Land Rush on New Domain Extensions – 2014
It’s a new age for a new land rush, as ICANN has authorized a long list of new global domain name extensions for public consumption.
Recently, ICANN (Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers), has released a whole bunch of new gTLD (global Top Level Domain) extensions to the general public. Most of these have been out for a little while, but I have been so busy that I didn’t have time to post. There will be a whole bunch more to follow these, as well. So we still are just around almost halfway through the release of this new variety of extensions.
Obviously some great names are gone. Lots of domainers often automate the task of registering the names they want. I personally think that some domainers (who are much better off than I) go a bit overboard because they can afford to. You aren’t going to sell domains on a regular basis unless you have a large stock of generic names, though.
Still, I believe that the .com extension will win out as the best domain name extension to have in the US simply for a long time yet, because people here aren’t used to using anything else. As United States citizens, we don’t even bother to register .US versions of our own beloved brands much of the time. To me, that is a huge oversight.
But I did manage to grab a few myself, including…
There are some good ones out there, I’m planning on getting more, but I am actually scrambling to protect my current brands. The new domains are a bit more expensive, so we have to be selective. But this land rush seems to be
The new list of extensions supposedly allows everyone a chance of getting a good domain name. It would be just too hard for all the domainers to snap every good name up, but be sure that most of the generics are gone. That’s just a fact of life in this day and age.
Some of the generic names just aren’t even available. As I mention above, site.domains isn’t available to anyone, even though I have personally created the Site Domains Trademark and built a great brand behind it. What is crazy to me is that everyone in the domainer community shunned me for grabbing sitedomains.com, saying that it wasn’t very good, catchy or short enough. But now I supposedly can’t register the .domains version and capitalize on my investment?
So, the rules are a little different with this new flood of gTLD (global Top Level Domain) extensions. The real benefactor in the short run, is ICANN, who is cashing in on already established brands while we little guys try to protect our brands. After all, it only takes a nut to grab an extension and deface the brand in order to build any notoriety and ill-will directed squarely at the brand.
The new list of available extensions is actually quite long and adding them all to the drop down extensions menu would make that search utility less effective. So the best thing to do is, in the registration search field, enter the domain name, a dot (period) and then extension that you wanted to check. It is probably a the easiest to do it, and more self explanatory, from the shop.domainhostmaster.com subdomain of Domain Hostmaster, though.
I’ll be adding info on the new extensions into the http://www.domainhostmaster.com section soon, under a new gTLD directory (www.domainhostmaster.com/new-gtld/) as soon as possible (I have been working a great deal, lately).
Here is the current list of the new extensions ready for registration at Domain Hostmaster:
New Extensions List
.camera
.media
.photos
.photography
.pictures
.exposed
.graphics
.gallery
.webcam
.productions
.lighting
.exchange
.trade
.bargains
.cheap
.computer
.support
.systems
.domains
.directory
.club
.bar
.pub
.social
.buzz
.email
.zone
.cool
.dating
.singles
.bike
.watch
.diamonds
.glass
.parts
.toys
.works
.agency
.company
.associates
.partners
.enterprises
.industries
.international
.foundation
.holdings
.ventures
.capital
.estate
.land
.lease
.house
.condos
.villas
.farm
.properties
.management
.careers
.marketing
.consulting
.guru
.expert
.engineering
.services
.solutions
.technology
.equipment
.supply
.supplies
.tools
.training
.education
.academy
.university
.institute
.community
.center
.town
.events
.tips
.reviews
.report
.today
.wiki
.holiday
.vacations
.voyage
.cruises
.flights
.glass
.coffee
.vision
.solar
.democrat
.catering
.cleaning
.florist
.ninja
.camp
.rest
.fish
.recipes
.rentals
.clothing
.kitchen
.plumbing
.contractors
.construction
.builders
.limo
.cab
.shoes
.dance
.cards
.bid
.ink
.uno
.gripe
.xyz
.futbol
.maison
.tienda
.viajes
.immobilien
.kaufen
.reisen
.moda
I’ll follow-up later, I am still very busy. But there will be many more added soon, ICANN has a lot of new ones coming.
