43 Things That Run my Website Business

February 11th, 2008 by admin


Written by
Samuel
in
Freelance Resources

Having brewed websites for almost 12 years now, I’ve used a fair share
of tools and websites to help streamline the process. Nowadays, as a
busy freelancer and online entrepreneur, I try to stay as efficient as
I can in the web creation process. Just about every tool/website listed
here I use on at least 90% of my projects.

The Creative

1. Photoshop CS2 - Yeah, kinda obvious — I upgrade every other version usually. Used for all my imaging needs.

2. Flash CS3
- Another obvious one. Although I also use Flash for all my vector
needs as well (as opposed to buying Illustrator). Most people would
argue that Illustrator is a “must-have,” but you’d be surprised how
much you can accomplish with Flash (and of course, I speak as web
designer/developer, not a print or identity designer). I’m sure I’ll
get it someday :-)

3. The FWA - The standard for the best Flash websites on the web. Great inspiration fuel.

4. CoolHomePages - Another website that simply databases great looking websites, all filed under various styles and types.

5. FaveUp - Not as many websites here as Cool Home Pages, but a really good directory of logos and some sites.

6. Flashloaded
- Some well-written and very cool Flash components. I particularly like
their 3DEnvironment component and have used it a few times.

7. Flashden - A stock Flash site. Great for inexpensive Flash stock.

8. iStockPhoto - The best micro-stock image website. A few bucks for some really great photos/illustrations.

9. TechCrunch - If anything significant happens in the world of tech, it will appear here. Great news coverage on startups as well.

10. Smashing Magazine - Great design “lists” including ones for well-designed sites and free quality sites.

11. FlashKit - A bit of a confusing website, but a great source for free sound clips for Flash and a few other Flash tidbits.

12. A List Apart - The best original articles for “people who make websites.” Great CSS workarounds here.

13. Kirupa
- Wonderful site if you’re a Flash rookie or veteran. Tons of
tutorials, tips, and files - plenty for other developers too (.Net,
PHP, Photoshop, etc.).

The Development

14. SciTE
- I’ve always been a handcoder for my sites, and this is my favorite,
albeit somewhat archaic, text editor. The shortcuts, file tabs, and
syntax coloring all seems to be just right. I use it for all my
HTML/CSS/PHP and most of my .Net

15. SharpDevelop
- Why pay hundreds for Visual Studio when you can get a very similar
program for free. The best open-source IDE for a .Net developer.

16. Firefox
- Besides being a more secure browser, Firefox has innumerable plugins
helpful for any website creator. There’s even one for opening an IE tab
so you can test your html all in one browser.

17. Google - Anything I ever need to know about anything, someone already has documented it, and Google will find it.

18. Google Groups
- As development questions often appear on newsgroups, this is where I
search for them, often finding answers Google’s standard engine doesn’t
find.

19. SourceForge
- Don’t reinvent the wheel. More than likely there is an open source
project that functions like you need it to, and you’ll find it here.

20. Three Monitors
- A 22-inch monitor is now around $300 and 19-inch ones are half that,
making it cheap to have a dual or triple monitor setup. Email on one,
Photoshop/Flash in another, and Editor/Browser in the middle.

21. IIS - Developing locally is the only way to go.

22. FreeTextBox - A great rich text box I use for creating CMS systems for clients.

23. PDShop
- Not a beautiful website nor cart, but it’s the best .Net cart for the
money. You won’t find a comparable one for four times as much.

The Backbone

24. NameCheap
- I’ve used my share of registrars and NameCheap is by far the best.
The administration is the most logical and simple, with no tricks or
annoyances.

25. CrystalTech
- The hosting company I highly recommend to all clients and use myself.
Competitive prices, great admin panel, and 24/7 tech support with very
knowledgable folks.

26. SQL Server Express/Management Studio - The free SQL Server database. Works great for smaller websites.

27. SmarterMail - Solid email software. Easy and comprehensive admin and a good webmail client too.

28. NewEgg - The low-cost, quick delivery shop for all computer hardware needs. Lots of reviews and product images as well.

29. MySQL GUI Tools - The best tools to manage a mySQL database.

The Support

30. Alertra
- Ever worry that your website might be down and you wouldn’t know
about it? For a few bucks a month, Alertra checks your site thru the
day and will email or SMS you if anything goes amiss. A lot of options
and worth every penny if you run your own websites.

31. Google Analytics - Free, robust analytics program that you can implement in 5 minutes. What more can you ask for?

32. SecureFX
- A $59 FTP program that’s reliable and well-designed. I’ve used many
of the free FTP tools out there, but this one just makes file transfer
easier.

33. Yahoo Site Explorer - An easy way to see how your site is doing from an SEO perspective.

34. Western Digital Passport
- I have a couple 80GB units for all my backups and large transfers. A
perfectly small size and a reliable company for data storage.

35. Yahoo Unlimited-To-Go
- How can you work without music? Especially when you can access an
insanely huge library of music for so cheap (one offer gives you two
years for $80).

36. Google Reader - You must keep up with the design/development field or else. I now have 40 newsfeeds that I scan almost daily.

The Business

37. BlinkSale
- As a solo freelancer, this makes invoicing so much easier. Sends
emails, reminders, and thank-yous. Also good as a very primitive
accounting of moneys received.

38. TradeKing - Profits from business go to investments via my online broker TradeKing. IRA options and only $5 a trade.

39. Fool Caps - This is a great research community for investment market ideas. A chunk of my yearly income is from investments.

40. PrimoPDF - I keep all my business as PDFs and PrimoPDF lets me transform docs easily to PDF.

41. White Tile Board
- Whiteboard at office stores is way overpriced. You can get a 4×8 foot
panel from Home Depot for $12 and coat your whole wall. Not only will
friends be impressed by your wall art and apparent tech savvy-ness,
it’s great for tracking projects or mapping ideas.

42. iPhone
- Along with a Bluetooth headset, this makes mobile communication and
information so much easier and quicker. I use it to read all my RSS
feeds as well.

43. Pidgin - An open source instant messenger that allows me to have all the various IM clients in one piece of software.

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Microsoft buys Multimap

December 13th, 2007 by admin

Multimap
Microsoft has bought online mapping service Multimap, the two companies announced today.
Multimap is a website that offers maps which can be searched by area,
postcode, street name and grid reference. The maps can be printed and
linked to for sending via email or instant messenger.
Microsoft intends its new acquisition to sit alongside Virtual Earth and its Windows Live Search services.
“The addition of Multimap enhances Microsoft’s position
as a leading provider of mapping and location platform services,” said
Sharon Baylay, general manager of the Online Services Group at
Microsoft.

“This acquisition will play a significant role in the future growth of
our search business and presents a huge opportunity to expand our
platform business beyond the UK and globally. We are thrilled to
welcome Multimap onboard,” Baylay continued.
Multimap said that the deal would be beneficial for both companies.
“Partnering with Microsoft gives us a world of new
opportunities to build our mapping services into new technologies and
applications,” said Jeff Kelisky, chief executive of Multimap.
“As one of the world’s foremost technology brands,
Microsoft is in a position to bring even more value to the Multimap
service and give people everywhere new, exciting and fun ways to get
from point A to point B,” Kelisky continued.
Google is one of Microsoft’s main rivals in the mapping space with Google Maps and Google Earth offerings.
Terms of the deal were not disclosed.
www.multimap.com

www.microsoft.com

Posted by Webuser

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