Monday 6 June 2011

A job should mean a job for life?



Living in the 21st century, we can longer rely on a single job. In fact, these days people are forever seeking better job opportunities, in order to earn more income and have a better standard of living. To rely on a particular job is just like hanging by a thin thread. It is very risky in case of any down turn of the business. Therefore, the cliche “a job for life” would not be possible.

A long working hour and a lack of fringe benefits, are these characteristics of A desirable job? Obviously, everyone would like to work in a good environment, with high salary. A job that offers better pay and plenty of benefits is always as per our requirement. For instance, nowadays there are many people who quit their current job and search for a better job. In addition to this, I believe that the motivations of people are different. In some case, social security is the important factor for people to continue to work in the same place. Despite the high amount of salary that is being paid per month, social security may be the next needed. In fact, no one would like to work in an unstable position, as they can be laid off the job at any time. Similarly, in this competitive era, each business might be faced with a lot of competition that results in their shutting down. Therefore, to depend on one job may seem to be too dangerous.

As a conclusion, for people to continue work in the same job, usually depends on the motivations. Personally, I believe that it is impossible for one to continue working in the same job for life. Everyone works for a better quality of life; therefore people look for a better job that is more worthwhile.

      

Sunday 24 April 2011

How to raise your website/blog rank using these helpful tips

Page rank is the single most important determining factor that will determine the success or failure of a blog or website. Google has a ranking system they’ve developed on their own to determine where various websites fall within the search results and they use very specific information to determine this. To land on the first page in Google’s search results a site must have a fairly high page rank. With that in mind, it’s a good idea for you to do everything you can to boost your page rank – these steps will help.

Social bookmarking websites like Reddit and Digg all have high page ranks and any websites that get submitted to them can obviously be helped. These sites are a great portal through which to reach your target niche when you upload good content. So, if you think about it there are both implicit and explicit ways to raise a page rank by using social bookmarking sites. Seriously! For one thing, the websites to which you are submitting your content have very valuable page rankings. Next, people who make a habit of visiting these sites do so because they use them as portals to other kinds of content. So if your website is worth anything at all, you’ll have all sorts of other websites linking to you and helping you raise your page rank. Make sure that your bookmark tags are relevant and have the best keywords.
For the best overall results, it’s always a good idea to only use original content on your website. Original content is what all site owners should have on their websites. Google likes to see original content. One rule which should be followed by all successful website owners, is to never use copied content. Even if the content is written by you and posted elsewhere on the internet, do not use this content on your website. Sites have been hammered before by Google for having copied content, especially when the content was copied within the site itself.


Consider all the high page rank directories. You can get tons of new exposure simply by submitting your site to these directories. It’s a simple matter to make your site’s page rank go higher and higher by submitting it to more and more directories. Most directories are free of charge but there are some that charge a fee – these generally provide a much bigger boost and many webmasters find sites like Yahoo! Directory to be worth the price they pay. Always be on the lookout for directories where you can submit your own site quickly and easily.
Don’t get caught up in the details or lost in the process of trying to improve page rank fast and focus instead on how you can change it for good. Your eyes should be on your long term goals and not something short term. The correlations between page rank and search engine traffic will be enough to convince you that this is not wasted effort.Good luck :)