Remember that if you decide to do business with me at Domain Hostmaster, it will be highly appreciated! 😉 Plus, we quite honestly do offer the best prices around, the best management control panels, the best servers and network operations center available (on several continents), and the best support staff in the industry.
Thanks so much. Have fun domaining!
August 9, 2014
Posted by domainating |
Advertising and Marketing, Brands, Business, Domain Names, Internet | branding, Brands, Domain Names, domainer, domaining, Domains, names, securing a brand, securing a mark, securing your name, Trademarks |
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After writing my last blog entry here, I looked at the image I uploaded. After doing a little extra work, by the time I actually had a good screen capture shot cropped and saved, the Chrome tabs didn’t even display any letters.

Chrome is only showing the favicon (the website’s favorites icon), in the tab for each open page. The browser tab for each page shrinks as we more web pages available, and there is no room for an actual title. FireFox (the second browser app which is overlaid underneath Chrome’s tabs) also showcases the favicon, even though it displays a word or two of the title. So, your favicon is the final means of leveraging your brand and identity with a tiny rendition of your logo or some other iconic image.
Take a gander at how the favicon for each site listed in Chrome (and FireFox) is still listed. In Chrome, it will be the very last thing displayed as you increase tabs, until the tabs are so small that even the favicon won’t display.
But, when we get to that point, all those open tabs will become a giant resource hog. Yet, any modern computer with a decent amount of memory is capable of doing this, and we usually take advantage of this capability. The point I am trying to make here is that the favicon is that one lasting image distinguishing your brand from all the others.
Even though FireFox protects the tab size at some minimal size by introducing a means to scroll through the different tabs, the title of the page is reduced to a word or two and the favicon, if available, remains your website or blog’s brand showcase.
So, if you don’t already have a favicon on your website, I have a great tool for you! 😉 You can easily create one by using my online faviconvert utility!
For your absolute best results, I recommend coming up with your best 32 pixel by 32 pixel reduced size image using a quality program such as Photoshop (use the “Bicubic Sharper (best for reduction)” option to resample the image in the Image Size dialog window). Then, reduce that again to 16 by 16 for the final favicon image.
Favicon will resize your image for you if you don’t have Photoshop. But its hard to beat the impressive power of such a professional image manipulation software application if you have it available, even if you only have the consumer version (it will use the same reduction resampling engine).
The faviconvert.com utility doesn’t actually convert your image into an icon, but it uses your image (gif, jpg, png or a 24 bit transparent png file format) to convert the data into a favicon and provide it in a few formats that you can download together in a zip archive.
Faviconvert.com
August 4, 2014
Posted by domainating |
Advertising and Marketing, Blogging, Brands, Graphic Design, Internet, Logo Design, User Interface eXperience, Web Design & Development | branding, Brands, Chrome, design, favicon, faviconvert, FireFox, Google, icon, logo, photo, Photoshop, UI, UIX, user interface, web design, website development, websites |
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If you are using one of the latest browsers on your PC, or browse the web on a mobile device, it is very likely that you don’t even see the name of the page your current browser window is displaying.
Why?
Web page titles and even their filenames are important assists in helping your site’s web pages search. By providing a unique title and name that reflects the content found on that particular document, you are providing more meta data to the search engines. If your title/name meta data are accurate for each page, this optimizes search. And we optimize the ability for searching the page, we optimize search for the entire website.
I would think that by optimizing search, the search engines might even be more likely to rank your site’s page higher in the search results. This is the general idea behind Search Engine Optimization (SEO), providing optimized data to enhance your listing’s rankings in the search engine results (often referred to as SERP for your ‘Search Engine Ranking Position’ or ‘Search Engine Results Positioning’).
Yet as I surf the web, it seems to me that more and more I am running across pages that are completely untitled, or all the pages in a website share the company name, or are simply titled and named inappropriately (home, page 1, page 2, page 3…). I have even seen many that are labelled “Untitled”, which seems to be the default name that WYSIWYG web page editors use.
