10 Great Ways To Use Social Media – @TinyBuddha

There are plenty of ways to approach social media, be it as an entrepreneur or a social butterfly. Lori Deschene, though, takes a more enlightened approach to the burgeoning world of social media with a few tips to ensure we think before we tweet.

For the last two years, I have provided a daily wisdom quote through a Twitter account called Tiny Buddha. Since the follower count has grown by leaps and bounds, people have suggested I tweet more often throughout the day. I’ve realized, however, that the greatest lesson we can all learn is that less is enough.

1. Know your intentions.
Doug Firebaugh of SocialMediaBlogster.com has identified seven psychological needs we may be looking to meet when we log on: acknowledgment, attention, approval, appreciation, acclaim, assurance, and inclusion. Before you post, ask yourself: Am I looking to be seen or validated? Is there something more constructive I could do to meet that need?

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Six Keys to Being Excellent at Anything

The reward is that being really good at something you’ve earned through your own hard work can be immensely satisfying.

I’ve been playing tennis for nearly five decades. I love the game and I hit the ball well, but I’m far from the player I wish I were.

I’ve been thinking about this a lot the past couple of weeks, because I’ve taken the opportunity, for the first time in many years, to play tennis nearly every day. My game has gotten progressively stronger. I’ve had a number of rapturous moments during which I’ve played like the player I long to be.

And almost certainly could be, even though I’m 58 years old. Until recently, I never believed that was possible. For most of my adult life, I’ve accepted the incredibly durable myth that some people are born with special talents and gifts, and that the potential to truly excel in any given pursuit is largely determined by our genetic inheritance.

During the past year, I’ve read no fewer than five books — and a raft of scientific research — which powerfully challenge that assumption (see below for a list). I’ve also written one, The Way We’re Working Isn’t Working, which lays out a guide, grounded in the science of high performance, to systematically building your capacity physically, emotionally, mentally, and spiritually.

We’ve found, in our work with executives at dozens of organizations, that it’s possible to build any given skill or capacity in the same systematic way we do a muscle: push past your comfort zone, and then rest. Aristotle Will Durant*, commenting on Aristotle, pointed out that the philosopher had it exactly right 2000 years ago: “We are what we repeatedly do.” By relying on highly specific practices, we’ve seen our clients dramatically improve skills ranging from empathy, to focus, to creativity, to summoning positive emotions, to deeply relaxing.

Like everyone who studies performance, I’m indebted to the extraordinary Anders Ericsson, arguably the world’s leading researcher into high performance. For more than two decades, Ericsson has been making the case that it’s not inherited talent which determines how good we become at something, but rather how hard we’re willing to work — something he calls “deliberate practice.” Numerous researchers now agree that 10,000 hours of such practice is the minimum necessary to achieve expertise in any complex domain.

That notion is wonderfully empowering. It suggests we have remarkable capacity to influence our own outcomes. But that’s also daunting. One of Ericsson’s central findings is that practice is not only the most important ingredient in achieving excellence, but also the most difficult and the least intrinsically enjoyable.

If you want to be really good at something, it’s going to involve relentlessly pushing past your comfort zone, as well as frustration, struggle, setbacks and failures. That’s true as long as you want to continue to improve, or even maintain a high level of excellence. The reward is that being really good at something you’ve earned through your own hard work can be immensely satisfying.

Here, then, are the six keys to achieving excellence we’ve found are most effective for our clients:

1. Pursue what you love. Passion is an incredible motivator. It fuels focus, resilience, and perseverance.

2.Do the hardest work first. We all move instinctively toward pleasure and away from pain. Most great performers, Ericsson and others have found, delay gratification and take on the difficult work of practice in the mornings, before they do anything else. That’s when most of us have the most energy and the fewest distractions.

3.Practice intensely, without interruption for short periods of no longer than 90 minutes and then take a break. Ninety minutes appears to be the maximum amount of time that we can bring the highest level of focus to any given activity. The evidence is equally strong that great performers practice no more than 4 ½ hours a day.

