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We are able to assist you, if you have no web site.
We are able to advise you, if you want your existing web site updated.
Our rates are competitive, and our service standards are high.
Please contact us for further information by email.
Importance of Website Design and Website Development:
Making the most of the internet: The internet bubble may have burst, but web based on-line business is here to stay. Your business must be online, and you must be making the most of the internet revenue opportunities. In order to do that you will need the following:
Website Graphic Design: Set yourself apart from your competition with crisp fast-loading images and graphics that express your on-line identity and unify your web site.
Website Design: You can have an HTML website that acts as an electronic brochure for your business that is clean and fast-loading, and you can also have a custom made website designed to be dynamic. Dynamic sites are database driven websites that generate pages on demand. This could be anything from displaying your inventory on your site, to an interactive test or survey.
Website Designer: You need an experienced website designer who will analyze your needs and build, design, and manage the website solution that is right for you. Your website designer must understand your business and your business operations and design a website that is the best for you. Your designer must know Macromedia Flash, Dreamweaver, and animation for your website.
Website Remodel: You may need your site remodeled to give it a fresh new look. You want your website to convey the look your company image demands in your market. Your a website can be designed around your current logo, or you can develop a whole new look and corporate identity image around your company.
Requirements Analysis: Your website designer must analyze your business and your online strategy to design a solution that is economical and effective and meets the requirements of your business.
Information Architecture: Your website should be designed as a navigation structure and user interface that lets all your customers get to what they want quickly and easily. Ease of use is one of the top factors in developing a loyal clientele.
Front-End Implementation: You must have lean, fast, easily maintained html, javascript, and style sheets that work on all major browsers. Ease of Use: Whatever server or various types of databases, your website needs the right combination of technologies to create a reliable, scalable solution that fits your needs.
Website Content: The content of your website should be reviewed and edited so that it gets your point across to your customers.
Website Market Plan Opportunity: Your website should advance the goals of your marketing plan and present the best image of your products or services. Your website should be better than your competitors.
HTML Key Words: You must choose the right keywords or phrases that describe your product or service so that your website will be easily located. They must have the right prominence and frequency and the right amount of text to satisfy the search engines.
HTML Meta Tags: Your important keywords must be placed in meta tags, and all tags must have the right prominence and frequency in HTML to satisfy the major search engines.
Website Links: You need to create links from other relevant websites to yours to improve your link popularity and improve your ranking with the major search engines.
Website Optimization: You must implement the many ways that you can attract customers and create business from your website. Your website must be compatible with the search engines and set up to insure that your site comes up with the correct targeted search terms. This can mean a real boost in your sales.
Glossary of Internet Terminology:
404 error:
File not found. This is an error that occurs when the host server cannot find a file that a web browser or search engine spider requests.
A
Above the fold:
Refers to the portion of the screen visible without scrolling down a web page.
Absolute link:
A hyperlink that includes the complete web address, which is the domain name, pathname and filename.
Agent name delivery:
The process of delivering alternative web pages to a search engine spider in order to artificialy elevate search engine positioning. See cloaking.
Algorithm:
The mathematical formula used to determine how web pages are ranked within search engine results pages.
Alternative text:
The text placed within the image source tag. If a graphic image does not display, then the text appears in its place. The same text is used by text only and aural browsers. Also known as alt text.
Anchor text:
Commonly known as a text link. In HTML this text is placed between the <a> and the </a> tags.
Applet:
A small program written in the java programming language that runs in a web browser.
B
B2B:
An abbreviation for Business to Business. A B2B web site sells products and services to other businesses.
B2C:
An abbreviation for Business to Consumer. A B2C web site sells products and services to the public.
Bait and switch:
The process of submitting a web page to a search engine or directory and then substituting it with an unrelated page after the search engine or directory has logged the original one.
Below the fold:
Content on a web page that requires the user to scroll down to view it.
Best of the Web:
The elite Inktomi databse currently containing over 115 million documents from Inktomi's natural crawling of the web. Web sites listed in this index are the most popular documents on the web by Inktomi's analysis. Abbreviated as BOW.
Boolean search:
A search on a computer database or search engine for keywords that best describe your topic using boolean operators such as AND, OR and NOT.