But if you look at how we use the web nowadays, it doesn’t seem unrealistic that this is so unimportant to so many. People in the know understand fully how important these names and titles can be when it comes to optimizing search, because these particular fields, even the filename, are concise representations of what might be found on that page, and therefore, words that appear there, as well as are repeated elsewhere throughout the description, headings, content and image descriptions (maybe even in the image file names), are given more importance in search.
Because the title and name of a page usually use concise wording, even most of the very basic search algorithms place even more importance on the few words found here. And when there are fewer words used, their importance is greater for each word there, because importance is less spread-out when they are concise, as opposed to a certain importance spread between more of them.
That, by the way, is how some SEO professionals think, and I completely disagree, that using more key search words is good. It is much better to be concise and concentrate on the keywords and terms that are your focus. These can be underlined with synonyms and such in the content, but to stuff keywords in a title or filename, even in a description or keywords list (within meta tags) is just not a good idea. But that is a different subject, overusing names and titles. I just want to encourage their practical use, and even all of the major search engines like to see this, too. It’s called paying attention to the details.
Of course, any modern advanced search technology uses much more refined algorithms, but it always starts right there, with each page’s own name and title. Why do so many overlook them and their importance to search?
My answer is that the new modern web browsers are making it less important.
When I am browsing the web on my PC these days, I am in productivity/creativity mode, and I usually only have a single web browser window open. But that one browser window is full of tabs showing all sorts of different webpages for all the different online projects I am working on.
Often, I have a tab open for the font creation tool I am currently utilizing. Another for each of my different hosting accounts I manage. Another for my WordPress blog, one tab for Blogger and yet another for Tumblr. I usually always have my Twitter and Facebook accounts readily available, as well.
On top of that I will have the websites open that I am working on, and the next ones I want to touch-up, as well. Because we can do that with modern browsers on a fairly recent machine that has some processing power and enough memory.
So, what do I see as the title of each page in these tabbed windows? Well, since the current open tab is not enhanced above the individual tabs (as it should be) in Chrome or FireFox, I see:
[In] [In] [W] [S-] [Pr] [H] [H] [Sh] [D] [g] [W] [Bl] [T]…

Reduced size screen snapshot of my browser tabs. Chrome shows a letter, maybe 2. FireFox shows a word, maybe 2 short ones. But both are ignoring the current active title, as well as all the others.
It is the modern web browser that is masking how important those Titles are!
If the title of the page isn’t even displayed in the current active browser window, this is a huge burden in educating users the importance of the proper use of the HTML title tag. Especially when Google is declaring that what is the most important thing to it is that their search results are reflecting what the visitor actually sees and is presented with upon arrival to that document.
Isn’t Google itself devaluating these titles in Chrome?
Interestingly enough, your PC or Mac web browser’s address bar is still there by default and yet most users and even many webmasters are ignoring its importance. Site administrators, owners and webmasters ignore it with non-related domain name choices and even more poorly thought-out directory organization and file naming conventions.
However, the issue does not stop there. Because screen space is so important on smart phones and handheld devices, the page title doesn’t appear unless we are switching between different page views. In fact, the web browser’s address bar disappears as soon as we scroll down the page a little. That said, as soon as we start scrolling up, it will reappear, reaffirming its importance to navigation. But I honestly don’t think that anyone understands that importance, because I find myself frustrated not having a gadget that represents the browser bar there for me to tap and access.
My differences in UI (user interface) design vary greatly from the mobile plaftform, though. I believe in visual clues that allow navigation. Unfortunately, the mobile UI is very unfriendly in this respect. So although you do have elderly people adopting smart phones, I find them even more frustrated with the expected UI experience because they are expecting a GUI and not the touch motion technology that mobile users have to learn.
Nevertheless, despite the challenges of humans interacting with mobile device interfaces, it remains clear that Google’s Chrome and Mozilla’s FireFox are abandoning the display of the all important web page title unless you actually look for it. So now is it becoming just meta data?
I have to ask myself why, and I really do think that they too, are sick of seeing unused or inappropriate HTML document titles. Since the webmastering public at large doesn’t use the title tags correctly, why should they even display them, I suppose?
But doesn’t this start down a new slippery slope where we don’t even worry about our page titles because they are so out-of-sight and therefore out-of-mind?