4.Seek expert feedback, in intermittent doses. The simpler and more precise the feedback, the more equipped you are to make adjustments. Too much feedback, too continuously can create cognitive overload, increase anxiety, and interfere with learning.

5.Take regular renewal breaks. Relaxing after intense effort not only provides an opportunity to rejuvenate, but also to metabolize and embed learning. It’s also during rest that the right hemisphere becomes more dominant, which can lead to creative breakthroughs.

6.Ritualize practice. Will and discipline are wildly overrated. As the researcher Roy Baumeister has found, none of us have very much of it. The best way to insure you’ll take on difficult tasks is to build rituals — specific, inviolable times at which you do them, so that over time you do them without having to squander energy thinking about them.

I have practiced tennis deliberately over the years, but never for the several hours a day required to achieve a truly high level of excellence. What’s changed is that I don’t berate myself any longer for falling short. I know exactly what it would take to get to that level.

I’ve got too many other higher priorities to give tennis that attention right now. But I find it incredibly exciting to know that I’m still capable of getting far better at tennis — or at anything else — and so are you.

Tony Schwartz

On: Managing yourself, Organizational culture, Work life balance

Tony Schwartz is president and CEO of The Energy Project. He is the author of the June, 2010 HBR article, “The Productivity Paradox: How Sony Pictures Gets More Out of People by Demanding Less,” and coauthor, with Catherine McCarthy, of the 2007 HBR article, “Manage Your Energy, Not Your Time.” Tony is also the author of the new book “The Way We’re Working Isn’t Working: The Four Forgotten Needs that Energize Great Performance” (Free Press, 2010).

http://blogs.hbr.org/schwartz/2010/08/six-keys-to-being-excellent-at.html

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All About Magento Ecommerce!

Of late Magento open source Ecommerce is gaining tons of popularity. Wonder why? Well here is an article that was published on net.tutsplus.com. Let me share some of the important highlights of Magento. Hundreds of ecommerce systems exist, but very few can match the power of Magento.

Why Use Magento?

Well there are quite a few very good reasons to use Magento:

  • A Simple Intuitive Interface
  • Easy To Download, Install & Maintain
  • Built on current technologies unlike other systems.
  • Multiple Site Functionality
  • And best of all…It’s free and open source!

The Benefits of Magento as an Ecommerce Solution

[via - Newearthmarketing.com]

More and more of our clients have been expressing an interest Magento. Magento is robust, scalable, rich in features and user friendly. It has ecommerce features that in that past would have cost prohibitive. Now our clients are able to use a free opensource platform with minimal customization to create a first-rate online shopping experience for their visitors.

We love Magento for the following reasons:

1. Open Source: Open Source platforms are free and the code is open to the public. This allows us to understand the how the software works to fix things and add new features.

2. Features: The standard version of Magento contains all the features required to implement a good ecommerce store. Basics such as the shopping cart, catalog management, search, checkout and administration functions are all included. (Features of Magento )

3. Flexibility & Conversion: Magento’s flexibility allows us to modify existing features or add in new ones. Drupal now has an extension for Magento which helps integration of Magento into a Drupal based website. If you are converting from another platform, there are tools which allows you to import products, customers and order information from other carts such as OSCommerce and X-Cart.

4. Active Community: Magento has a growing community of developers who continue to report problems, provide suggestions and share. Many write open source extensions that add to the features. Varien, Magento’s creator has provided a roadmap which helps users upgrade their sites more easily.

5. Architecture: The basic structure that Magento is built in is excellent. This makes for a stable reliable platform.

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Joomla v/s Drupal – Which CMS is better

Founds this interesting article at alledia.com.

Joomla and Drupal

  Joomla Drupal
Community Features
Community Builder. A solid component, but one that really needs an SEF extension to enable Youtube-style URLs.

