IPv6 Change
Management
By Robert M. Morris
Managing the Migration to the Internet Protocol of the Future
IPv6. It can be assumed that
there isn’t a CIO/CTO on the planet that has not heard of that phrase.
But what is IPv6? IPv6 is follow up to IPv4, which is the current
Internet Protocol addressing scheme. However, due to the ever
increasing popularity and necessity of the Internet and the
increasing number of devices (computers, laptops, cell phones, cars,
refrigerators, etc) that have the capabilities of accessing the
internet, IPv4 is running out of addresses to give. Technology
managers must be able to implement necessary change strategies that
would work for their particular company and technological situation,
and finally the management must not be afraid to be the first in
what will be a very long line of organizations to make the migration
to IPv6.
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Why
Washington Must Face New-Cyber-Name-Economy?
By Naseem Javed
The serious objections by US Department of Commerce to ICANN's new
policieson creating unlimited domain suffixes are primarily based on
old domain name thinking and continued fear of losing control of
Internet.
The proposed ICANN plan offers a brand new superior device to fit
new platforms and technologically advanced solutions amidst global
image and name identities positioning. Here are the three key facts.
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Blogs… Bite ME!
By Paul Shearstone
The unbridled nature of the
internet has its strengths and weaknesses. One being, it exists in an
eternal state of recent authenticity. It would bode well for readers and
bloggers alike to temper their interpretations until they can time-frame
the context or circumstances in which the editorial / blog was written.
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The
Bid For Dubai's Cyber-Rights
By Naseem Javed
Under the latest ICANN's policy who would like to bid the highest
amount for the exclusive global rights to the new domain suffix .dubai?
Such a suffix will create a powerful domain root that will corner
some 180 services underneath it, like go.dubai, hotel.dubai,
job.dubai, cars.dubai or fly.dubai. Who would be the next global
cyber-branding leader of this new millennium?
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The Domain
Blast
By Naseem Javed
Now you can buy any domain with any suffix. If a dotcom is gone, so
what? For a cost, you can create your own suffix, any letters and
any name.
We should all embrace some mega changes of current business names
and the influx of millions of new ones. Some would be highly
practical and most needed, and a lot would be just silly, funny and
entertaining. Your readers are about to face tough challenges on how
to face naming on a global scale.
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The Domain Exchange
By Naseem Javed
The entire domain name industry has advanced to a more mature level,
which now fully recognizes the super value of having a generic
globally recognizable domain identity as a true cyber-real-estate
asset. But the name game in this current race must be played under
the correct laws, as most of these assets sometimes simply evaporate
into thin air.
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Technology & Business Expansion: Matching Your Data Systems to the
Business Growth Needs of Tomorrow
By Dan Kaplan
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Internet Branding: The 2006 Corporate Challenge
By Naseem Javed
"Cheap" is losing its power as now "free" is in. Global competition
is so fierce and the labor-cost disparity is so wide that most
bargain pricing is no longer effective, as there is always some
other supplier to offer a product for far less -- or even for free.
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The
Winners and Losers of the Internet Break-Up
By Naseem Javed
Why should Internet break and how ridiculous is this issue? Imagine
if a few printers around the globe got together and jointly decided
to replace all our current currencies and their value and choose
brand new colors, designs and new values all own their own. Economy?
What economy?
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Web
video gone viral
With all the interest in viral marketing lately, we have two
articles about the making of a recent web video that went viral –
and had stunning results.
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A
view on Google's Patent: Information Retrieval Based on Historical
Data
By Peter Faber
Google doesn't stop innovating their search engine, and there where
others try to follow, Google is not just 1 step ahead, but 10 steps
ahead. Their latest innovation, which actually may already be in
place for a year or longer, can be found in the patent: ‚Information
Retrieval Based on Historical Data'.
This article has the goal to give a simplified representation of
this patent + contains recommendations as to what would be the best
SEO techniques to obtain high rankings, with a specific focus on
links.
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Revolution
of the New Geek
Michael B. Parks
This essay is geared towards Information Technology professionals,
be it computer engineers, scientists, programmers, or help desk
support. It is an argument for a new way to do business.
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22
Reasons Why Your Page Did Not Get Indexed
If there's one question in search engine marketing that comes up far
too often it is: "Why hasn't my page or Web site been indexed
yet?" Or, almost as often: "Why was my page indexed for a
while and has now disappeared?"