Or are they actually going to give SEO professionals a reason to stick around because as always, all they have ever done is tackle the obvious that a newbie webmaster or newbie web designer without a clue would miss?
Nevertheless, despite their somewhat inappropriate disappearing act from the full view of the global world wide web community, web page titles and names do have a proven impact on assisting search. So it is then obvious that these things really do require your attention when designing a website, setting up a new page, posting a new blog entry, etc…
Just remember that each name and title reinforces the key search words/terms, advertising copy and even the brands themselves that are represented on these pages and it all makes common sense, doesn’t it?
In example… If you are creating a page about the different kinds of rodent traps, you might want to name your web page HTML file as “rodent-traps.html” and title it “Rodent Traps for the Home”. Then, on that page you would discuss the different kind of traps available for different kinds of rodents. Use head tags to identify different kinds of content. Then, you will link to pages about particular traps or brands… so maybe you have another page discussing Rat Traps at “rat-traps.html” and it may discuss the differences between poison traps, concussion traps and sticky traps, then each of those may point to reviews on particular brands of traps at other pages showcasing those brands or products.
I can go into more detail, but to me this is all common sense. Of course, I am a well educated web designer, as well as an artist. I’m supposed to understand this stuff. But not all webmasters do, and so that’s why I want to reintroduce some of these common sense practices to the world, because when a page title or name disappears, we think about these little beginning design touches a lot less, and yet they are very important to the grand scheme of search.
I don’t preach Search Engine Optimization (SEO), I preach search optimization (which has a better effect on SERP because you eliminate the worry).
August 2, 2014
Posted by domainating |
Advertising and Marketing, Brands, Business, Computing, Devices, Domain Names, Google, Internet, Search, Smart Devices, The Human Condition, User Interface eXperience, Web Design & Development, Website Optimization | advertising, blogging, blogs, branding, Chrome, common sense, design, domain name, Domain Names, file names, filenames, FireFox, Google, HTML, media, mozilla, online marketing, optimisation, optimization, page titles, professionalism, search optimization, SEO, smart phone, titles, UI, UIX, user interface, web design, web designer, web page titles, website design, website development, websites, worldwide web |
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I saw an ad on TV for some educational program that stated “Technology Changes the World”. Wrong.
Technology complicates the world, for sure. It is intended to simplify life, but in fact we have to learn how to use new tools. But the more that technology advances, the more the world stays the same. We always will rely on technology. In fact, we count on and anticipate its advances. The law is often up-ended in its failure to keep-up with the swift advance of technology, but the main thing is that right is still right and wrong is still wrong. Leveraging a computer to cheat still has to be programmed in by a human. Cheating is still wrong, that has never changed.
Part of the problem is that lawyers and lobbyists step in and muck-up the mucky-muck law to take advantage of us. The rich and corporate entities that can influence the law do so in order to take advantage of it for their own gain at our expense. Hence, you have slave labor when corporations take advantage of us by paying minimum wage with no real benefits, no significant recognition or care of its employees, while it builds millions, even billions on their backs.
It is a shame that we, as a people are so dismissed by corporate society, when we are its very core. But technology won’t change that, only art will. Corporations leverage technology to their advantage, but it doesn’t change their attitude or outlook, only encourages their abuse of power.
Not all rich people or large corporations are like this. The few 1%-ers and corporations that are acting responsibly usually do well by doing right by its people, treating them as family. Employees are flocking their posted career opportunities and a culture is created that is nurturing and interested in each individual’s lives. But this humanity does not arrive from technology, it arrives from humans making correct decisions and doing the right thing.
So where do we pick-up these inclinations to do right by others? You can look to religion, but perhaps a more important concept is the art of parenting. It certainly doesn’t come from technology, as technology doesn’t teach us what to do, it only enables and enhances our opportunities to either do right or do wrong.
Technology has never changed the world. It advances civilization, and the one constant in this world is change. Technology simply allows faster and further change with a broader reach. But change, real change that tugs at our soul comes from education. The teachings of which, are art. The art of writing, the art of communication, the art of understanding, the art of compassion, even our own morality and ethics are formed in an art of our perception of the world.