Very impressive. Users can form groups and expansion of the registraion form is native to Drupal.
Shopping Cart
Joomla has Virtuemart and an integration of OSCommerce, both of which beat Drupal’s ecommerce addon. Use OSCommerce if you need multicurrency options or if you have a payment gateway not supported by VM

Not recommended as it lacks tax and currency options. However, watch out for Ubercart which looks promising.
SEO
Poor out of the box. OpenSEF is OK and improving fast. SEF Advance is roughly comparable quality but costs 50 Euros. Code is not very well adapted for SEO.

The out-of-the-box URLs work well and can be improved with one easy addon. The code is generally lightweight and well-optimised.
Forums
Use Joomla with Simple Machines Forum, which is the path taken by Joomla.org. Joomlaboard integrates natively to Joomla but lacks many key features.

A native and very smooth forum, but lacking in the high end features of the best modern forums. VbDrupal is the best way to avoid this (a Drupal Vbulletin hack)
Multimedia
Yes, plenty of podcast and video options.

Yes – Drupal Video and podcast options also available.
Photo Galleries
Yes. The best are integrations with Gallery2 and the Flash gallery Expose.

Has a default module and a Gallery2 integration.
Event Calendars
Several native plug-ins and integrations.

Not great. There are options but they are far behind those available for Joomla.
Template / Themes
Joomla has a wide selection of free and commercial offerings. Once installed they can be assigned to different pages.

Only one commercial developer. Off-the-shelf choices are very poor. Currently, Drupal assumes one template for all pages, although this can be adapted with effort and will 5.0 will allow templates to be assigned according to URL. Developing your own is the best bet.
Blogs
Some out-of-the-box capability. A good overview is here. Joomla.org uses a port of WordPress.

Good capabilities, although not a natural blog in the manner of WordPress.
Document Management
Yes – DocMan.

Not anything worth considering.
User Permissions
Some very major forks can work with Joomla, but this is a very poor area. Joomla is very admin-orientated. A small group of people are going to control and run the site. A lot of members can contribute by adding content, forum posts etc. but it is difficult to increase their permissions further.

Drupal wins hands-down. However, you still can’t manage single members. You need to add them to a certain group.
External Integration
Joomla 1.5 will help greatly with a much improved API and more hooks.

Currently Drupal wins easily with plenty of hooks
Content Management
In the core only Section >> Category >> Content is available. That’s it. No cross-categorization.

Unlimited categories and subcategories. Also allows for cross-categorization of articles.
Multisites Management
Commercial component.

Out-of-the-box.
Documentation
Poor, although work on this is progressing. There is however a wealth of useful information on the Joomla forums. Joomla 1.5 promises to be much more thoroughly documented.(Click here for 1.5 documentation.

Not too bad. (Click here for documentation and here for an API reference guide
SSL Compatible
With hacks.

Yes
Standards Compliance
Not great. Accessible Joomla is a fork necessary to move Joomla towards compliance. Mambo/Joomla dates from before standards were even considered (1999).

Yes. Excellent out-of-the-box.
Internationalization
With Joomfish. Not an easy or straight-forward solution

Yes, Excellent. (via i18n module)
Commercial Community
Very strong. Perhaps the best in the Open Source CMS world. Try Try Joomla Yellow Pages or Joomla.org.

Weak. Difficult to find strong Drupal developers in any quantity. Try Drupal.org, Drupal Yellow Pages or Drupalancers.
General Community
Great. 100s of extra components available, both commercial and open source. Many companies now offering services.

Good community. Often more non-profit than business driven. Excellent forum support at Drupal.org.
Ease-of-use
Joomla has a great graphical interface in separate area of website.

Administrator tasks on the current Drupal version are done via a menu on the frontpage which confuses many. Drupal 5.0 will solve this and also provide an online installer. Still, installing many modules needs technical knowledge.
Learning Curve
Shallow. One of the very easiest CMS systems to learn and customize.

