Aug
2
Facebook gets a Facelift!
Posted by Asela de Saram in Business, Facebook, Reviews

When I logged onto Facebook today to check my usual set of messages, posts & gossip; I noticed a very interesting link at the very top left. It said “The new Facebook is here Try it now”. Being the insanely curiously type, I clicked “Try it now” and found my online social life change instantly.

There have been several rumors of plans to give a face lift to Facebook but what I experienced leaves face lifts far behind and places FB on a whole new level. Facebook has not only set a new standard but exceeded all my expectations of what social networking site can become in such a short time span.

The wide layout and additional tabs have made the content area a lot more user-friendly and made my profile a whole lot easier to manage with less scrolling.

Several interesting facts:

* Can add new tabs to include any new areas that I might want within easy access
* Edit text/icons are available for any section of the profile
* Loads a lot faster than the previous version
* A lot less scrolling to get to the required sections (e.g. Funwall, Testimonials, etc) - now they are available under Boxes

All-in-all, I really like this new face of the future and looking forward to more.

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Jul
6
Leading Designer Marketplace
Posted by Asela de Saram in Business, Reviews

Although this post is over a month overdue, I really wanted to get the word out about this great site since its really worth a look for anyone that wants to make some money while you do what you do best or want to get some work done at a decent price!

The Question

Have you ever wanted to tap into design talent around the world and get something designed without incurring absurdly exorbant costs? Or are you a designer that wants to get paid decently for what you do? Then 99designs is the place to visit…

The Reach

There are over 15,000 talented designers from around the world at your disposal that design everything from logo designs, business cards or web sites.

There is good new for designers as well, prize money up for grabs by designers: $54,309

How it Works

Step 1: Create your Design Brief Few simple questions form your design brief. A design brief is just a summary of what you need designed. It costs USD$39 to post your brief on 99designs.com

Step 2: Set Your Budget How much you’re willing to pay the winning designer to purchase their design. This is called the prize. Prize amounts generally range from $50 to $500 depending on the type of design you require.

Step 3: Work with the Designers Once your design brief has been posted to 99designs.com, designers from around the globe will submit design concepts to compete for your prize. It’s your job to rate the designs and provide feedback to help the designers deliver what you want.

Step 4: Choose Your Favorite Design At the completion of the design contest (which is a maximum of 7 days) you will choose a winning design and pay the designer the prize amount. The designer will send you their completed design along with copyright to the original art work.

That’s all there is to it. Take a look at some of the design contests currently running and see why 99designs is the best choice for your next design project.

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May
13
Microsoft WorldWide Telescope Launched
Posted by Asela de Saram in Business, Google, Microsoft

Microsoft Worldwide TelescopeMicrosoft has launched its Worldwide Telescope yesterday bringing together images from the Hubble Space Telescope, the Chandra X-Ray Observatory Center, the Sloan Digital Sky Survey and few others right to your desktop.

“The WorldWide Telescope is a powerful tool for science and education that makes it possible for everyone to explore the universe,” said Bill Gates, Microsoft’s chairman, in a statement.

The program allows users to travel the galaxy on their own or take guided tours of destinations out-space developed by astronomers and academics. It also provides a number of different telescopes and easy switching between different light wavelengths.

Here is a closer look at the system requirements:
2GHz or faster processor
2GB of RAM
1-10GB of free disk space
Graphics card with 128 MB RAM or 256 VRAM
Windows XP Service Pack 2 or Windows Vista
Net connection
Macs must run Windows OS

Ironically, they can make a piece of software that can go to the moon but can’t seem to fix their own operating systems like XP or Vista. :)

Atleast we can be glad that we don’t have to billionaires or book a ticket on the next commercial shuttle out of orbit to experience all this.

Google launched their own version called Sky sometime back too which also comes with an add-on for Google Earth.

Check them all out and let me know what you think right here…

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May
8
Hello my name is Twiddla
Posted by Asela de Saram in Business, Reviews

Hello my name is TwiddlaIts always a nightmare when you have to work with a team from varied backgrounds, it gets even worse when you are worlds-apart. Well just be thankful that 4 brilliant people had the same problem you have, and instead of just sitting around they decided to do something about it!

Introducing Twiddla!

