postulate methods for arriving at a specific brand idea, these models will also help businessmen understand the behavior of consumers in terms of their responses to a brand, which is helpful in adjusting old branding strategies or acquiring new ones.

All of these features are key in managing and reviewing brands, which are necessary steps that must be taken by any company in their branding efforts. These models are not directly linked but one does impact another.

Brand Positioning

(more…)

Google the hungry beast

Friday, March 12th, 2010

Meet Google. The noun that became a verb. The world’s favorite search engine, and the company whose motto is “Don’t be evil…”

5 Ways to Keep Visitors Coming Back

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

A lot of successful websites depend on returning visitors to account for a major part of their traffic. Returning visitors are easier to convert into paying customers because the more often they return to a site, the more trust they have in that site. The credibility issue just melts away. Hence, keep your visitors coming back to your site with the following methods:

1) Start a forum, chatroom or shoutbox

When you start a forum, chatroom or shoutbox, you are providing your visitors a place to voice their opinions and interact with their peers — all of them are visitors of your site. As conversations build up, a sense of community will also follow and your visitors will come back to your site almost religiously every day.

2) Start a web log (blog)

Keep an online journal, or more commonly known as a blog, on your site and keep it updated with latest news about yourself. Human beings are curious creatures and they will keep their eyes glued to the monitor if you post fresh news frequently. You will also build up your credibility as you are proving to them that there is also a real life person behind the website.

3) Carry out polls or surveys

Polls and surveys are other forms of interaction that you should definitely consider adding to your site. They provide a quick way for visitors to voice their opinions and to get involved in your website. Be sure to publish polls or surveys that are strongly relevant to the target market of your website to keep them interested to find out about the results.

4) Hold puzzles, quizzes and games

Just imagine how many office workers procrastinate at work every day, and you will be able to gauge how many people will keep visiting your site if you provide a very interesting or addicting way of entertainment. You can also hold competitions to award the high score winner to keep people trying continuously to earn the prize.

5) Update frequently with fresh content

Update your site frequently with fresh content so that every time your visitors come back, they will have something to read on your site. This is the most widely known and most effective method of attracting returning visitors, but this is also the least carried out one because of the laziness of webmasters. No one will want to browse a site that looks the same over ten years, so keep your site updated with fresh bites!

Amazing Technology and Your Online Marketing Strategy

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010

If your online marketing strategy isn’t working, then you might need to introduce some technology to your website.  If you current marketing promotions are going well, then you might be able to improve them even more with some added technology.  Fancy bells and whistles on a website just for fun aren’t the type of technology that will help you increase sales and grow your business.  But technology designed to do some very specific things can make quite a difference.

If you sell products, there are some website enhancements you’ll want to consider in your online marketing strategy. Of course, you must have clear pictures of your products, with more than one picture per product, ideally. You’ll want the customer to be able to click the picture and enlarge it to see the product even more clearly.  There’s no real technology involved with that.  But to give the customer the closest experience possible to actually being able to pick up and examine the product, look into the software that allows you to show 3D images on your website.  The customer can click on the image or on a slider bar and drag to turn the image completely around so they can get a better feel for the object. This online marketing strategy is becoming more popular as companies realize how effective it is.

You could also look into the software that allows a customer to hold the mouse pointer over an image and zoom into it.  This usually also allows the customer to move the mouse and see various parts of the object incredibly up close.  Remember in your online marketing strategy that everything you do to bring the customer closer to the item they want to purchase will increase the likelihood of a sale. You’ll also want to ensure that your shopping cart and checkout system is as absolutely simple and easy as you can make it.  Any slight hangup, delay or problem is just one more reason for the customer not to buy from you.

If you don’t sell products but services or information instead, don’t discount the addition of pictures to your website.  Screen shots are particularly helpful when selling software, for instance.  While adding pictures doesn’t require much technology, you’ll want to give your website more appeal by adding sound and video. When you’re selling a service, for instance, a video of someone explaining the service in a friendly, casual tone can go a long way toward giving a customer a positive impression.  Even audio clips the customer can listen to that break down concepts into simple steps can be an important part of your online marketing strategy.

Video that shows screenshots and still shots as well as a person speaking or demonstrating something can be particularly effective.  Get the software necessary to make these recording.  Don’t forget how annoying it can be to have something suddenly start playing, though, so give the customer the option.  Then add them to your website as part of your technology online marketing strategy.