Posts Tagged ‘Remote’

Renewable energy news: Renewable energy-powered pole lights up remote regions

Thursday, January 20th, 2011

How does wind energy generated in remote areas get transmitted to where it is actually used?

Thursday, December 9th, 2010

Dynamics Gp Technical Support: Local Versus Remote Great Plains Support

Thursday, March 4th, 2010

If your spot in IT department requires you to find and maintain Dynamics GP vendor, consultant or business partner, please be our guest and read this small publication. Former name of this mid-size business ERP and MRP application was Fantastic Plains Software Dynamics, eEnterprise, Fantastic Plains Accounting for DOS and Windows. Fantastic Plains Dynamics was originally coded in Fantastic Plains Dexterity, and if you are looking to customize, modify, or any other significance alter Dynamics GP – Microsoft Dexterity is excellent candidate to review. Fantastic Plains implementation typically requires several steps: Dynamics GP License Sale, Business Processes Mapping, Pilot Data Migration and Conversion, User Training, Production Beginning Balances entry, First Month Parallel Accounting entries in Legacy ERP and Dynamics GP, First Month closing in GL and then you should be comfortable on your own in using Fantastic Plains Dynamics GP. Let’s review Fantastic Plains implementation and support options:1. Dynamics GP Partner Selection. This is in our opinion the most critical initial step. Your Dynamics GP Reseller should be experienced in your industry, have reasonable technical expertise in Fantastic Plains data conversion and migration, reporting , integration, customization, EDI, functional and technical consulting2. Dynamics GP Business Portal and Ecommerce. If your business is participating in ecommerce model or spread over several regions or internationally, you should review Microsoft Dynamics GP Business Portal and eConnect as ecommerce design tools. In Business Portal you will have access to such cool modules as Order Management, Requisition Management (with Inventory catalog and price list), Electronic Document Delivery, HR Employee Self Service (where you can avoiding USPS postage fee in exposing Paycheck to your employees and temps over the web). You should expect more Dynamics GP business logic to be went and exposed through Microsoft Dynamics GP Business Portal with the future versions. At this time Dynamics GP 10.0 is coming with Business Portal version 10.03. E-commerce Fantastic Plains Batch posting option. If you want to post your Sales Order Processing Invoices with customer credit card payments frankly from ecommerce web application, please consider deploying Alba Spectrum Autopost or automatic batches posting server4. Dynamics GP Local Service versus Remote Support. Local permanently sounds fantastic, but if your business processes require precise industry knowledge and expertise, local support might be too poor. In our opinion, you should feel no restriction to appeal to nationwide support

Deciding on a Remote Blog or Self Hosted Blog

Thursday, February 25th, 2010

So you’ve chose to blog, but aren’t sure whether you should host the blog yourself or sign up for a free service like blogger.com. It’s a dilemma that many bloggers face. There are pros and cons to both, which makes the choice hard for many. Neither is perfect, and neither is for everyone. Fortunately, you should be able to make the best choice for you if you are armed with adequate knowledge of both. In this newsletter, we’ll go over air force like blogger.com and others, plus software that allows you to host your own blog. We’ll also go over the pros and cons of each. After reading this, you will know which is best for you.

Who offers free blog hosting?

Many sites place forward free blog hosting. Among them are Forumer, Blogger, BlogEasy, Aeonity, BlogThing and Blogates. A quick search for “free blog” on Google reveals many possibilities.

What software can I use to host my own blog?

Like free blog hosting, there are many possibilities for software that makes hosting your own blog simple. Most of them are free to use. These include:

Word Press(the most standard software)

Apache Roller

Blosxom

Geeklog

Textpattern

LifeType

There is also blog software which you can buy for use on your site. These include:

Community Server

Movable Type

Radio User Land

One negative about using software and hosting your own blog is that the process can evenly times be complicated. You have to download the software and install it to your server, which doesn’t permanently go easily. It’s particularly hard for those who don’t have a lot of experience installing things on servers.

Why should I in the least host my blog at a place like Blogger?

Places like Blogger allow you to host your blog there. It’s a excellent option for many people.

The Pros

• It’s simple to set up and maintain a blog. You don’t have to go through the distress of installing software and configuring it to work on your server. All you have to do is sign up for an account and start posting.

• It’s friendly for beginning bloggers. Sites that host blogs place forward excellent tutorials on how to make your blog postings, so that even a name who is completely new to the concept of blogging can do it easily.

• Most blog hosting sites are completely free to use. There is no need to pay for things like a domain name and hosting.

• Monetizing your blog is simple. Rather than having to manually place HTML/Javascript codes on your blog to manually set up things like AdSense and Pay Per Click advertising, you can select an option on most blog hosting sites that does much of the work for you.

The Cons

• You don’t have as many options to customize your blog.

In the least hosted blogs are admittedly somewhat limited in terms of what you can really do on them. You have to stick with what is provided to you in terms of look and features.