The Boulder Pledge:
Under no circumstances will I ever purchase anything offered to me as the result of an unsolicited e-mail message. Nor will I forward chain letters, petitions, mass mailings, or virus warnings to large numbers of others. This is my contribution to the survival of the online community. Ń Ń from the December 1996 issue of "Yahoo! Internet Life" Ń Ń as written by Roger Ebert (the film critic and long-time user of online computer forums)
Breadcrumbs:
A form of text navigation showing the hierachical linking structure of a web site. Usually in the format of Home < Products > Bags where each word is a link back up the hierachy.
Bridge page:
Another term for a doorway page. See Doorway pages.
Browser:
The software used to view, manage and access web pages by interpreting hypertext and hyperlinks.
C
Call to action:
The intended response a web site owner wicshes site visitors to take when they view a web page. The call to action might be to order, purchase, subscribe, download or click here.
Cascading Style Sheets (CSS):
An innovation from the W3C. Style sheets enable wen designers and end users to create style templates (sheets) that specify how different text elements such as paragraphs, headings etc appear on a web page.
CGI:
An abbreviation of common gateway interface. CGI refers to programs used to produce content for browser delivery via a web browser.
Click-through:
The process of clicking a link in one web page and arriving at another. In search engine marketing, it is the process of clicking a link from a search results page to a specific web page.
Click-through popularity:
In search engine marketing, the number of times end users click the link from search engines to a web site and how long end users stay on the site after they click through from the search engine. Some search engines use click-through popularity to determine relevancy. Also known as click tracking.
Cloaking:
The process of delivering custom content to a search engine spider that is hidden from site visitors. With cloaking, search engine spiders see one page and visitors see another page with different content.
Clustering:
Listing only one or two pages from each web site in a search engine's or directory's list of search results.
Comment tag:
An HTML tag used to hide comments from browsers. Comment-tag content is placed between the <!-- and--> symbols. Most search engines ignore the content placed between these symbols.
Concept search:
A search for documents related to a keyword or keywoed phrase. Different from a search specifically containing the keyword itself.
Content page:
Another term for an information page. See information page.
Conversion rate:
The measure of specific calls to action divided by the total number of unique visitors. For example, it 10 visitors purchase a product or service and 100 visitors view the web page, the page has a conversion rate of 10 percent.
Cookie:
A message given to a web browser by a web server. One of the main purposes of cookies is to identify web site visitors and possibly prepare customised web pages for them.
Counter:
A program or script that counts the number of visits to a web page.
Cost per action (CPA):
A type of advertising in which a web site gets paid each time an end user performs a desired action.
Cost per click (CPC):
A type of advertising where a web site gets paid each time an end user clicks a link to the advertisers web site.
Cost per thousand (CPM):
A type of advertising in which a web site gets paid based on the number of impressions given to an advert. Calculated in blocks of 1000.
Crawler:
Another word for search engine spider. See spider.
Cross linking:
Linking among web pages within the same web site.
D
Dead link:
A link to a web page that does not exist on a web server.
Deep linking:
Linking to content that is two or more directories deep within a web site. Can also be linking directly to individual web pages within a site, rather than the home page.
Destination page:
The web page a visitor is taken to after clicking a search engine listing or advertisement. Also known as a landing page.
Directory:
Web site that focuses on listing web pages or sites by specific categories, using human editors to manually place web sites or web pages into categories.
Directory enhancement:
The process of selecting the most appropriate category (or categories) in a directory and writing a keyword-rich description that accurately describes the content of a web site or web page.
Domain Name System (DNS):
The DNS translates URL text addresses (such as www.companyname.com) into a numeric Internet address (such as 202.203.11.1) is an example.
DNS Lookup:
The process of converting a unique IP address (of a web site visitor) to its domain name. Used in site statistics software to analyse site traffic.
Domain name:
A text address that corresponds to one or more numeric IP addresses. An registered exclusive company name that identifies a web site such as www.google.com is an example.
Doorway domain:
A web site that consists of mostly or solely doorway pages. A doorway domain's only purpose is to rank well on search engines and to ultimately direct traffic to a different site.
Doorway pages:
Web pages created specifically for obtaining top search engine positions and not to benefit end users. Computer generated doorway pages are usually created to rank high on specific search engines and are often cloaked.
Download:
The process of retrieving information from a main source to a peripheral device. Browsers download web pages from a server.
Dynamic HTML:
The use of JavaScript as an HTML extension to enable web pages to react to a users input without using the web server.
Dynamic IP:
An IP address that changes every time a user connects to the internet.
Dynamic URLs:
The URL of a dynamic web page. Dynamic URL's typically contain characters such as ?, =, %, +, cgi, or cgi-bin.