A little steeper than Joomla, but still relatively easy to learn.
Speed
A default installation of 1.0.11 loads in 0.90 seconds.
A default installation of 1.5 loads in 1.33 seconds. (Scores from http://sitescore.silktide.com)

A default installation loads in 1.05 seconds.
(Score from http://sitescore.silktide.com)
Size 1.0.11 is 16.4 MB
1.5 is 16.7 MB
Version 5.0 is 2.89 MB
Current Situation Unclear. When will Joomla 1.5 be out? Which version should people currently buiding sites use? One developer recently warned about relying on any firm deadlines or easy upgrades to the new version. Clear development path. Currently working on Drupal 5. Beta 2 came out at the end of November and a Release Candidate is probably next.
Overall Joomla 1.5 will be the crucial leap for the platform paving the way for the resolution of many old limitations. Producing a good-looking site with plenty of functionality is a relatively easy task with Joomla. Drupal is more community-oriented and the current live version is more extensible. That advantage will be greatly shortened once Joomla 1.5 is stable.
[via - alledia.com]
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Joomla CMS Development and Customization

Joomla website development

Joomla Development and Customization

Joomla! is one of the most powerful Open Source Content Management Systems. It is used all over the world for everything from simple websites to complex corporate applications. Joomla! is easy to install, simple to manage, and reliable.

Build your Business Website on Joomla

Joomla allows you to organise and update your website content regularly using a web browser (Internet Explorer, Firefox or Opera) – without needing to know any of the technicalities behind the scenes, such as HTML (the language used to create web pages). Joomla can take care of all future scalability needs of your business. Joomla can manage your shopping cart, newsletters, calendar and much more with just a click of a button.

Why StrApp?

StrApp has been providing CMS solutions to its clients from past 4 years. We are now authors of many Joomla CMS implementations, many of them including advanced customizations. Our job is not just to apply Joomla templates, but to develop a user friendly and highly effective website.

If you already have a Joomla site of your own or plan to have a new one and need customizations or you are missing some functionality, fill in the Quick Contact form on the right panel now.

StrApp Joomla CMS Offer

  • Complete customization of Joomla including core files
  • One-click Template Selection and Joomla Customization Solution
    Click here to know more
  • Customization of 3rd party modules (such as VirtueMart, Calendar, Photo Gallery, Discussion Boards, etc.)
  • Development of new components, modules and mambots
  • Advanced site SEO (search engine optimization)
  • Layout and template adjustments and tuning of existing websites and making it Joomla friendly.

Joomla Websites starting from US $699

Get a quote now
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Drupal CMS Development and Customization

Drupal CMS Development and Customization

If you’re going to spend the time and money to develop a website then you should develop a website that is built to last. StrApp’s Drupal website design, consulting, and development services help you implement user friendly website and maximize your website profitability.

Build your Business Website on Drupal

Drupal CMS allows you to organise and update your website content regularly using a web browser (Internet Explorer, Firefox or Opera) – without needing to know any of the technicalities behind the scenes, such as HTML (the language used to create web pages). Drupal can take care of all future scalability needs with its modules like user administration, publishing workflow, news aggregation, metadata functionalities using controlled vocabularies and XML publishing for content sharing purposes.

Why StrApp?

StrApp has been providing CMS solutions to its clients from past 4 years. We are now authors of many Drupal CMS implementations, many of them including module level customizations. Our job is not just to apply Drupal templates, but to develop a user friendly and highly effective website.

If you already have a Drupal site of your own or plan to have a new one and need customizations or you are missing some functionality, fill in the Quick Contact form on the right panel now.

StrApp Drupal CMS Offer

  • Complete customization of Drupal CMS
  • One-click Template Selection and Drupal Customization Solution
    Click here to know more
  • Customization of 3rd party modules (such as administration, publishing workflow, news aggregation, metadata functionalities, etc.)
  • Development of new components, modules and mambots
  • Advanced site SEO (search engine optimization)
  • Layout and template adjustments and tuning of existing websites and making it Drupal CMS friendly.

Drupal Websites starting from US $399

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