Crocodile
- 16 Dec 2002 03:59
kernow
- 29 Mar 2006 08:49
- 4318 of 11003
John/TP Having done a little looking myself recently I'd buy a router with MIMO router if distance/thick walls are an issue. If not then slightly cheaper are the 108mb transfer rate varieties - twice the speed of most. Not useful now maybe given ADSL rates are well below but a bit of future proofing. Don't forget to secure the wireless network or your neighbours will be able to use it also.
ChuffChuffChaser
- 29 Mar 2006 09:45
- 4319 of 11003
HI - thanks for the replies chaps.
DocProc - thanks for the phone nos. tried the 0800 no - that's where I found out that I would need the missing id no. - it's an automated service with no one at the other end as far as I can see.
Will give the other 2 suggestions a run
thanks
ThePublisher
- 29 Mar 2006 11:44
- 4320 of 11003
K,
The downside, for me anyway, of the Mimo solution is my liking for using my PDA to quickly look for any e:mail arrivals. My understanding is that there is no way that a PDA can have a special Mimo receiver attached.
The advantage of the PDA is that it has no boot up time.
TP
john1943
- 31 Mar 2006 08:04
- 4321 of 11003
Thanks for replys. I phoned Telewest to arrange appointment to install Broadband and while I was on asked a young fella what he thought. He recommended a Netgear router, best place PC World, 25-30. When engineers come to install Broadband ask if they would kindly help with implementation. He thinks they will.
Leaving PC, printer, hard drive etc., where it is now but will then let me use laptop anywhere else in my flat. For a non-technical mind like mine, this is a good start to wireless stuff without disturbing anyone else in the flat.
hewittalan6
- 31 Mar 2006 08:37
- 4322 of 11003
Can anyone recommend a way to get your website picked up by the search engines. I listed a website a few weeks ago and still it does not appear if you search for it, only if you actually type the address into the address bar.
Thanks for any tips.
Alan
Mega Bucks
- 31 Mar 2006 08:42
- 4323 of 11003
http://www.uk-cheapest.co.uk/submissions2.php?ref=goo-crn-s
Alan,this is a good company to use,also it could well be a idea to add a counter on your website.
Mega...
hewittalan6
- 31 Mar 2006 08:45
- 4324 of 11003
Cheers Mega.
Got a counter and it stays still for days, then shoots up by about 200 in an hour or so. Don't know whats causing this or if it is significant.
Will try that link.
Thanks.
Alan
hewittalan6
- 31 Mar 2006 09:19
- 4325 of 11003
And thanks for the visit!!
Every little helps. ;-)
Alan
DocProc
- 31 Mar 2006 09:19
- 4326 of 11003
Ten Steps to Ensure PC Security
and also
Safety on the Internet
This latter site thoroughly discusses
Viruses and worms
Trojan horses and crackers
Spyware and adware
Email problems
Read email safely- Dealing with Attachments and Web Bugs
Phishing
Spam
Slide show- Tutorial on Making Outlook Express Safer
Cookies- Function and Management
Advanced cookie management in IE6
Cookie management in Firefox
Making Internet Explorer Safer
Table of default settings for all security zones
Figures showing all possible settings of security zones
The hidden "My Computer" zone
Comparison of the "Internet" zone in different versions of IE6
"Internet zone" settings in Windows XP SP2
Recommended settings for increased security
How to add sites to the "Trusted" zone
What ActiveX is
Pop-up blocker and Add-on manager in Windows XP SP2
Slide show- Tutorial on Making Internet Explorer Safer
Internet Explorer vs. Other Browsers
Which is Safer, IE or Firefox?
hilary
- 31 Mar 2006 09:45
- 4327 of 11003
The most important search engines to be ranked with are Google, Yahoo and MSN. You can register with them easily yourself without the need to pay anyone.