E
Entry Page:
The first page an enf user views after clicking a link to a web site. Also known as a landing page.
F
Fake copy listing:
A web page that has achieved a top search engine position by stealing the contents of another web page.
False drop:
A web page retrieved from a search engine or directory that is not relevant to the query used.
FFA:
Abbreviation for free-for-all links. FFA web pages contain a collection of indiscriminate, often unrelated, links to other web pages. FFA links are commonly used to artifically boost link popularity and are considered spam by the major search engines.
Filter words:
Common words that search engines remove when adding web page information to their full-text indices because they tend to slow down search queries without improving the results. Common filter words are as follows: the, a, an, or, for, of, but, is and it.
File Transfers via HTTP:
Problems with downloading files can have many variables. From slow network connection, bad connections, to outages can all cause problems in downloading large files. Using FTP clients could be a better solution than HTTP, when you find that you can not download a file.
File Transfers via FTP:
If you are having difficulty downloading software it may be that you are behind a firewall or secure router. Try using the following FTP software that has better handling abilities with this problem.
* How to configure WINDOWS FTP SOFTWARE to work with your Firewall ...
When using WS-FTP software for Windows:
1. Load Ws-FTP.
2. Click on the "Options" button on the bottom of the screen.
3. Click on the "Session" tab, check the box that says "Use Passive Transfer Mode" and then click on the "Set as Default"
button.
4. Ws-FTP will now operate normally.
When using CUTE-FTP software for Windows:
1. Load CUTE-FTP.
2. Click on the "FTP" menu and go down to the "Settings" option, then select the "Options" field.
3. Click on the "Firewall" tab and then check the box labeled "PASV mode"
4. CUTE-FTP will now operate normally.
Please note that there are many other FTP software programs available, most of these will also support Passive FTP, these are just a few examples of how to configure your FTP program, different programs may need to be adjusted differently. If you are having trouble with your FTP program, please try using one of those programmes.
Focus page:
A web page that contains quality content about a specific topic. Also known as an information page. See information page.
Frames:
An HTML technique that enables web site designers to divide the browser screen into two or more sections. Each section, or frame is a single web page.
Full-text index:
A database, or index, containing every word of every web document, including filter words and stop words. Can also refer to an index without filter and stop words included.
Fuzzy search:
A search that retrieves matches for partially spelled or misspelled words. Fuzzy matching techniques reduce words to their root and then try to match all forms of the word. Fuzzy search is based on "fuzzy logic engineering," which is a very advanced mathematical discipline. Simply put, it enables you to say "maybe," "almost," or "close to" in computer code.
G
Gateway domain:
See doorway domain.
Gateway page:
See doorway pages.
Gibberish:
Web site content that has no logical, sensible meaning when viewed by site visitors.
GIF:
Abbreviation for Graphics Interchange Format. A type of bitmap graphic image commonly used on web sites. GIFs contain 256 colors and are displayed in the most commonly used browsers.
H
Hallway page:
A site map created specifically for doorway pages on a web site.
Hidden text:
Text on a web page that is not visible to end users in a browser, at any time, but is visible to search engine spiders. Considered spam by all the major search engines if used to artificially increase keyword density.
Hit:
A single request made to a web server for an object on your web site. The object can be an HTML file, a graphic image, or any other embedded object, such as a sound file, in your web pages.
HTML:
Abbreviation for Hypertext Markup Language. A cross-platform, text-formatting system for creating web pages, including text, images, sounds, frames, and animation.
HTTP:
Abbreviation for Hypertext Transfer Protocol. The system used to transfer data between a web server and a browser.
Hypertext link:
A word or set of words placed inside an anchor tag.
I
Image map:
A single graphic image, generally in a GIF or JPEG format, containing multiple hyperlinks.
Inbound link:
A link from an external domain to a web site, bringing traffic to that site. Inbound links are used to measure link popularity.
Index:
A searchable database of words pointing to documents created by search engine software.
Indexer:
The part of the search engine that processes and places spidered, or crawled, web documents into a database. The indexer typically processes a document by removing all tags, storing links in a queue, removing filter words, looking for stop words, and storing the document in a searchable database.
Information page:
A static web page that contains quality content about a specific topic. The page is written for a site's target audience but formatted for easy search engine spidering. Also known as a focus page or a content page.
Invisible web:
Web sites or pages that search engine spiders cannot or will not crawl because the content is locked up in a database.
IP address:
A unique number that identifies every computer on the Internet. Currently, an IP address consists of four, 32-bit numbers (from 0 to 255) separated by periods, such as 192.168.11.99 is an example.
