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OsCommerce Explained
Written by Administrator    Monday, 11 August 2008 19:25    PDF Print E-mail

OsCommerce is a term that means "open source Commerce". It is a program found in software that enables online store management. It is an online store or shop that allows business people to make sales online. The osCommerce was launched in Germany in March 2000. It has been developed by Harald Ponce de Leon who is its founder and leader. It is in other words referred to as the 'exchange project'. Its general idea is to bring business people and their clients together easily. It has so far managed to connect people with same interests in a bid to share knowledge, ideas as well as partnerships. This is aimed at creating and improving businesses. Other people use the osCommerce as a hobby. This is possible since the software is not restrictive. This has made it grow into a community due to the increased number of users. It is a freeware, meaning that it is obtained for free from authorized websites. It is easy to install and manage the osCommerce software and this makes it stand out among online software.

Clients are able to access the online shops and stores with ease and this has led to increased business. It is most ideal for store owners as well as developers. It is licensed under the GNU General Public License. It is used on web servers which are installed with MySQL and PHP. It is currently powering many shops in the world. It is normally written in PHP. It uses an operating system that is of a cross platform type. It falls under the Weshop type. It is the basic setting for online businesses and helps meet their needs. This is made possible through its accommodating nature that allows for customization. This will give the users a personalized system that fits their needs. The osCommerce is highly compatible with major browsers. It is multilingual and uses languages such as German, Spanish and English. This allows many users to access and use it as the language barrier is cut out. On the osCommerce, users can restore and back up their database.

This ensures that there are no data losses which could cause businesses great fall backs. It is highly secure to use the osCommerce. This is enabled by the presence of a secure socket layer (SSL). It supports multi currency which is done manually. Its web installation is automatic and this saves on time. Available on the osCommerce are guides on how to run or use various applications. It also gives users tips, tricks and help on their concerns. The osCommerce also seeks to answer their questions and gives them tutorials. The osCommerce however has its short comings which include insecurity. This is not very pronounced since it has installed security measures. In such cases, users may loose their data. It does not feature a plug in architecture and this makes the system unstable. The fact that downloads are not always secure limits its use. People may fear to download the software as it may come with viruses. This has however been corrected by securing the product.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Gordon_Petten

Last Updated ( Friday, 11 December 2009 14:38 )
 
Success of the iPhone App Market
Written by Administrator    Monday, 11 August 2008 19:17    PDF Print E-mail

Apple launched its App Store on July 11, 2008. Within the first weekend, users had downloaded ten million iPhone apps. What's more, the Wall Street Journal reported on August 11, 2008 a month after the iPhone App Store launched that Apple had been making about $1 million per day from the site. Apple's own CEO Steve Jobs called the site a "grand slam" and said that in the first thirty days, developers had already earned $9 million.

By September 9, 2008, VentureBeat reported 100 million iPhone app downloads. Will the trend slow anytime soon? Probably not: the iPhone App Store is projected to hit one billion downloads sometime in 2009 meaning it will have hit the one billion download mark faster than the iTunes site.

iPhone Apps Make iPhones a Pleasure

When the iPhone was first revealed, it was certainly a breakthrough in mobile phone technology. But other than looking good and showing the picture of the person who was calling you, it didn't do all that much. The iPhone app market has changed all this. In the first few days of the App Store launch, over 900 new applications were added. The iPhone suddenly became a digital playground for its users.

New iPhone Apps Will Change the Way we Do Business

Online banking was viewed with some suspicion when it first arrived on the scene, as bank customers wondered if online banking could really be trusted to pay their bills on time. But gradually, online banking became second nature and nearly ubiquitous as all major banks adopted it. iPhone apps, like Bank of America's iPhone application, may even make online banking obsolete as we slowly but surely begin banking from our cell phones.

Retailers are also starting to get in on the iPhone action. The Gap and Target are two of the first retailers to launch their own iPhone apps that enable customers to buy products from their iPhones, and dot com companies like Amazon also let iPhone users buy from their cells. Just as shopping online was once considered innovative and rare, but is now a common activity that millions of consumers engage in every day, so the iPhone apps of retail giants will become increasingly common and "normal."

