Author: webproworld

Focus, Focus, Focus: The Key to Online Success

The key to online success is specialization and niche marketing. There, I’ve said it and I won’t take it back! You’ve heard endless advice whispered from every corner of the web and shouted from the rooftops by every major web marketing guru. Now I’m offering it myself in the hope that I finally get it! I’m as guilty as any webmaster of jumping at the latest affiliate program that offers “200 PERCENT PAYOUT” or leaping on the “Submit your site to SIX MILLION SEARCH ENGINES” banner I see on every site.

The Most Powerful But Overlooked Success Rule in Cyberspace

Before I begin, I want you to read this article with an understanding that there’s no way, you can make a fortune until you realize the importance of a basic success rule. This article reveals the secret that makes you a winner in this crowded battlefield of Internet warriors. Get the rule, and then swiftly apply it in your your marketing model.

Displaying XML in an HTML Browser

Those of you who have been reading DevNewz for a few months already know that XML is one of the greatest things to come along. It is, therefore, ironic that the very features of XML which give it its strength and versatility also make it impractical for use as a Web authoring language: most mainstream browsers don’t know what to do with it. This will change. Before you know it, every Web browser on the planet will be able to handle XML just fine, but for now we must live with those that are equipped to deal with HTML.

Website Navigation

Thinking of a web site as an architectural design is actually a good analogy. It must have a structure expressed as continuity in the layout scheme. It must be functional in the value of the things that it offers the visitor. It should be pleasing in the form of its design and detail. And it should be easy for a first time visitor to find their way around. When finished, your web site can be comparable to a skid row warehouse or to an architectural jewel such as “Falling Water” by Frank Lloyd Wright.

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