IP delivery:
A type of cloaking technique where customized content is delivered to a site visitor based on the visitor's IP address. Because search engines have IP addresses, content delivered to the search engines is not the same content delivered to site visitors.
IP spoofing:
The act of sending messages to a computer using an IP address from a trusted source to gain unauthorized access to that computer. IP spoofing is illegal in many countries.
ISP:
Abbreviation for Internet service provider. An ISP is a company that provides access to the Internet.
J
Java:
A programming language created by Sun Microsystems that enables small applications to run on different types of computers and operating systems. Currently, search engines do not record the content inside a Java applet.
JavaScript:
An open-source scripting language developed by Netscape that enables web designers to create more animated and dynamic web pages.
JPEG:
Abbreviation for Joint Photographic Experts Group. A type of graphic image commonly used on web sites. JPEGs can contain millions of colors and are displayed in the most commonly used browsers. Best format for photographs, images containing gradients, or the presentation of millions of colors.
K
Keyword:
A single word typed into a search engine query. Also a single word that accurately describes the contents of a single web page or web site.
Keyword buy:
A term used in search engine advertising in which advertisements appear when a keyword or set of keywords is typed into a search query.
Keyword density:
A measure of the number of times keywords occur within a web page's text divided by the total number of words on a web page. Search engines have unique algorithms for calculating keyword density. Filter words are often subtracted from the total word count to measure density.
Keyword domain name:
A domain name that contains one or more keywords.
Keyword phrase:
A set of words typed into a search engine query. Also a set of words that accurately describes the contents of a single web page or web site.
Keyword prominence:
Refers to how "high up" on a web page a keyword appears. Generally, if keywords are visible on the first screen on a web page without site visitors having to scroll, the words are said to have high keyword prominence.
Keyword proximity:
Refers to how close keywords are to each other on web pages.
Keyword stacking:
Placing gibberish sentences and phrases on a web page in order to artificially boost keyword density, keyword prominence, and keyword proximity. Keyword stacking often occurs in title tags, meta tags and invisible text.
Keyword stuffing:
Placing gibberish sentences and phrases inside graphic images or CSS layers. Often has the same meaning as keyword stacking.
L
Layers:
Attribute in CSS . A rectangular section, or layer, of HTML code that can be placed on a web page by assigning X, Y, and Z coordinates, measured in pixels.
Link farm:
A collection of indiscriminate, often unrelated, web sites that link to each other to artificially boost link popularity.
Link popularity:
Refers to the number and quality of inbound links to a web site from other web sites. One of the highest quality inbound links is a link from a major directory such as Yahoo!.
Link rot or linkrot:
A link from a search engine, directory, or other web site that results in a 404 error page after a web developer modifies a web site with new URLs or removes pages from a web server.
M
Metadata:
"Data about data". A digital photograph, for instance, usually includes shutter speed, aperture, time and date within the metadata. Database metadata can describe the number of tables and columns, the type of data in each column, etcetra.
Meta refresh:
Attribute in a meta tag in which one URL is replaced with another URL after a specified period of time. A method of redirecting end users from one URL to another.
Meta revisit:
Attribute in a meta tag in which web designers instruct the search engine spiders to return to a web page within a specified period of time. Search engines do not honor this attribute.
Meta tag:
An HTML tag, placed between the and tags, that gives information about the content of a web page, such as what HTML specifications a web page follows or description of a web page’s content. A meta tag, however, does not affect how a web page is displayed on a browser. For online marketing, the most common uses for meta tags are the keyword, description, and robots exclusion attributes.
Mirror domains or mirror sites:
Multiple copies of web sites, often on different servers, with the exact same, or similar, content. Used to artificially boost link popularity and search engine visibility.
Mirror pages:
ultiple copies of web pages, often on different servers, with the exact same, or similar, content. Most mirror pages are doorway pages tailored for each search engine.
N
Navigation button:
A graphic image, generally in a GIF or JPEG format, that links to a single URL.
noframes:
An element commonly used on framed pages. Content placed between the <noframes> and </noframes> tags display when a browser does not support frames or is configured not to display frames. Because almost all browsers support frames, search engines either ignore or place low weight on the content inside the <noframes> tags.
noscript:
If a browser does not support a scripting language or if an end user has disabled client-side scripting in a browser, content between the <noscript> and </noscript> tags is displayed. This element enables web developers to display alternative content in the event a script is not executed.