The iPhone App is the New Music Video

Likewise, when MTV started showing music videos in 1980, pundits wondered wouldn't bother watching musicians on their television screens. Twenty-eight years later, generations have grown up within the MTV culture, and they expect more and more from their pop stars. Today's pop stars not only need music videos, they also need a website, Facebook page, and MySpace page. Will the next thing that pop stars need to stay hip be an iPhone app?

Already, Nine Inch Nails, Weezer, Moby, the Chemical Brothers, and others have participated in the popular Tap Tap games created by iPhone app developer Tapulous. Meanwhile, Pink and Snow Patrol have their very own iPhone apps. These artists could turn out to be the trend setters as more and more stars rush to get a piece of the iPhone app pie.

The Success Will Only Grow

The beauty of capitalism is the innovation it inspires. As companies progressively try to one-up each other in the new iPhone app frontier, the consumer will benefit. The staggering success of the iPhone App Store means we will be seeing more and more iPhone apps with more and more innovative features as consumers demand more and business tries to fill these demands. Step aside, 'world wide web' here comes the iPhone app.

For more information on iPod touch apps or to read more in-depth reviews of iPhone apps visit AppCraver today. AppCraver is dedicated to iPhone apps, news, reviews and interviews with iPhone application developers.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Neal_Adam_Hamou

Last Updated ( Friday, 11 December 2009 14:40 )
 
Google Checkout - Ecommerce Friend Or Foe?
Written by Administrator    Sunday, 10 August 2008 01:30    PDF Print E-mail

Back in June of 2006, Google released Google Checkout amidst a flurry of predictions and press coverage that it would soon be the number one payment choice for buyers. It looked like Google wanted to go head to head with PayPal and enter into the payment gateway and ecommerce world with a bang.

The Past...
In fact, Google spent around $100 million dollars in 2006 and 2007 to push Google Checkout with merchants. They initially offered large Adwords credits to merchants (For every $1 merchants spend on Adwords, they could process $10 in sales through Google at no charge). They then introduced *zero* fees for all payments processed through Checkout. They waived all percentage and per transaction fees to entice merchants to sign up and use their new service. Google also gave out $60 million in coupons to consumers to get them to use the new service. This resulted in holiday sales of over one million transactions in December 2006 alone.

Today...
Fast forward to 2009, and Google got rid of both the adwords credit and the zero fees to merchants. Today, the rates offered to merchants are almost identical to PayPal's fees. Additionally, PayPal offers more features, and is a more well known brand when it comes to online payments. With this move, many have said it signals Google's resignation to not be able to be the leader in this field. And some have suggested (I don't believe this) it is the first step towards Google eliminating this service in the future.

Recent Analysis has shown that Google checkout is only offered by 11% of the top 100 online retailers, only rising 1% from 2007 (source: Rosetta). This stagnation does not bode well for Google's chances of being a major player for online payments.

We analyzed statistics of our hosted ShopSite merchants and found that only 6% of all ShopSite merchants are offering Google Checkout. In terms of total numbers of orders, only 1.5% of all orders placed used Google Checkout. This would seem to indicate (albeit a small sample) that smaller online merchants have a much lower adoption rate as compared to the larger online stores. There may be a number of reasons why this is, and we'll explore a few below.

Limitations...