If you are like me, it is the art of Michelangelo, da Vinci, Raphael, van Gogh, Monet, Cézanne, Goya that inspires us to not just do our best, but appreciate other’s work, even when it is not their best. the lessons we have to learn of morality and ethics are echoed through-out literature not just in education and leadership classes, but in the art of parenting (which by no means is a science).
Technology, on the other hand, gives art a new voice, and we see this in television and digital, where concious decisions are openly made to deceive the public not only in advertising, but even through the art of journalism by deep pockets that want to use art to twist the reality of politics, news, human rights and pacify the public with how well we should be doing, how great our slave nation has become.
Don’t think that the slaves weren’t paid. True, very little, but in better houses they were paid a bit to maintain their lives so that they were presentable and clean. And that seems to be all the growing working class poor can afford in this country, enough to keep their nose clean, but not enough to meet any life crisis or even afford their own healthcare.
And yet, there will be those that will try to convince you that it is better to have poor, because otherwise their own profits are robbed.
No, it is not technology that changes the world, but the artists that control and mold its impressions on us, and how we allow the arts, even fashion, to grab us and take a hold of us. How art moves us, in books, education, parenting, what we see in the beauty of art, in the humanity of others and how we feel about the art that they reveal through their lives…
Art Changes the World!
April 2, 2014
Posted by domainating |
Advertising and Marketing, Business, Internet, Media, Parenting, The Human Condition | art |
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So much spam. I abandoned this droll blogging platform when WordPress suddenly decided to add advertisements to the blog. I was so upset that I cancelled my paid domain name mapping (where http://domainating.com was the actual address of the site). You can still get here via the http://domainating.com address, but now you are redirected to this web address (https://domainating.wordpress.com/).
So, I will lose all credibilty with my domain name in Google, as Google very hypocritically and absolutely very definitely hates redirects used on any server other than its own, even though they use this method of directing traffic all the time (check out chrome.com , android.com or picasa.com, as examples).
So I started blogging on Tumblr and wouldn’t you know it, after their sale to Yahoo the very first post to every one of my blogs is now a very spammy advertisement. Sometimes these ads even contain malware! Hence, I will not even list my 7 tumblr blog addresses here. In fact, if you visit any blog on Tumblr, make sure you have a good malware client. An anti-virus program is not enough! In fact, an anti-virus program does very little to protect you from spyware and malware. I use a good one, Malwarebytes Anti-Malware Pro, and I recommend it, highly. You wouldn’t believe how much stuff it has already caught and protected me from.
So now, I feel betrayed once again. Why can’t a guy write on a blog without seeming like a spammer or scammer anymore? I don’t have $100.00 a year for that, even full-function web hosting is cheaper, and you have more control. It used to be that everyone who liked to blog could find a safe haven. But now everyone is just using us to build their own scraper site.
What is a scraper site? A site that uses ads to scrape a few cents away from the advertiser to reflect the lead, or link, giving him traffic to his site. Now, I am not at all against advertising, when it is done right and responsibly. But peppering the advertisements with lies, mistruths, misleading info, outright deceit, viruses, trojans, malware and spyware has always been against the law. Plus, advertisers such as WordPress, Yahoo, even Google and Tumblr lose control of the ads and the quality of the ads because truth in advertising is never enforced in digital media anymore.
I guess I’m going back to Google’s Blogger platform, now. At least I don’t have to display ads with Blogger (so far). I guess all we can do is pray that corporate America sees the light and revolts against all this privacy intrusion…
Jesus Christ, please forgive the stupid people behind these corporations that are taking advantage of us bloggers and our readers with crap advertising, spam, viruses, trojans and malware, but please get some smart people into these corporations that can take charge, look after their brands, not mar us and ours up, and make it pretty darn quick! This is just plain idiocy. Amen.