O
Obfuscation:
The act of misrepresenting web page content to site visitors. Similar to cloaking, search engine spiders see one page, and visitors view a page with different HTML code and content.
Optimisation:
The process of designing, writing, coding (in HTML), and submitting web pages to the search engines to increase the probability that your web pages will appear at the top of search engine queries for selected keywords and keyword phrases. The process of making a web page as perfect or effective as possible for end users and the search engines.
Outbound link:
A link from a web site to a different web site with a different domain name.
Own/owned:
A security term. When a hacker successfully penetrated a server, they have "owned" it.
P
Page views:
In site statistics software, the total number of times users view a single web page.
PageRank:
A numeric value that represents how popular a web page is based on Google’s link analysis calculations. Part of this numeric value is the quality and quantity of links pointing to a web page.
PDF:
Abbreviation for portable document format. Created by Adobe Systems in its software program Adobe Acrobat as a universal browser. A PDF document uses formatting information from many different desktop publishing applications, such as InDesign and QuarkXPress. Files can be downloaded over the web and viewed page by page, provided the user has installed the necessary plug-in, Adobe Acrobat Reader.
PFI:
Abbreviation for pay for inclusion. In a PFI program, in exchange for payment, a search engine guarantees that a web page will (a) be included in a search engine index, (b) be added to the search engine index within days, and (c) be respidered within a specified period of time.
Positioning:
In a search engine or directory, the process of ordering URLs so that the most relevant sites appear at the top of search results for a particularquery.
Power combination:
he first three words in a title tag that, when typed in any combination in a search query, will contain a keyword phrase.
PPC:
Abbreviation for pay per click. A type of search engine advertising model where the advertiser pays a specified amount of money to the host every time an end user clicks a link to the specified site.
Precision:
The quality and degree of accuracy with which a search engine lists documents that match a query.
Proximity search:
search in which users specify that documents returned in search results should have the words (entered into the search query) near each other.
Q
Query:
A request for specific information from a database.
Query processor:
The part of the search engine software that matches the words typed in a search query with the web page that is most likely to have the information for which end users are searching.
R
Ranking:
See positioning.
Reciprocal links:
The mutual exchange of links from one site to another.
Relative link:
A link that does not include an entire domain name, subdirectory (if used), and filename together in the URL. A link that is defined by its relative position to the current URL.
Relevancy:
A search engine's numeric measure of how well a particular URL matches terms entered in a search query.
Robot:
A software program that search engines use that visits every URL on the web, follows all the links, and catalogs all the text of every web page that (a) contains text, and (b) that can be visited or crawled. Also known as a spider or crawler, but the term "robots" is more and more commonly associated with automated agents.
Robots Exclusion Protocol:
A text file that you place on your server that instructs search engine spiders to not spider and record the information in specified areas on your web site. The same function can also be utilized using the meta-robots tag.
S
Search engine:
Software that searches an index or database and returns relevant matches based on the information typed into a query.
SERP:
Abbreviation for search engine results page.
Server:
In search engine marketing, a computer that delivers web pages to browsers and search engine spiders.
Spam:
The act of taking extreme or excessive measures to achieve top search engine positions. Spam also can be the act of using any words, HTML code, scripting, or programming on a web page that is not meant to benefit the end user experience.
Spider:
Software used by a search engine to find and retrieve web pages to include in its index.
Splash page:
A web page, commonly the home page, that consists either of (a) a large graphic image and a link instructing visitors to "Enter" a web site, or (b) a Flash animation, a link to skip the Flash animation (Skip Intro), and a redirect to a new page after the animation is completed.
Static IP address:
An IP address that remains constant, or the same, every time a person logs on to the Internet.
Stemming:
Stemming is the ability for a search engine to search for variations of a word based on its root. For example, if the word “running” is typed into a search query, search engines that utilize stemming might also display documents that contain the word "run."
Stop words:
Extremely common words that the search engines will not record. This is done to save space on their servers and to speed up searches. Examples of common stop words include the, a, an, for, and, but, to, and so forth. Sometimes known as filter words.
T
Text link:
See anchor text.
Title:
The text placed between the <title> and </title> tags on a web page.
Traffic:
The number of unique visitors to a single web site.
U
Unique visit:
Represents a single, unique viewer who has visited a web site within a specified time period.
Upload:
Act of copying a file from your computer to another computer.
URL:
Abbreviation for uniform resource locator. Address referring to the location of a file on the Internet. In terms of search engine marketing, it is the address of an individual web page element or web document on the Internet. Every web document and web graphic image on a web site has a URL.