  • Realtime Shipping Rates: Google has a limitation of a 3 second maximum response time to receive realtime shipping rates. This means that for every address saved in a customer's Google Checkout account, all shipping rate lookups must be completed within 3 seconds. If not, default rates are returned, which may not be close to accurate for your shipping needs as a merchant. In real world practice, limiting realtime rates to 2-3 options (from one carrier) usually gets in under the limit.
  • Shipping and one time use coupons: Google Checkout does not work with shipping coupons such as free shipping or discounted shipping coupons, or unique one time use coupons.
  • Gift Certificates and surcharges: These features will not work with Google Checkout.
  • Customer Registration (in your ecommerce application): Due to Google's privacy policy, it is prohibited to have a customer account created in the ecommerce store. This restriction prevents a customer from being able to be logged in on your site and see past order history, save their address, etc... as all of this is now handled through Google directly.
  • Limitations on the type of products that can be sold: Google has a long list of prohibited items that can't be sold through Google Checkout. Make sure you read this list carefully before signing up as a merchant.
Ebb and Flow...
One of the more major changes when implementing Google Checkout is the alteration of the flow a customer goes through when placing an order in your store. Due to Google's tight licensing agreement and implementation requirements, the placement and size/text of the Google Checkout button itself is quite limited. Additionally, they require that their button appear before the cart's regular tax, shipping, and other payment options appear. If you're using a cart such as ShopSite where the customer can normally see shipping, tax, surcharges, payment, and gift certificate options, enabling Google Checkout inserts a "pre-cart" screen where all of this is hidden (except for the prominent Google Checkout button).

The end result of this sort of change in an ecommerce cart could lead to confusion for customers who are not familiar with Google Checkout or would never use it in the first place. It requires the merchant to clearly mark and label the process (with easy to follow instructions) to avoid this confusion. In addition to the altered flow of the cart, a shopper who chooses Google Checkout is taken to Google directly to complete the purchase (and is not offered a simple "return to cart" link/button), and is not returned to the store's checkout system. The merchant simply hands the customer off, as opposed to PayPal, which allows the customer to return to the cart once signed in to complete the purchase (giving merchants flexibility in how they implement PayPal).

...

The bottom line is a merchant must weigh these limitations and changes with how much increased revenue and customer satisfaction will result from offering Google Checkout. It will depend heavily on the type of customer your store attracts. If they are very technically oriented, chances are good they know about Google Checkout and may use it often. If your customer demographic is not technophiles (I'm sure my parents fall into this category), then adding Google Checkout may result in few added benefits (and possibly some major downsides).

To put it into perspective, I've never heard anyone say "I will not shop at this online store because they do not offer Google Checkout". However, I have heard people make this statement if a store does not offer PayPal as a payment method.

Last Updated ( Friday, 11 December 2009 14:29 )
 
Why Select Magento Ecommerce Development For Your Online Shopping Cart Website
Written by Administrator    Sunday, 10 August 2008 01:30    PDF Print E-mail

Magento Ecommerce offers merchants complete control over the client experience, shopping deal, inventory, content and other functionality of their online shopping cart websites.

Due to remarkable benefits it offers, Magento eCommerce development has become quite popular in today eCommerce market. Thousands of online shopping cart website owners use Magento as a platform for their successful running online stores. One of the very important factors for its popularity is its Eye catching and attractive User friendly Designs making it an enjoyable experience for every visitors on your website and thereby increasing the ROI Magento shopping cart is one of latest in market with advance features of open source shopping cart that it helps you to build Not only a great shopping cart website in very short time but comes with many extra-ordinary functionality.

Functionality with feature such as advanced reporting and analysis help you to know current sales trend and customer's activity. Through the Reporting advance functionality your Online EBusiness is enable automatically for maximum efficiency according to your targets.

Magento multi store development is the stand alone feature that comes only with Magento shopping cart and thus gives edge from other shopping carts software in the market. With the help of Magento, it's an easy task to manage and control your multiple online store and websites from single as well as simple administrative panel and also offers various payment options and currencies with convenient single page checkout.

One great feature about Magento eCommerce customization is it is SEO friendliness. SEO friendly website design helps you to get you website rank well and perform well in search engines like Google, Yahoo... It gives you an extra ordinary functionality to generate xml code, Meta tag, title, keyword for your product and category pages.

For more info visit: http://www.zaptechsolutions.com/offshore_outsourcing/2009/10/why-select-magento-ecommerce.html

Zaptech Solutions is an offshore web development company providing web software development services in Microsoft and Linux platform. Zaptech Solution provide experts team of web developers in ASP, Ajax, Php, Drupal, Joomla, X-cart, Zen Cart and other programming language having more then 3 year experience in web base application development.