Twiddla is a free, real-time online collaboration tool. Just click and go: no plug-ins, downloads, or firewall voodoo. It’s online when you are. Mark up websites, graphics and photos; brainstorm on a blank canvas; meet with your virtual team easily and instantly… all in real time, all online. All you need is a computer with an internet connection and a web browser. They do the rest.

Messaging
Twiddla is a free, real-time online collaboration tool. Its beauty is in its simplicity and accessibility: no plug-ins or downloads, no need to work around complex firewalls, no advanced scheduling. It’s available 24/7 and the only requirement is a computer with an internet connection and a web browser. It’s browser-agnostic, user friendly, and free.

Users can:
* mark up websites, graphics and photos
* brainstorm on a blank canvas
* meet virtually, easily and instantly
* chat with other users
* talk with other users live

There are even separate Twiddla buttons that you can place on your browser and your site. After using it for a while, I was so addicted that now I don’t do anything without it. Give it a spin and share your experience with many others.

Team WhiteBoarding with Twiddla

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May
7
Who Is Hosting This
Posted by Asela de Saram in Business, Reviews

Who Is Hosting This is a tool conceived by Stan Schroeder (editor at Mashable) and programmed by Gordan Orlic (Zend PHP and MySQL certified developer), it enables you to find out who is hosting any web site. Simply type in any domain name, and you’ll get a link to the company that’s hosting this particular domain. It’s that simple!

Although they started in June 2007, the official launch was on the 4th of July 2007 when the site got Digg’d. By September they announced that they had successfully integrated WHT with BuiltWith.

They have also included two nifty toys in the tools section for anyone that wants to have this great site within easy access within your favorite browser. Their FAQ section answers some more questions most of you may have about this site.

Don’t just take my word for it, go have a look for yourself and leave a comment here.

Who Is Hosting This (opens in a new window)

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May
6
My Career life from then to now
Posted by Asela de Saram in Business, Careers, Miscellaneous

I started my web development career at 21 with MegadynamiX (Pvt) Ltd (LK-based IT solutions provider specializing in web development) as a trainee web developer on the 10th of February 2000.

After my 6-month probation period was over, the Webmaster who was there left the company for a better position and I was promoted to the post of Webmaster and put in-charge of the day-to-day web development activities . Over the next few months, I was tasked with training the 4 university interns with the inner workings of building a website, where to host the files and the standards to follow in the process.

During this time we worked on a lot of websites and portals for various clients. One of the stars of the time was when we made a one-stop portal called “LankaWorld”. Although its no longer active today, it was making headlines in months where we hoped it would take years.

After serving at MegadynamiX for over 3 and half years, I left the company to join Confifi Management Services on the 12th of August 2003 as their Group Webmaster, taking with me some good lessons and whole lot of experience. Confifi Group was a hotels and resorts management organisation based in Sri Lanka. Although most would think of this switch as career suicide, I thought of it more like a challenge. As expected, I was faced with a lot of challenges, frustration and reluctance by my fellow employees to embrace the ever evolving web technology since most of them had little or no exposure to Information Technology back then.

I worked my way through each problem, eventually leaving Confifi on 25th of April 2005 to join OpenWorld after having served for 1 year and 7 months, during which time I learned a lot about the inner workings of hotel chains, customer management and public relations.

OpenWorld was one of the best places to work, I was given a pre-warning though that I would not learn anything new but the pay was extremely good so I took up the challenge to try something different since now I had the best of both world under my belt.

A UK-based IT solutions provider for the global travel and hospitality industry, with branches worldwide. OpenWorld served the likes of InterContinentals, Raffles, Dorchester’s and many more hotel chains. I was recruited to service the Raffles and Swissotel Hotel chains for a greater part of my time and it proved rewarding for everyone, since my contact at Raffles was very impressed with the way things were being handled.

After serving at OpenWorld for over 2 years, one fine day the CEO of OpenWorld dropped a bomb on everyone saying that the company was running at a loss and that he had no choice but to close down the company on a global scale. Although we knew that this was not possible since the company was making millions, we all started to look for jobs.

At the peak of my career I was frustrated and angry, I promised myself that I would never let this happen to be again. Now I was in financial trouble as well since I had got married only 3 months back. So I looked around for another job but in fact my skills were now out-dated and out of style. Eventually, I found a job through some good recommendations of my ex-colleagues at OpenWorld. TravelByte Technologies also proved to be a short career when they closed down 3 months later.

