For new companies starting out, it can be difficult to get goings, especially on major search engines such as Google. We’re here to help make sure you get off to a better start, and we’re providing you with a few expert pieces of advice for small start-ups. • Make a list of the search terms you want to dominate, preferable choose search terms which are good but not too competitive, because you may find yourself wasting time over compaction that you just cannot face. • Register with Google tools to check your performance, giving you detailed information to make informed decisions. There is Google Analytics, Google and Bing Webmaster tools, as well as Google places among others. • Create good internal links, and definitely make sure they are not broken in anyway whatsoever. • Social media platforms can attract new visitors, and because it can take some time to get going, social media networks allow for quick traffic, especially if you market your business on... Read More »
Google Explains Wallet Objects Concepts (Templates, Classes, Objects)
Google has put out a brand new informational developer video concerning the Wallet Objects platform, discussing templates, classes and objects. Google developers Maru Ahues Bouza and Peng Ying offer you an in-depth overview. The two recently discussed the Wallet Objects API Java quick start in another video, that you could watch here. When Google launched the recent Wallet app in September, it announced some new loyalty programs, which profit from the Objects API, which itself, was launched earlier this year.
Amazon Launches Amazon RDS For PostgreSQL
Amazon announced RDS (Relational Database Service) for PostgreSQL on Thursday, and that PostgreSQL is now available as a managed service on Amazon Web Services with as much as 3TB of storage, 20,000 IOPS and support for prime-availability. Amazon RDS supports the core PostgreSQL database features, like PostGIS, free text indexing and search extensions. Users can scale I/O operations to 30,000 IOPS per database instance. in accordance with Amazon, achieving “consistent, fast performance.” Users can be capable of deploy production Postgre SQL apps using the multi-availability zone option, and Amazon says RDS will operate a synchronous stand-by replica with an automatic fail-over mechanism. It also supports cross-region snapshot copy operations. “Since we launched Amazon RDS four years ago, a good number of enterprises and startups have adopted the service since it permits them to run familiar relational databases with none of the operational complexity of on-premise systems, at a substantially cheaper price,” said Raju Gulabani, Vice chairman of Database Services, AWS. “As mobile, web, social and... Read More »
Flash Player 11.9 Updated, Improves Safari With Safe Mode
It’s that point of the month again where Adobe releases another update for Flash Player and AIR. This month’s update incorporates a selection of fixes and new features for Windows and Mac platforms. To initiate, listed here are all of the fixes which are within the latest versions of Flash Player and AIR: [3650590] [OSX] – App Updater Crashes on MacOS with Air 3.9 [3648442] [iOS7] – Leftmost a part of the text in spark TextArea and stageText get clipped when mulitline property is correct. [3640207] [Android] [Captive Application] – orientationChange event handler fetches wrong stage.orientation values. [3624280] Sound now plays correctly in both channels at the Logitech G35/G930 Surround Sound headset [3648273] [EaseScreen] – Corrects redraw issue affecting applications that embed the ActiveX control, introduced in Flash Player 11.9.900.92 [3646576] [Win 8.x] – Full-Screen Flash video now rescales correctly when switching between Portrait and Landscape modes multiple times [3646574] [Win 8.x] – Clicking on an embedded “Watch on Youtube” link now not triggers the... Read More »
Oracle Ends Commercial Support For GlassFish
As a part of Oracle’s acquisition of Sun Microsystems, the corporate also acquired the GlassFish application server project. Since its launch, GlassFish users have enjoyed commercial support for the most recent releases of Java Enterprise Edition, but that’s not the case. Earlier this month, Oracle announced that it might be ending commercial support for GlassFish and Java EE. In other words, there’ll be no GlassFish Server 4.x with commercial Java EE 7 support. There’ll, however, be an open source version with GlassFish Server Open Source Edition 4.1 launching in 2014. So, what’s an enterprise using GlassFish to do? Oracle says that every one your Java EE 7 needs will now be fulfilled by the company’s WebLogic Server service. It says that the the compatibility between the 2 server types is high and so that you can have the ability to transfer your goods over to WebLogic very quickly. For additional information, here’s what Oracle recommends GlassFish Server customers do to start the move to WebLogic:... Read More »