For more information please visit http://www.zaptechsolutions.com

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Jim_Zaptech

Last Updated ( Friday, 11 December 2009 14:37 )
 
Google Caffeine and the New Ranking Factors
Written by Administrator    Saturday, 09 August 2008 17:30    PDF Print E-mail

Google Caffeine is the name given to Google's "Next Generation" search engine, which it will use to rank and index all the pages on the wonderful world wide web. According to all indications, this is not just another one of Google's infamous Updates, but a major "Overhaul" of its index and algorithm, the complex formula and calculations Google uses to rank all web pages, including yours.

If that doesn't sound ominous enough, according to Matt Cutts (Google Spokesperson) one database is already showing Google Caffeine, and the full blown version will be released after the holidays. The reasoning behind this, Google doesn't want to upset webmasters and site owners during the lucrative holiday buying season. In the past, other major Google Updates have come around this time of the year, most notably the "Florida Update" which severely
affected many web sites and webmasters.

Recently, Google has been more aware and much more generous to webmasters by being more open and forthcoming in regards to how it indexes its pages. This time around, webmasters were even given access to a beta version of Caffeine which Google released last summer ('09) where webmasters could check to see how well their keywords and site would fare in this new search index. This beta site has now been taken down by Google.

Like any professional search engine marketer who works online, I was constantly checking my sites and keywords in Google's new search engine. I have drawn some conclusions from what I have observed, but please be aware it is often very foolish to draw conclusions and make predictions from your own small sampling of results. You can end up with egg on your face very quickly, especially when you consider Google is probably still making adjustments and refinements on Caffeine as it analyzes the results.

However, there are certain ranking factors that even Google is telling us about, mainly "Site Speed" or how fast your site loads will play a part in how its ranked. We have also heard a lot about "Broken Links" and if your page or site has them, then it will probably be ranked lower. Of course, linking out to "Bad Neighborhoods" will probably still not be a good practice if you want higher rankings within Google.

It should not come as a shock or a surprise, that "Over-All Page Quality" will play a greater role in how well your page ranks. Keep in mind, Google is like any other company putting out a product, if that product doesn't have a high standard of quality, it reflects badly back on everyone concerned. Google's SERPs (Search Engine Results Pages) is the key to all their online revenue, they must do everything in their power to keep that product fast, relevant, current and above all, something of high quality.

Therefore, expect "OnPage Factors" to play a much greater role in Google Caffeine. Quality unique content, page design, good navigation, title, meta tags, description, keyword density, alt tags, page views, bounce rate, traffic numbers, time spent on page, and the number of social bookmarks may play an increased role in achieving high rankings. A perfectly optimized keyworded page, with the keyword in the title, description, meta tags, alt tags, on the page... will probably get you ranked higher in Caffeine, as well as most search engines on the web.

This may be pure speculation on my part, but one of the areas Caffeine will be addressing or incorporating is "Social BookMarking", that is the number of social bookmarks a page receives will determine how high it is ranked. I also believe one of the major reasons these bookmarks will become much more important has to do with the whole nasty issue of link buying.

Now, the integrity of Google's index is not in question, but any savvy marketer or webmaster knows any individual or company with deep pockets and huge resources can buy their way into the top spot. Despite Google's attempt to stop it, link buying and keyword positioning, is a thriving industry on the web. Rightly or wrongly, money and unlimited resources will get you or your company to the top in organic search, regardless of which search engine you're targeting.

All moral and ethical issues aside, the small webmaster and/or online marketer is stuck right in the middle, with Google on one side and these major multinational competitors on the other. Looming on the horizon is Google Caffeine, a new sheriff in town!

What new rules will this sheriff bring?

The major question here is this: has the importance of backlinking been downplayed in this new index in favor of the keyworded domain and onsite content and optimization? Has there been a major shift to listing more quality content rather than relying on the number of backlinks a site is receiving, even from important related themed sites? The major problem and question to Google is this: if links can be bought, how do you keep your organic results democratic and fair, which was the original intention of Larry Page and Sergey Brin when they started Google in 1998.

One possible solution is social bookmarking.