By this time, another friend of mine who had gone to Dubai over a year back mentioned that there was a position with the company that she was working for, as a Web Developer to build a tourism, business and recruitment consultancy portal. After a few months of negotiating, I was on my way to Dubai to start my life fresh without making the same mistakes all over again. With the help of some of the best people I ever had the privilege of working with, including my ex-colleague from OpenWorld; we launched the portal.

Six months later, I was dragged into the same pit all over again. I was once more tricked into believing that I could come back to Dubai in two weeks when I came to Sri Lanka in November 2007 for a short holiday.

Although it was inevitable that they would not need us once we had completed the portal, giving people the benefit of the doubt is what we should always do. Anyways, I am now in Sri Lanka trying my best to overcome my past mistakes and get my life and my web development career back on track with an outlook to a prosperous future. :)

Lessons Learned:

1) Never ever trust people that offer you the world
2) Always trust your instincts
3) Make as much money as you can when you are young (never tell your boss that you are NOT interested in money)
4) Save as much money as you can, because you never know when you will need it next
5) Never give up on yourself or your dreams
6) Always Think Positive!
7) Be aggressive about what you want in life and never settle for anything less than your worth

Do you have a story that you would like to share? Please feel free to drop me a line…

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May
5
LinkedIn for the professionals
Posted by Asela de Saram in Business, LinkedIn

I joined LinkedIn on the 27th of August 2007, since then I was amazed at all the connections I made, both old and new. It is a great place to connect with business professionals from previous jobs and meet new professionals through recommendations and introductions. I was able to connect with 32 people so far and it keeps growing.

When it is time to re-connect with your professional contacts from the past, LinkedIn is worthy place to start.

View Asela de Saram's profile on LinkedIn

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May
4
FaceBook - just the way I like it!
Posted by Asela de Saram in Business, Facebook

Facebook has over the years fascinated me with the rate at which it continues to grow. Ever since joining the bandwagon over a year ago, I have come to think of FB as a part of my life… something that keeps me in touch with all my friends over the years and also serve as a platform to meet new people. Yesterday, I touched on 250 friends, how I manage to know so many people — I honestly don’t know! :)

I log into FB and several of my other important sites on a daily basis before I start my day. I love the fact that everything on the home page shows up for easy access but sometimes I wish there were less to look at.

Some of the FB applications I might add today would be removed permanently in a few days time simply because they sent me too many notifications or I didn’t like the color of the background in sync with my mood on that day. As of this post, I managed to remove over 50% of the applications I had. I hope to keep the rest until such time I get bored and start removing them as well.

One of my favorite FB applications though happen to be Nations, its about building your own Nation bit-by-bit while resolving issues that come from time-to-time from your citizens.

To visit my Facebook Profile, click here.

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Feb
24
Can scandals really spike up traffic?
Posted by Asela de Saram in Business, Miscellaneous

Basics:
When a certain entity points in one direction and starts moving. This creates traffic, may it be on the highway, a road, or even honey bees. Obviously as more and more join in, it creates momentum and this in turn creates an influx of traffic at the intended target.

When we apply this theory to a website, what do we get? Traffic from a number of curious, interested and sometimes aimlessly browsing surfers.

To spice up a situation, if there was some kind of a scandal then the traffic that starts to generate becomes so huge that sometimes the server that is hosting that site becomes clogged up or goes down unless of-course it has a lot of bandwidth to support this traffic.

The Scandal
Anything juicy, noisy and irresistible will definitely have an effect. Most times even if you talk about your neighbor sleeping with your other neighbor will have this effect. The best results are achieved if these neighbors are singers, movie stars or just plain old famous.

Traffic magic!
Provided you have a decent number of readers and those readers you are bound to get some very good results.

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Feb
17
New Site Launched!
Posted by Asela de Saram in Achievements, Business

After months of going back and forth with the design and re-design, I have finally managed to launch the new crystalaxis.com site. I have a good feeling about this venture and hope that it will reap good rewards soon.

CrystalAxis web design and development services are provided to you on a friendly platform - with plenty of space for discussions about whatever you need to do with your web site and company branding. We like to give you all-inclusive packages, with all the techie stuff handled by us.