March 31, 2014
Posted by domainating |
Advertising and Marketing, Brands, Business, Computing, Google, Government/Politics, Internet, Media, Software, User Interface eXperience, Web Hosting | Google, Tumblr, WordPress |
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Yahoo has decided to release some of its premium domain names to the public through an auction at Sedo…
Yahoo!’s Domainapalooza …(This link was updated on November 16th, 2013)
This premium domain name portfolio auction started today, November 14th, and runs to November 21st, 2013. Although there are quite a few names that I feel are not very good (especially for the reserve price indicated), there are some great domains in the bunch…
- AV.com
- WebServer.com
- Sandwich.com
- Sled.com
- VoiceMail.com
- Crackers.com
- Freeby.com/.net
- BlogsPort.com (or brand it as BlogSport.com)
Now, please note that the above is merely a sampling of some of the best domain names in the Yahoo Domainapalooza premium domain portfolio auction. But that portfolio is listing over 500 names on its first day, and Yahoo! also indicates that it will also be adding even more domain names throughout the auction.
Can you walk away with a great brandable domain name that you could develop into a profitable website or business? Very likely, considering the quality of some of these names. Especially with names that have an excellent second meaning. For instance, even though winter is coming and sled would make a great name to sell winter snow sleds, “sled” is often how I refer to older muscle cars that had great power but lacked the handling of a sports car. These beasts will never have sports car handling because they double as grocery-getters and transportation to work. And if you are into muscle cars like I am you would see the opportunity in that street rod slang name.
As of this writing, there are 517 domain names available for auction and with Yahoo planning to add even more this may become the most watched premium domain name portfolio auction in history.
Happy domaining! I hope there will be many domainers taking advantage of this opportunity to add to their portfolio and domainate the market with domainating names. 😉
Yahoo!’s Domainapalooza …(This link was updated on November 16th, 2013)
-Doug
…”Domainating”
(I’m going back to check out that list!)
November 14, 2013
Posted by domainating |
Advertising and Marketing, Brands, Business, Domain Names, Internet, Sales, Software, Web Design & Development, Web Hosting, Website Optimization | Domainapalooza, domainating, domainer, domaining, premium domain names, premium domains, premium names, Yahoo |
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I am having a heck of a time locating graphics and organizing images. I tend to take too many photos because my family almost will never pose for a shot. Plus, it’s always better to see them with a real actual smile as I catch them laugh at someone else’s joke. But timing these moments is difficult, everything has to be right and no one can be flinging their head back or rolling on the floor (which my son does for affect).
I also love to take photos of nature and although I do make the attempt, wildlife doesn’t like to cooperate much. I have never had a pheasant stop for a pose, those birds are actually quite stealthy. And when the deer do stop out of curiosity, they have already made cover. Mother nature just doesn’t like to cooperate.
To make matters worse, I am a graphic/web designer by trade. I design all sorts of web logos for my domains, websites logos and advertisements for others, and I almost exclusively work in the Photoshop Document (*.psd) or Adobe Illustrator (*.ai) file formats until I am ready to publish something. The trouble with this is that once saved, I never see a thumbnail when I am browsing the file structure in Windows Explorer. Instead, I see a worthless advertisement of the logo for whatever the default program is that I use to load for the image even if I am trying to view the thumbnails.
I can see the *.psd thumbnails in Photoshop when I am looking for them, but then I am trying to open them up or save them. Plus, this is an extremely limited browser. Adobe does offer Bridge with my Master Creative Suite, but Bridge suffers from the same drawbacks as Photoshop, it has a high memory requirement and it is an extremely poor replacement for the OS’s file/directory structure explorer (AKA: “Explorer” or “Windows Explorer”).
Bridge is a good gallery program, but when I am trying to find something somewhere on my hard drive and I need a visual cue, it sucks because it is so proprietary, lacks decent search features, drains the memory from other programs, and since I use a lot of other programs (except when in Photoshop), this thereby makes my system unstable.
In order to accomplish what I need to do, I need to be able to see .psd files in the OS while I am searching through my archives normally, anyway.
Shortly after I got this computer (which is a 64-bit Vista based machine), I installed the Photoshop CS3 Master collection and I thought for a little while that I could actually see my PSD files. I was so happy. Since then, I have installed all sorts of other graphics tools, utilities and picture viewers. I kind of have to, Adobe no longer supports every new format in the world, especially since my Photoshop is a couple versions old, now. And not everything new asks for permission before taking over the default file loading stations upon installation.