Will we see an ever growing importance of social bookmarks and links in this new index. It is quite easy to buy 1000 links, but getting 1000 or 10,000 "re-tweets" is a little more difficult, similarly getting two or three thousand "diggs" may be a little harder to pull off. Same goes for Del.icio.us bookmarks, Facebook fans... well you get the picture. Will Google's use of these new social sites make Caffeine faster, more relevant, more current and most importantly of all, can it bring some democracy back into their index?

Of course, nothing in Google's new index will be that cut and dry, that black and white. Other ranking factors such as age of site, past history and reputation, traffic numbers, authority branding... will all play a role in whether your site gets listed on that all important first page. However, on page factors may play a greater role - title, meta tags, description, keyword density, alt tags, page views, bounce rate, time spent on page, and the number of social bookmarks may play an increased role in achieving high rankings. Website speed or how fast your site loads may also be a new ranking factor.

Underlying this whole issue is the fact which many experienced webmasters/marketers already know, Google's SERPs is not a one-trick pony anymore. For very lucrative (monetized) keyword phrases, Google's results are broken up into Five categories... Info listings, Video listings, News Listings, Shopping Listings and Corporate Listings. Forget Caffeine, this is probably the fairest move Google has made in the last few years to make its SERPs more democratic.

Another even more puzzling issue for me concerning Google Caffeine is how much emphasis or ranking power will it place on "Keyworded Domains", domain names which have your keyword or keyword phrase in them. Will these domains be ranked higher? Webmasters and marketers for years have been telling us we should always pick domain names which have our major keywords in them. Just common sense really, someone searching for "brown widgets" will more likely than not find that item at a domain called brownwidgets(dot)com or brownwidget(dot)com. The major SEO reasoning, all your backlinks will inherently have your searched keyword in the URL, thus bringing it up in the rankings.

Against this whole backdrop, everyone has to realize the web itself is evolving, new sites like Twitter, FaceBook... have changed the whole cyber landscape. Likewise, the web user is also changing and becoming more web savvy in how they use the web. Will search engines, not only Google, take a back-seat role in how we find stuff on the web? As major sites are branded into the web user's psyche, will these users go directly to these sites, by-passing the search engines altogether?

As the web evolves, keyworded domains will become more valuable and this value will be reflected in the quality of the site. If you're making thousands or even millions from your keyworded domain, you can afford to invest in quality content and design. Cream rises to the top. Gradually, as these domains become more valuable, they will probably be snapped up by marketers and companies who know just how to exploit them. Thousands upon thousands of keyworded domains will probably be bought up by multi-billion dollar corporations who finally realize what the web has to offer. This new evolved web will probably be much more narrower in scope and very topic specific.

In the "next generation" web the re-direct shall be king!

Will the role of the search engines, whether it be Google or Bing/Yahoo, become less and less important, as savvy web searchers go directly to a site by typing in the keyworded domain to find what they're looking for on the web? Cutting out the middleman may just become a world wide passion as big multinational and fully funded corporations snap up all these valuable and lucrative keyworded domains, will we see these domains grow in importance and the search engines take more of a back-up role? Human nature dictates we always take the fastest route to our destination, the web will be no exception to this rule.

Have all the smart people at Google figured this out already, and designed the new Google Caffeine to reflect the growing importance of the keyworded domain? Of course, we can only speculate when it comes to just what Google is planning and doing with its next generation search engine, but will onsite factors and your domain name play a greater role in their organic SERPs?

Regardless of what the new sheriff actually does, when the dust finally settles on all these latest developments, the keyworded domain will probably be standing tall, watching the sun rise on a brand new day.

The author is a full time online affiliate marketer who has sold millions of dollar's worth of other people's stuff (mostly electronics) on the web. His livelihood is derived from and depended upon search engine marketing and the daily monitoring of targeted keywords, mainly within Google. He operates numerous niche sites, as well as two sites on Internet Marketing, where you can get valuable marketing tips for free: Free Marketing Tools and Internet Marketing Tools.

Titus Hoskins Copyright © 2009. This article may be freely distributed if this resource box stays attached.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Titus_Hoskins

Last Updated ( Friday, 11 December 2009 14:35 )
 


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