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Feb
10
Writing effective business proposals
Posted by Asela de Saram in Business

For my first article on “business”, I would like to start with sharing how to write an effective business proposal. In my experience as a web developer & project manager, I’ve found out the hard way that in many cases, I’m not the only person trying to get the deal done. The firm or individual in question has to make a choice on who they will contract their work out to, based on many business proposals they’ve reviewed.

In any line of business, proposal writing is a tedious process, and costs you time and money every time you don’t get the contract.

Earlier on in my web development career, I knew there were a number of jobs I could do well, but I never got them, simply because I didn’t know how to put together a professional-looking business proposal.

Since then I have managed to build up a set of business proposal templates, I can very easily apply for contracts, and each time, I can present specific to that business that’s well-laid out, looks highly professional and very convincing.

I’ve learned that an important facet of a business proposal is its legal aspect. In any business, it’s very important to lay out specific terms within the law, to prevent yourself being taken for a ride or otherwise ripped off. Trust me the chances are that they have a better lawyer than you do and they will find loopholes in your proposal and exploit these.

With any business, the right proposal has an excellent chance of winning a contract, even when it’s just you, competing against a medium or large firm.

I must emphasis the following strongly -

Just being able to do the job well is not good enough. You have to be able to convince the client that you know what you are doing.

Here are few tips to creating a great business proposal:

Write Clearly and Concisely: It is very common in business writing generally, and in business proposals specifically, to try and show how smart you are by using excess verbiage, jargon, and run-on sentences. Don’t do it. Be concise. Make your point and move on.

Remember: You only have their full attention for less than 30 seconds, and they have little or no idea what you are proposing, so you have to walk them through the process. You do so by starting at the beginning and clearly, simply, and logically moving forward by making your points one at a time.

Start with the big picture and drill down as you go along so you keep their interest going.

Make a Good Argument and Counter Possible Obstacles: A great proposal is, essentially, a sales brochure in disguise. In here, you put your best foot forward, put your company in the best light, and make yourself irresistible to the reader.

How do you achieve that?

The best way is to turn the table and the top facts and arguments in your favor. Have a theme and reinforce it again and again. Take the reader down a path that leads but to one conclusion — that hiring you makes the most sense for them.

You also have to put yourself in the readers’ position, think of what counter arguments they may be considering, and deal with those potential obstacles honestly. That makes you trustworthy.

Personal Touch: Ever so often, business proposals are so lifeless as if they were computer generated, programmed to say nothing new, be really boring, and not offend the reader.

In your proposal let your personality come through. Of course this is business and you have to follow some business etiquette, but as you do, also let the reader feel that there are actually humans behind those words. Share your enthusiasm for your business, their business, and the ideas you are putting forward, etc. You get the point!

Don’t Over-do-it!: Avoid exaggerate too much. As soon as you cross the line from understandable pride to obnoxious overstatement, you lose all credibility. Once they realize that you’re not shooting straight with them, they may question the truthfulness of everything in your proposal - all that they read so far, and all that is still to come.

You avoid this unenviable fate by staying on the safe side of overstatement.

Use Graphics Sparingly: Don’t make the common mistake of filling up a perfectly fine proposal with excess graphics. The need for graphics is to clarify an idea, and liven up a proposal and allow readers to focus on something other than words. Be smart about it. Just don’t get carried away with these things too much. Whether you use a program like Publisher or PowerPoint, just be sure that the graphics reinforce the sale rather than distracting from the point.

Avoid Catch Typos & Cut-and-Paste: Another sure way to lose readers is to have them think that your proposal is a cut-and-paste job. You can reuse persuasive information from elsewhere, but try to keep it to a minimum and don’t make it obvious. Like mentioned earlier, your proposal should read as if it were created especially for this particular client or customer. And while you’re personalizing the proposal, triple-check for typos.

If it is clear that you didn’t give the proposal your best effort, why would your readers think you would give their project your best effort?

Always Keep the Reader in Mind: the proposal is a marketing tool, and as such, remember that you need to be able to convince as much as possible how it benefits them.

Finally, although the price is important and must be discussed at some point, do so only after you have wowed readers with your crisp writing, powerful arguments, supporting graphics, and a excess of potential benefits.

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