Installers and updaters are also notorious for leaving icons on my desktop, which is another pet peeve of mine. But even if I haven’t given explicit instructions to any program not to install shortcuts or not to change my file extension default loading applications because it hasn’t asked, it should always default to “No” unless it asks. They don’t. And these companies will continue to piss me off (Microsoft, Apple, Google, Broadcom, DivX) by littering my desktop with crap without permission on every single update. So, since the big guys don’t follow the common sense rules of file installation and updating, all these little guys think that they have to get their brand out there are well, and the way they do it is by not asking for permission to change your default application settings, and doing it anyway.
Why aren’t Adobe format files showing a preview thumbnail when I am saving a preview thumbnail with each and every save? I can’t say that they are making everyone buy another product just to see PSD and AI thumbnails since I am actually sure that I used to see such thumbnails. But how to I get things back to that state?
It is just plain impossible to reorganize my photos and images without being able to view them because when I need to do it is when I come across them and see they are out of place through my normal day as I am using the OS. When I try to do it on purpose, I am systematically going through folders and never run into anything out of place.
Let’s face it, if Adobe is offering anything less than what Microsoft is designed to be (to say, sell another product), they would actually be corrupting the OS. Even though everyone else does it, Adobe usually takes the high road in this case. So, I don’t think they are the culprit.
Argh.
How do I take my OS back?
January 13, 2011
Posted by domainating |
Advertising and Marketing, Brands, Computing, Graphic Design, Logo Design, Media, Photography, Product Design, Search, The Human Condition | Adobe, bad behaviour, Brands, Bridge, cataloging, corrupting the OS, default application, default file loader, design, directory structure, file extension, file structure, illustrator, installers, litter, organization, OS, permissions, Photoshop, previews, thumbnails, UI, UIX, updaters, user, user interface, Windows, Windows explorer |
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These days we all like to customize our stuff so that it reflects our own personality. New industries have sprung out of the desire for custom vinyl car, phone and laptop wraps. And of course we can do the same thing with our FireFox browser now, using Personas, which act like little FireFox browser themes.
We all have to think about how we want to promote our businesses online. SEO doesn’t work unless there is some sort of promotion program in place. The more creative ideas always seem to win out over just submitting your website to the directories.
People who make good videos tend to get lots of viewers. I keep wanting to make my own tutorials but the screen recording and presentation software has always been out of my budget (let me know if you have something free/share-ware that works).
But I finally decided to take a look at how I can get my work out there. Because I have so many domains, I have been making lots of logos for my minisites & blogs. But I have always been trying to find a way to share my graphic design skills.
I had been so busy that I hadn’t noticed it. But every time FireFox updated to a new version it was always inviting me to try out the new personas. To tell you the truth, I don’t like a lot going on in my browser. I don’t want it to clash with other websites or be too busy. I’ve even stopped using the Google Toolbar because it refused to share the same line with any other toolbar and pushed the content down and closed my visible window on the cyberworld.
But as a graphic designer my curiosity has finally gotten the better of me and I was quite amazed what I found there. Many were just plain awesome because they invoke loyalty to a brand such as the Vikings, the Twins or the Yankees… I even have a couple Superman themes for FireFox, now.
But later I made a few of my own. The first few have finally been approved at:
http://www.getpersonas.com/en-US/gallery/Designer/SymbioticDesign
Some of these are actually quite busy for a texture pattern, but I’m learning and they still seem to work well for some people with less going on than I have. Some could actually be modified further if someone wanted to. And I usually added credit for my business or a website in somewhere (usually on the bottom footer image) with a blatant plug for my website.
I’m still experimenting with stuff and a whole bunch of others are pending, but it’s just a good idea I thought I might share. It might go somewhere, it might not, but the idea of having a technically sophisticated user (I think most FireFox users are well up on things) that might see my creativity and check out my websites (I am promoting quite a few of them in different patterns), sounded like a good idea and a real win-win if my graphic eye is attracting them to my services.
Thought you might like the idea.
