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Social Bookmarking and Social Networking – SEO Dynamite

Take a look at website content and SEO basics.  In today’s business world we know more about the human brain that in the past.  Millions of years ago, you would hear the roar of a big tiger out of the corner of your eye a few feet away from you.  If you move, you’ve had it because the tiger is faster than human beings.  Ponder something for a minute.  What happens to other animals when they get caught, like a spider.  They play dead.

We have a part of out brain that keeps us safe.  Your kept alive so that you can have children.  If you can’t have children, your life might be done for.  That is the only thing that part of the brain does.

It’s the same part that gets you mad when you’re trying to write articles on your blog.  You are also being protected from hidden danger as well.  When you try and post articles on your blog that part of the brain sees you as having trouble in a certain area and it wants to keep you safe.  This can cause you grief at times.

Here is the amazing thing about this story.  By admitting this to yourself that this happens in your brain, that is half the battle.  The other half of the battle is to get some good content up that isn’t going to be bad.  You might think that the content that you are writing is going to be bad, but you should just sit there anyway and write without editing it.

Put it down someplace and take a break from it and go back to it the next day.  Read it with a fresh perspective.  You will be amazed at what you can do.  What will happen is that you will put out content that isn’t that bad after all.  You might want to put it up on your blog right away but don’t.  Put it down for another day, then go back and look at it.  This is a technique that copywriters use.

Whatever you worked on, tuck it away and put it some place safe.  That section of our brain keeps working on it while you are doing other things.  That is about 70% of our processing power.  It has been tested over time that this is how things work.  That section of your brain wants to give you the best stuff you can enjoy.

That is the part of your brain that keeps you from doing very dangerous and stupid things.  It reminds you what danger is. If you have a question, sit down and ask yourself that question and your brain will sooner or later come back with an answer.  These are just a few ways you can made great website content.

 






In this article I’m going to clarify common but frequently confused computer terminology: “operating system”, or “OS”.

Maybe you’ve found you have questions and ask yourself what OS means,, if so, you’re not alone in wondering about this.

This is actually a pretty simple idea to make sense of when you have it explained the right way, as you’ll discover as soon as you’ve finished learning from this basic computer lesson.

Let me begin by mentioning first that an OS or operating system is a kind of software.

To repeat my explanation from a previous article, here’s how you can think of software:

“Software” refers to all of the pieces of the computer that you can’t really observe or touch directly. Software would include things like Microsoft Excel, Internet Explorer, Windows or the Mac OS, as well as all of your personal files like letters, photos, MP3s, and so on.

Here’s another way to think about it: hardware is like your brain, a physical part of your body, while software is like your mind or your thoughts — the non-physical part of yourself.

Software runs on hardware, just like your thoughts “run on” your brain.

Does that make sense?So let’s look at the OS specifically.

So,let me give a couple of examples:  the two best known operating systems right now are Windows, and Mac OS X (pronounced “Oh Ess Ten” — as in the Roman numeral ten).

Windows Vista and Windows XP are two versions of Windows.  While Mac OS 10.4 ( also called”Tiger”) and the newer Mac OS 10.5 ( a.k.a”Leopard”) are a couple different versions of Mac OS X.

Alright,so what is an OS?

Here’s one way to think about it:when a baby is born, they have the instinct to eat, to breathe, and so on, and they also have the instinct to watch, listen, and absorb everything going on around them.

In time, a young child learns to talk and walk by observing the people around them, and as they get older, they also learn more basic skills like reading and writing, hand-eye coordination, and so on.

So in other words, they go from barely being able to anything but eat, sleep, and fill diapers, to physical and mental maturity where they have all the basic skills they need to learn more specific skills such as learning to drive, playing a sport like soccer, writing a paper for a class, getting a job ,etc.

In some ways, when you start up a computer, it’s sort of like a newborn baby, only having one or two fundamental”instincts.”

The computer can power on, and display an image on the monitor, but that’s about it.

The only other thing the computer can do is look at the hard drive, and if it finds the information it needs there, it can start running the OS.

This is called “booting”, which is what happens between when you turn the computer on, and when you can actually start using it.

And the best way to think about it is that it’s just like a child being born and growing up: the OS has the “life experiences” and lessons that give a “child” all the basic skills equivalent to walking, talking, reading, writing, etc., that allow everything else to hapen.

So in a sense, it’s as if your computer is “born” and “grows up” in the space of 30 to 60 seconds or so( sometimes longer for some computers) that it takes to “boot” the OS.

So, the OS is much like those fundamental skills we all have and learned as we grew up. More precisely, it’s the software on your computer that draws its desktop, the icons on it, moves the little mouse pointer around on the screen when you move your mouse around, lets you view and open files, lets you type, — you get the idea.

Without the OS, you couldn’t do anything with a PC but turn it on and see an error message such as”non system disk or disk error” on a Windows-type computer, or a flashing question mark on one of Apple’s Macs.

So even though a lot of people don’t really understand what an OS is, or what it does, none of us could use a PC without it.

Now you know the answer to what’s an OS and what’s it for.