V
Virtual domain:
A term used by web hosting services when multiple web sites are hosted on a single web server. Each web site hosted on that server can have a unique domain name, called a virtual domain.
Visit:
Represents one unique viewer who has visited a web site. One site visitor can view many web pages.
Vulnerability:
A security term. A weakness in software that allows an attacker to compromise the security protocols.
W
Web copywriting:
The process of writing content specifically for display on web pages, including potential search result pages.
Web site:
A collection of web pages, usually found under one domain, generally formatted in HTML, that contain text, graphic images, and multimedia effects such as sound files, video and/or animation files, and other programming or scripting elements such as Java and JavaScript.
X
XHTML:
Abbreviation for Extensible Hypertext Markup Language. Is a hybrid of XML and HTML. Web pages designed in XHTML should look the same across all platforms.
XML:
Abbreviation for Extensible Markup Language. XML enables web site designers to create customized tags to describe data.
Y
Z
Z-index:
In CSS, the z-index property sets the stacking order of an element, usually a layer. Layers with greater z-index numbers will appear in front of layers with lower z-index numbers.
!
INTERNET BROWSER IMPORTANT DIFFERENCES:
Note that due to a design feature (bug) in the quirks mode handling in Mozilla/Firefox, the reported width of any positioned element will be wrong when the content is too wide for the screen resolution. This is a particular problem for image popups. To avoid this design feature (bug) the display:table; style should be used to force the div to stretch to fit its contents. This is the wanted and desired behaviour, and causes the correct response in browsers that support it (Opera, Mozilla/Firefox, Safari, etcetera). Browsers that do not support it get it correct anyway (Internet Explorer). ...
Some Firefox releases have trouble deciding when to show the status bar. As a result, if there is not enough text in the popup window, they may leave a gap underneath the text, caused by the non-existent status bar that appeared during the resize. Adding a couple of extra lines of text into every image popup avoids this problem. ...
Firefox whilst resizing, scripts need to leave some extra space around the edge of the window. For security reasons, newer Firefox releases do not allow you to hide the address bars or tab bars. This takes up a fair amount of extra space. With larger images, this can actually run out of desktop space on 800x600 screen resolutions. This will not cause a problem, but it may leave a narrow gap underneath the pictures. Try to use images with 350 to 400 pixels maximum height, so that it does not leave this unwanted gap for Firefox users with 800x600 screen resolution. ...
Making the popup use strict and/or XHTML doctype is considered to be completely un-necessary, some people do feel the need to include these doctypes in the popup window code. For the sake of simplicity, I do not recommend it, but if you do want to use one, you must also make another change to the generated content. The image should specify display:block; as the style. However due to a design feature (bug) in Mozilla/Firefox/Gecko, when you write an XHTML doctype tag, and the XML prolog (declaration), but you have used separate document.write commands to write the code, then Mozilla/Firefox/Gecko will use quirks mode rendering, not standards compliant mode rendering. ...
For some reason Safari and Firefox both need the style called "border:none" to avoid inserting an extra 40px top margin, and MSIE changes the style called "border:none" into the following styles "BORDER-RIGHT: medium none; BORDER-TOP: medium none; BORDER-LEFT: medium none; BORDER-BOTTOM: medium none;"
MSIE6 and older does not support the style called "white-space" and the style property "white-space: pre;" can be used for the other internet browsers, and all those pesky <br/> tags can be removed.
"The bank-robber principle: as you can't always stop them getting in, so always catch them when on the way out."
The Boulder Pledge: January-2010 latest update, spam is still growing, spam is now 83% of all email. It may sound like a broken record, but spam continues to do just that, break records. Unwanted commercial email spam is growing by electronic leaps and bounds: An Internet-buckling 60 billion to 150 billion unwanted messages per day. Put another way: A whopping 83% of all e-mail comes from suspicious Internet Addresses. Spam is up 100% from twelve months ago because "there still is money to be made from marketing fake Viagra and fake get-rich-quick schemes. One of the rare times, when Bill Gates was subsequently proved wrong ... It was Mr Bill Gates who famously said just a few years ago, that spam would be eradicated.
Service Security Standards:
To provide security protection to benefit all of our customers, we deliberately choose to never ever disclose, discuss, confirm, the existence of any potential software security issues, until after full and complete investigation has occurred, and every necessary patch and/or update release has already been made available to all of our customers.
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