I know there are some “Personas” that I made that maybe I shouldn’t have uploaded, but everyone likes something different and as indicated, I have just started toying around with this. I think I have a few better ones that I expect to be approved soon and I am even going to be tapping other parts of my hard drive (some of my folders seem to be growing spiderwebs but have images I know would work well).
Here are some examples of FireFox Personas that I thought worked well:
Brushed Recessed Metal

Brushed Recessed Metal Persona by Symbiotic Design (Preview Image)
Space Craft Panels Persona

Space Craft Panels Persona by Symbiotic Design (Preview Image)
Knurled Persona

Knurled FireFox Persona by Symbiotic Design (Previe Image)
Alien Ribs

Alien Ribs Persona by Symbiotic Design (Preview Image)
Blue Angels 1 through 6

Blue Angels 1 through 6 Persona by Symbiotic Design (Preview Image)
Wavy Grill

Wavy Grill Persona by Symbiotic Design
It’s easy enough to use another designer’s Persona or with very little work you can make your own. Although it is free, it helps get the word out about your sites and stuff, if you decide to try to make your own to promote yourself or your business.
I’m sure there are other such avenues, if you do something similar, post it here (or in a new thread).
As another designer pointed out, we do have to be careful about what images we use. I made all my designs, or used photography that I had taken. Be sure that you have the rights to use anything that you might come up with in your own Personas. If it’s Copyright at all, make sure it’s your Copyright! 😉
July 28, 2010
Posted by domainating |
Advertising and Marketing, Brands, Computing, Graphic Design, Internet, Media, Social Communities, social media | branding, creative solutions, custom, customization, FireFox, FireFox Persona, Graphic Design, marketing, online marketing, Personas, promotion, self promotion |
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I am really starting to get tired of all the spam… “So-and-so” posted “something” on your wall, but when you look at it, you are sent to an application that is supposed to quiz you and has nothing to do with anyone, writing on my wall, a photo of me that someone commented on, a picture of me within a photo, a nquestion about me, or anything. Spam is what made me walk away from Yahoo, they did not take my privacy seriously. Google has, and although I don’t like their monopolistic corporate greed attitude, I am still there because they are seemingly serious about protecting my account.
This is the same reason that people left MySpace and strolled over to Facebook. We were sick of all the spam. But if Facebook is just going to become another damn haven for spammers, you can count me out.
Facebook, get your head out of your butt right now. Or I will be gone.
March 4, 2010
Posted by domainating |
Advertising and Marketing, Brands, Media, Product Design, Social Communities, social media, The Human Condition | brand, brand integrity, brand preservation, branding, facebook, rep, reputaion, social blogging, Social Communities, social marketing, social media, social networking, Social Networks, spam, spammer, spamming, website development |
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Can you believe this:? Microsoft Internet Explorer refuses to run on my XP desktop or XP notebook machines, or even my Vista based laptop! I can’t get IE running on anything, not even on my son’s XP desktop.
Thanks so much for nothing, MS!
It isn’t that I want to use it, it’s just that I need to support the IE browser for my web design clients. And yet it won’t even run on my Windows based machines. I am so tired of supporting IE. They fail to develop the browser at all so that it will keep up with ancient web standards such as CS3, XHTML and XML and don’t even plan on supporting HTML5. Ideally, the browser is considered crappy.
Why the hell should I support this peice of junk browser? Oh yeah, my client’s clients/customers. Well, I am now doubling my rates to support anything other than the last version of Internet Explorer, FireFox, Safari, Chrome and Opera. Why? because IE is so poorly undeveloped that it should not even be considered a true modern browser.
So from this moment on, if you want support for IE7, you will have to pay double for it. Because IE really *is* that crappy and really is much of a pain in the butt. Everyone else supports the current and emerging web standards, just not IE.
February 14, 2010
Posted by domainating |
Advertising and Marketing, Brands, Computing, Graphic Design, Internet, Media, Product Design, Web Design & Development, Website Optimization | coding, CSS, design, HTML, IE, IE7, Internet Explorer, Microsoft, professionalism, web design, web designer, website design, website development, websites |
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