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The
Wal-Martization of E-Commerce
By Naseem Javed
The self-replication of e-commerce has already started, and like an
alien blob from another planet it is re-generating and multiplying
itself in a fast self-repro-replication-mode
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Clash
of the Titans - When Search Engines Collide
By Naseem Javed
Billions of pages going to trillions. Most of the information
available online is replicated again and again, then twisted,
corrupted and re-entered. When one search question retrieves one
million answers, the system fails -- results have little or no
value.
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Attacks
from within can be worse than those from without
By Paul Marcellin
Organisations spend significant time, money and effort ensuring that
their IT infrastructure is as secure as possible, working tirelessly
to reduce threats of virus infection, malicious attacks or
intrusions. Should an organisation’s IT security be breached, the
potential damage that can be caused could be mild or it could be
crippling. The assumption is that outsiders attack companies. Wrong,
says PAUL MARCELLIN, MD of PhiBlue Technologies.
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Manage
e-mail so it can assume its rightful place in your business
By Michael Brunzlik
Do you know how many e-mails move through your server every day? Any
idea how big they are, or if they are clogging the server? Do you
care how many of those mails contain private content, or how many of
the mails containing business critical information can be read by
any Joe Soap? How much control do you have … and how much can lack
of control cost you?
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The
Mysteries And Future Of Websites
By Naseem Javed
Websites have just completed a full circle of a hard struggle, and
somehow survived where other traditional marketing tools and old
principals failed big time. Now the same sites and domain names must
face harsher realities once again, all to ensure high visibility and
exposure they so provide.
html-file - 16 KB
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Top
10 Design Issues According To Web Marketing!
By: Martin Lemieux
When it comes to designing your site, there are 2 ways you can
ultimately go. a) Designing for yourself and no one else, b)
Designing to fit web marketing and customer attracting methods.
Here are the top 10 issues you should always consider
html-file - 12 KB
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A
Network Of Web Sites Is Not Enough!
By Martin Lemieux
html-file - 10 KB
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eMarketing:
New Millennia
by Cameron Dart
We are quickly moving into a new world – a ‘wireless world’,
sporting trendy Internet-enabled handheld devices and interactive
televisions. New marketing methods are emerging, forcing companies
to change the way they search out and connect with their customers.
The revolutionary element of ‘trackable digital delivery’ is
helping marketers measure their efforts and gain real-time
intelligence about their customer base. This article takes a look at
how to break through the clutter, and drive companies into the 21st
century with new technologies.
January 2002
pdf-file - 240 KB
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eBusines -
The Second Wave
by Cameron Dart
eBusiness is an evolving process; a fundamental business
transformation that is not easy. It affects everyone, from
governments to corporations to customers. Second wave eBusiness is
not about flashy websites, it's more about transforming relationship
management right across the entire business value chain. New and
improved technologies, business methods and processes, including
electronic customer relationship management, electronic supply chain
management and corporate portals are reshaping organizations all
over the world. Leaders and managers are taking heed of these
changes, and developing strategies to incorporate them into their
everyday business activities, putting their companies one step
closer to becoming fully-fledged digital corporations; a
prerequisite for success in the new economy.
html-file - 119 KB
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The E-Business
Hype does not End - Some Ironic Thoughts
by Dagmar Recklies
Do you remember the time when the e-business hype reached its peak
in the first half of 2000? The author of this article thinks that we
now have an anti-hype with everything e- is bad. The author explains
her thoughts on why the new anti-hype is as much an exaggeration as
the former e-business hype was.
August 2001
html-file 21 KB
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M-Commerce
- The Next Hype?
by Oliver Recklies
It looks as if the term M-Commerce and the business models behind
become the next great hype in the digital economy. At the moment,
however, it is not clear, where the story will end. Suppliers of
M-Commerce Solutions, content providers and suppliers of hardware
(mobile phones) predict (again) a great future for this concept –
with great new services for the customers and great business for
themselves. This article attempts to find a realistic view on future
prospects.
March 2001
html-file - 29 KB
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Digital
Marketplaces - Types and Functions
by Dagmar Recklies
This article gives an overview on functions and types of digital
marketplaces.
September 2000
html-file - 23 KB |