The most important thing though is to ensure that your site is optimised for search engine ranking. This means making sure that your meta-tags are done properly and in the right places. Keywords aren't as important now as they used to be because everyone latched onto it and it got abused. Title and Description are the two most important tags.
It's also useful to have a link(s) to and from other site(s) as this helps your ranking too.
I did read somewhere that Google are currently taking between 5 and 12 months to get sites ranked, so no surprise if yours isn't there.
hewittalan6
- 31 Mar 2006 09:49
- 4328 of 11003
Thanks, Hilary.
I did register it with Google about 3 weeks ago, and I am currently looking for sites that will allow reciprocal links, but which we will be allowed to have on our website, as the rules on this are very stringent indeed.
I'll keep trying. Its a good job the web is just a very samll part of our business at the moment.
Alan
Richgit69
- 31 Mar 2006 12:48
- 4329 of 11003
Just bought my 3rd monitor ;-)
Viewsonic 19" 1912W DVI/VGA connection
Got a AGP ASUS ATI Radeon 9600xt which has 2 monitors already connected to it ;-)
1) can I split one of the monitors connections with a 2 vga connector
2) Recommed a good PCI graphics card with 2 DVI/VGA between 30-100
3) Recommend a motherboard with 2 AGP slots
Priscilla
- 31 Mar 2006 13:02
- 4330 of 11003
Please forgive this software question.
I'm trying to make a mailing list more 'intelligent'. For example, I want to make sure that if 5 different names are living at the same address, only one gets all the enclosures. (All five have to stay on the list because each is a member in their own right, so removing the other four isn't an option!)
Currently the list is in MS Word/Exel and I'm running XP Home.
Is there someone out there who could kindly offer help? I'm happy to buy a little bit of extra software if there's a sophisticated programme I could use that could make the mailing more flexible, and therefore efficient and cost-effective.
Thanks
hilary
- 31 Mar 2006 14:04
- 4331 of 11003
P,
What you are looking for is called database de-duplication software or de-dupe for short.
It's unusual, however, to keep your records in a spreadsheet (Excel). Normal practise is to keep them in a database (Access). You might find that you first need to export your records into database software before being able to de-dupe them.
Some specialist mailing list databases such as Cardbox have add-ons which de-dupe so, if you haven't got database software already, it might be worth looking at Cardbox and other software like it.
Otherwise you need to do a Google search for de-dupe software and find out which databases they work with.
Priscilla
- 31 Mar 2006 15:19
- 4332 of 11003
Thanks, Hilary. I just inherited the list but I'm sure I can improve my predicament now I know where to look. Appreciated.
Haystack
- 31 Mar 2006 15:25
- 4333 of 11003
In any dedpuping process, it is very important to have the list accurately and fully postcoded. If the list is not too big it will be worthwhile to manually look at it and try and standardise the format for the various fields, particularly the first line of the address.
Priscilla
- 31 Mar 2006 15:35
- 4334 of 11003
Thanks, Haystack.
Kayak
- 31 Mar 2006 15:40
- 4335 of 11003
Priscilla, if it's not too huge a list it might well be easier to change it manually to a list of member households, including in each entry a list of the people who are members within that household. That would then enable you to print letters by household or by member without the complexity introduced by a deduping step.
Priscilla
- 31 Mar 2006 16:04
- 4336 of 11003
Another good idea. Thanks, Kayak. The list is about 600-700 names and addresses. A daunting re-typing task but I have ensured they all have full postcodes.
hilary
- 31 Mar 2006 16:14
- 4337 of 11003
P,
I hadn't realised that your list was relatively small and so de-dupe software is therefore pretty pointless (unless it's free or a trial version). I've worked with databases of around 40k names and de-dupe software comes into its own in that instance.
If I were you, I think that I'd order (sort) the list alpha numerically by postcode and then scroll through it manually to spot the dupes. Ordering should put the identical addresses next to each other within the list making them easy to spot. You could easily create a fresh field within the list to distinguish between the primary and secondary members of a household and then just mail the primary members.