Wednesday 6 April 2011

World's Top 3 Blogs

1. The Huffington Post

The history of political blogging might usefully be divided into the periods pre- and post-Huffington. Before the millionaire socialite Arianna Huffington decided to get in on the act, bloggers operated in a spirit of underdog solidarity. They hated the mainstream media - and the feeling was mutual.
Bloggers saw themselves as gadflies, pricking the arrogance of established elites from their home computers, in their pyjamas, late into the night. So when, in 2005, Huffington decided to mobilise her fortune and media connections to create, from scratch, a flagship liberal blog she was roundly derided. Who, spluttered the original bloggerati, did she think she was?
But the pyjama purists were confounded. Arianna's money talked just as loudly online as off, and the Huffington Post quickly became one of the most influential and popular journals on the web. It recruited professional columnists and celebrity bloggers. It hoovered up traffic. Its launch was a landmark moment in the evolution of the web because it showed that many of the old rules still applied to the new medium: a bit of marketing savvy and deep pockets could go just as far as geek credibility, and get there faster.
To borrow the gold-rush simile beloved of web pioneers, Huffington's success made the first generation of bloggers look like two-bit prospectors panning for nuggets in shallow creeks before the big mining operations moved in. In the era pre-Huffington, big media companies ignored the web, or feared it; post-Huffington they started to treat it as just another marketplace, open to exploitation. Three years on, Rupert Murdoch owns MySpace, while newbie amateur bloggers have to gather traffic crumbs from under the table of the big-time publishers.
Least likely to post 'I'm so over this story - check out the New York Times'
huffingtonpost.com

2. Boing Boing

Lego reconstructions of pop videos and cakes baked in the shape of iPods are not generally considered relevant to serious political debate. But even the most earnest bloggers will often take time out of their busy schedule to pass on some titbit of mildly entertaining geek ephemera. No one has done more to promote pointless, yet strangely cool, time-wasting stuff on the net than the editors of Boing Boing (subtitle: A Directory of Wonderful Things). It launched in January 2000 and has had an immeasurable influence on the style and idiom of blogging. But hidden among the pictures of steam-powered CD players and Darth Vader tea towels there is a steely, ultra-liberal political agenda: championing the web as a global medium free of state and corporate control.
Boing Boing chronicles cases where despotic regimes have silenced or imprisoned bloggers. It helped channel blogger scorn on to Yahoo and Google when they kowtowed to China's censors in order to win investment opportunities. It was instrumental in exposing the creeping erosion of civil liberties in the US under post-9/11 'Homeland Security' legislation. And it routinely ridicules attempts by the music and film industries to persecute small-time file sharers and bedroom pirates instead of getting their own web strategies in order. It does it all with gentle, irreverent charm, polluted only occasionally with gratuitous smut.
Their dominance of the terrain where technology meets politics makes the Boing Boing crew geek aristocracy.
Least likely to post 'Has anyone got a stamp?'
boingboing.net

3. Techcrunch

Techcrunch began in 2005 as a blog about dotcom start-ups in Silicon Valley, but has quickly become one of the most influential news websites across the entire technology industry. Founder Michael Arrington had lived through the internet goldrush as a lawyer and entrepreneur before deciding that writing about new companies was more of an opportunity than starting them himself. His site is now ranked the third-most popular blog in the world by search engine Technorati, spawning a mini-empire of websites and conferences as a result. Business Week named Arrington one of the 25 most influential people on the web, and Techcrunch has even scored interviews with Barack Obama and John McCain.
With a horde of hungry geeks and big money investors online, Techcrunch is the largest of a wave of technology-focused blog publishers to tap into the market - GigaOm, PaidContent and Mashable among them - but often proves more contentious than its rivals, thanks to Arrington's aggressive relationships with traditional media and his conflicts of interest as an investor himself.
Least likely to post 'YouTube? It'll never catch on'
techcrunch.com
 

Wednesday 2 March 2011

A Love Letter



To My Dear Love
______________

Oh! my dear love,how are you doing? are you missing me? God knows i do,I just can't stop thinking about you,you're always in my head,my dreams and my heart,I still remember the first day we met oh that was the best day of my life,we were too young that time but love has no age and no limits.
I've heard that the lake we used to see each other on is no more,it was hard and sad to hear such thing but we still have those marvelous unforgettable memories.Remember our favorite song how we used to sing it together?
Oh No,No I don't need nobodyI don't fear nobody
I don't want nobody but youMy one and only
I Don't need nobody BUT YOU

Its only a matter of time for us to reunite again,you take care,,,,,,,, =(


Much Love
__________