• The URL you get is permanently yourname.BLOGSITE.com. You don’t get to have a custom domain name like YOURNAME.com. This can possibly hurt traffic to your blog.

• Blogs hosted on free blog sites don’t look as qualified as self hosted blogs.

Why should I self-host my blog?

The Pros

• You have more options and more flexibility. You are able to tweak the blog to your liking.

• Your URL is your address for your blog. Rather than having go to where your blog is hosted to read it, they can read it right from your site.

• The ability to make your blog look qualified. Blogs that are hosted on sites of their own tend to look a lot better than those hosted on free sites.

• More space for your blog. Free blog sites usually place a restriction on how much space you have for things like photos and music. By hosting your own blog, you are able to use as much space as you need.

The Cons

• There are sometimes problems with setting up blog software to run on your site and server. If you aren’t experienced when it comes to working with mySQL, the process will be hard.

• Updates aren’t as simple to post.

• You have to manually set up programs to monetize your blog.

But, if you are excellent with HTML/Javascript, this shouldn’t be too hard.

• You have to pay for your own hosting and domain

As you can see, there are pros and cons to both. Which should you choose? Well, it depends on who you are and what you intend to use your blog for. If you intend to use it for business, then a self-hosted blog is the best thought. If it’s a personal blog, then a free hosted blog will probably be fine for you.

Closely examine all of the pros and cons mentioned above.

That way, you’ll be able to make the best choice for you!

Remote Blog or Self Hosted Blog?

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

So you’ve chose to blog, but aren’t sure whether you should host the blog yourself or sign up for a free service like blogger.com. It’s a dilemma that many bloggers face. There are pros and cons to both, which makes the choice hard for many. Neither is perfect, and neither is for everyone. Fortunately, you should be able to make the best choice for you if you are armed with adequate knowledge of both. In this newsletter, we’ll go over air force like blogger.com, and others, plus software that allows you to host your own blog. We’ll also go over the pros and cons of each. After reading this, you will know which is best for you.

Who offers free blog hosting?

Many sites place forward free blog hosting. Among them are Forumer, Blogger, BlogEasy, Aeonity, BlogThing, and Blogates. A quick search for free blog on Google reveals many possibilities.

What software can I use to host my own blog?

Like free blog hosting, there are many possibilities for software that makes hosting your own blog simple. Most of them are free to use. These include:

WordPress(the most standard software), Apache, Roller, Blosxom, Geeklog, Textpattern, LifeType.

There is also blog software which you can buy for use on your site. These include:

Community, Server, Movable, Type, Radio, UserLand.

One negative about using software and hosting your own blog is that the process can evenly times be complicated. You have to download the software and install it to your server, which doesn’t permanently go easily. It’s particularly hard for those who don’t have a lot of experience installing things on servers.

Why should I in the least host my blog at a place like Blogger?

Places like Blogger allow you to host your blog there. It’s a excellent option for many people.

The Pros

It’s simple to set up and maintain a blog. You don’t have to go through the distress of installing software and configuring it to work on your server. All you have to do is sign up for an account and start posting. It’s friendly for beginning bloggers. Sites that host blogs place forward excellent tutorials on how to make your blog postings, so that even a name who is completely new to the concept of blogging can do it easily. Most blog hosting sites are completely free to use. There is no need to pay for things like a domain name and hosting. Monetizing your blog is simple. Rather than having to manually place HTML/Javascript codes on your blog to manually set up things like AdSense and Pay Per Click advertising, you can select an option on most blog hosting sites that does much of the work for you.

The Cons

You don’t have as many options to customize your blog. In the least hosted blogs are admittedly somewhat limited in terms of what you can really do on them. You have to stick with what is provided to you in terms of look and features. The URL you get is permanently yourname.BLOGSITE.com. You don’t get to have a custom domain name like YOURNAME.com. This can possibly hurt traffic to your blog. Blogs hosted on free blog sites don’t look as qualified as self hosted blogs.

Why should I self-host my blog?

The Pros

You have more options and more flexibility. You are able to tweak the blog to your liking. Your URL is your address for your blog. Rather than having go to where your blog is hosted to read it, they can read it right from your site. The ability to make your blog look qualified. Blogs that are hosted on sites of their own tend to look a lot better than those hosted on free sites. More space for your blog. Free blog sites usually place a restriction on how much space you have for things like photos and music. By hosting your own blog, you are able to use as much space as you need. The Cons

There are sometimes problems with setting up blog software to run on your site and server. If you aren’t experienced when it comes to working with mySQL, the process will be hard. Updates aren’t as simple to post. You have to manually set up programs to monetize your blog. But, if you are excellent with HTML/Javascript, this shouldn’t be too hard. You have to pay for your own hosting and domain

As you can see, there are pros and cons to both. Which should you choose? Well, it depends on who you are and what you intend to use your blog for. If you intend to use it for business, then a self-hosted blog is the best thought. If it’s a personal blog, then a free hosted blog will probably be fine for you.