| bio | website | intlect.com |
|---|---|---|
| location | ||
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 2 years, 11 months |
| seen | Feb 8 '12 at 2:30 | |
| stats | profile views | 28 |
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Jul 16 |
awarded | Yearling |
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Jul 17 |
awarded | Yearling |
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Nov 12 |
awarded | Enlightened |
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Nov 12 |
awarded | Nice Answer |
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Oct 3 |
answered | Is there a tool to compare space used by each file of a web page? |
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Aug 27 |
answered | What happens if I don't pay for my .com domain in time? |
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Aug 24 |
answered | How Can I Secure A VPS Installation? |
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Aug 24 |
comment |
Why would anyone need my registrar information for a new web site? To be honest, if I were you I wouldn't turn over "access passwords". Force them to setup an account with the registrar you use, and push it to their own private accounts. Otherwise, if they never change the password you set them up with and they end up with a disgruntled employee they don't know about screwing with their domains, the first fingers will point to you, and denying involvement wouldn't really help. |
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Aug 18 |
answered | Why would anyone need my registrar information for a new web site? |
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Aug 17 |
comment |
SEO: Will this site give me trouble? Thanks for the link. I saw them after they started spamming some of my Analytics accounts that aren't even live. Seems like they've gone through all UA-X-1 accounts 10 times (per a sample of 90 accounts, first day they started being July 10th 2010). |
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Aug 16 |
comment |
Does registering a domain for 10+ years help search rank? Not an answer: Rather than registering something for 10 years, you might look into purchasing something that's already 10 years old. Unless it's been used for a pharma website or the likes, it'll at least (most likely) get you out of Google's Sandbox from the get go. |
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Aug 14 |
answered | How to create separate users in phpmyadmin, each one can't see others databases? |
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Aug 12 |
answered | How do you backup your websites? |
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Jul 29 |
comment |
Who is a great domain registrar company? I too used NameCheap a lot in the past. Thing is: 1. Namecheap is not a registrar. (OK, it is an accredited registrar, it just doesn't use its accreditation for domains you buy via namecheap.com) Namecheap is an Enom reseller. And Enom isn't exactly the best of registrars. It may have one of the best APIs in the business, but it has a lousy track record [google: enom sucks]. 2. Customer service: usually, morons with a script (with some exceptions, of course). Nice thing is it's live chat. Side note: they've never been able to actually help. Email support seems to be better though. |
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Jul 29 |
awarded | Critic |
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Jul 29 |
comment |
Who is a great domain registrar company? Please read some of the horror stories up on nodaddy.com before actually using GoDaddy. Between the upsell, the control panel made to make you buy more useless crap almost by accident and want to go hang yourself because you can't find what you're looking for, the lock-ins they try to enforce, the enormous price for their Domain Privacy option, and the really dazed customer support reps, I found myself wishing for a $79/year option to remove all crap from their CP... |
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Jul 29 |
comment |
Who is a great domain registrar company? Gandi is so extremely expensive, though... But they're great if you're an American trying to "off-shore" your domain assets. |
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Jul 29 |
answered | Who is a great domain registrar company? |
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Jul 25 |
awarded | Commentator |
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Jul 25 |
comment |
When should you consider being an OpenID provider? I believe it depends mostly on your user base. If your users are actual potential OpenID users (geeky and all), and you believe they would rather use you as a service provider than the majors, you should by all means set it up. |