This was fun. I started a top list. You can add your website banner. Just follow the link and click on "Add Your Site." It took me forever to get the banner size right. It's gotta be 468x60 to look right. Have fun! Mae
MaxGive them just an image (no HTML) ... I would create several standard banner sizes of .gif images. You could create some static .gif and some animated .gifs It also allows you to be more creative with the design.
On 12/18/08, Max wrote: > Give them just an image (no HTML) ... > I would create several standard banner sizes of .gif images. > You could create some static .gif and some animated .gifs > It also allows you to be more creative with the design.
I received an email from someone who visited my website. This person said that the security system at his school and Firefox on his home PC are both sending him the message that my site is a "potential spyware site"
I have never heard this before.
Is there a way I can find out what might be triggering this?
Firefox's wording "potential spyware site", is just a bit too harsh for what it's worth.
You may want to check with your webhost on the type of statistics they are keeping for you. What they provide may be just as detailed and informative as Analytics.
-max-
On 12/17/08, science teacher wrote: > I received an email from someone who visited my website. > This person said that the security system at his school and > Firefox on his home PC are both sending him the message > that my site is a "potential spyware site" > > I have never heard this before. > > Is there a way I can find out what might be triggering this?
Our retiree teacher group has a b*l*o*g spot. We have a list of interesting sites, but always look for more. Have you stumbled upon neat sites that you might share? If so please post. This is our b*l*o*g. Just remove the **** tpsretireegroup.b*l*o*gspot.com
From 12/24/2008 through 1/4/2009, Community MX is celebrating the holiday season with an Open House! All of their almost 3,000 articles and tutorials are free to read during this period so take a peek inside. one series that might be of interest is the Dreamweaver Web Standards Lesson Plan Series [link removed]
On 12/27/08, K. Fair wrote: > I am voting for a friend on the site posted. (It is a site > for Super Bowl tickets... with fans competing with video > clips). I just want to know if someone can program their > computer to keep accessing the web site and recording votes > without having to manually do it. I'm not interested in > knowing how it's done... just if it is possible. I'm not > interested in wasting my time if someone can program a > computer to register votes nonstop 24 - 7. Thanks for your > expertise!
K. Fair Thanks! From conversations about programming (overheard) it seemed that it could be done. I agree with you. I have continued to vote. I wasn't able to post the URL, but if you are interested at all... you could google: "NFL Super Fans That's how I see it". I am trying to support a teacher.... Kellie Nyman, who has a website that so many educators h...See MoreThanks! From conversations about programming (overheard) it seemed that it could be done. I agree with you. I have continued to vote. I wasn't able to post the URL, but if you are interested at all... you could google: "NFL Super Fans That's how I see it". I am trying to support a teacher.... Kellie Nyman, who has a website that so many educators have benefitted by. So, thank you for now... I'm going back to vote. On 12/28/08, megan wrote: > Is it possible? yes - People can do and do do all kinds of > things - the real question is how is the website voting set up > behind the scenes - the website might set cookies or record ip > addresses of those voting to try and prevent such things from > happening or to flag admin if it looks like abuse is occurring > from a certain ip - While I try to be smart about protecting > myself from phishing etc, I also don't let some vague fear of > what others might do keep me from doing what I think is good > to do. > > just my .02 ~megan > > On 12/27/08, K. Fair wrote: >> I am voting for a friend on the site posted. (It is a site >> for Super Bowl tickets... with fans competing with video >> clips). I just want to know if someone can program their >> computer to keep accessing the web site and recording votes >> without having to manually do it. I'm not interested in >> knowing how it's done... just if it is possible. I'm not >> interested in wasting my time if someone can program a >> computer to register votes nonstop 24 - 7. Thanks for your >> expertise!
I had HostGator last year and canceled. They seemed to be down as often as they were up. Their billing system kept sending me overdue messages even though I wasn't overdue. I found their customer service to be very poor.
I hope I am on the correct board, but I would like to know if there is anyone out there that can tell me what I need or how to even learn how to create webinars.Thanks
MeganThere are a number of free web conferencing tools out there and also some for pay services that you can try for free - just click the blue link below
also, you can find some good tips and resources for getting putting on webinars at [link removed]
On 1/01/09, Max wrote: > Mae ... > > You put your forum in it's own directory, which is fine, > but your main directory has no "index.php" page? So > the link shown below ends-up being forbidden? > > Until you get an index page made, at least upload this > as your "index.php" ... > > > > That will redirect it to your forum. >
The spammers will register as users and then begin spamming. There are actually people hired to do just that.
If you have some special information for teachers that is not available anywhere else, you should do a website about that, and ditch the forum ... just my opinion. I only mentiont this because you seem to have a lot of technical aptitude not common among most teachers I knoew.
I've heard Drupal has more versatility but requires more php expertise. But Joomla! is really adequate for me and more time-efficient, since I want to focus on content -- free interactive websites for K-12 students and teachers.