Website Designers and Webmasters

Dedicated to all the tasks Webmasters, Website Developers and Website Designers find themselves facing.

By: Ashton Sanders

Hunting Broken Links

Aug 28 21:08

Filed under: Webmaster

Broken links can be a pain to try to find. No matter how good you are at programming, broken links are sure to appear randomly throughout your website over the years. A site that you were linking to goes down, or an old browser doesn’t understand the ampersand. There are a million reasons one of your website links can break.

You can spend an hour every day going through your website and finding all of the broken links, or you can do it the easy way:

Hunt your Broken Links

Link Tiger will “hunt” up to 1000 links on your website and check to make sure they all work for free! (Paying for a subscription will increase the number of links and checked.) I’ve been looking for a good free link checker, and I think I’ve found it.

-Don’t be nice to your broken links.
-Ashton Sanders

By: Ashton Sanders

Keeping your Email Address Away from Spammers

Aug 17 22:26

Filed under: Email

There are many ways that spammers use to acquire email addresses. Some set up fake websites that request emails, and say they’ll give you a 1337″ flat screen TV if you do. Others buy the addresses or hack databases for them, etc.

Some have bots that search the internet for email addresses. The bots search a web pages code for “*@*.com” for example (where * = any amount of characters.) Some bots also search for “mailto:*@*.com” which is the HTML code that you would use to allow a user to click on the link to email you.

Is there a solution? Yes there is! You can replace the certain characters that the bots search for with their html entity code.

For example:

“m” translates into “m”

Phoenix Development put together a little form that will automatically turn your email address into unrecognizable gibberish, that will be translated fine by an Internet Browser.

Email Encoder

-”Spammers are annoying”
-Ashton Sanders

By: Ashton Sanders

Web Comic

Aug 16 1:59

Filed under: Humor

A friend showed this to me about a year ago, and I stumbled upon it, and must admit. The author of this comic is very very funny. He’s got a degree in Physics and he is well versed with Internet Lingo.

xkcd.com

Current Favorite Comic:
#1 Programmer Excuse for Legitimately Slacking Off

-Enjoy,
-Ashton Sanders

By: Ashton Sanders

The Problem with Web Developers

Aug 13 23:50

Filed under: Rant, Webmaster

This post has been dwelling within me for the past couple days.

I’ve been trying to find a responsible ASP.net programmer for a three-week project. Unfortunately we have a problem with one of those words: responsible. How do I know they are responsible? How do I know they won’t put me off for another project, even though I’m paying them top dollar to do this project right now?

Ask for references… Great, this guy made 50 websites in the last 10 years, and three of them are happy. I guess that means he’s responsible.

It’s a very tough situation, especially since it is very hard to switch horses mid-stream when you get into the complicated and extensive programming projects.

I think I’ve heard so many bad guys say this in movies… and I’ll go ahead and repeat it.

-”If you want it done right, you got to do it yourself.”
-Ashton Sanders

By: Ashton Sanders

AOL – Service Review

Aug 11 19:38

Filed under: Rant, Review

You can really summarize companies in two general categories:

Customer Orientedand

Profit Oriented

(Obviously this is a sliding scale but for the majority, companies will prefer one or the other.)

I have observed companies like Logitech and In-And-Out to be very Customer Oriented. When they (or even I) messed something up, they would go out of their way to fix it for me. And because of this customer orientation, I speak highly of them, and spend more money with them.

AOL is on the other end of the spectrum: Profit Oriented. They go out of their way to stop you from canceling their services etc. Their first programs were basically impossible to uninstall from your computer unless you were a computer genius… and even then it could take weeks to really get it off of your computer.

My first email address was with AOL, and when we realized that we could get better internet connection for cheaper elsewhere, we tried to uninstall it from our computer… for two years. Granted we didn’t know a lot about our computer, but we did know that once something is uninstalled, it shouldn’t keep making shortcuts on your desktop…

“But that was years ago, they are better now…”

If you believe that, I recommend checking out some of these people who tried to cancel their AOL account within the last few years:

Ask Dave Taylor how he canceled his AOL account.
Vincent Ferrari tries to cancel his AOL account.

AOL’s business decisions have lead to shirts that say “Friends don’t let friends use AOL” and hopefully will end up destroying them.

-Customer Service is King
-Ashton Sanders

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You have found the semi-coherent ramblings of Ashton Sanders: a website designer, developer and webmaster. This is primarily Ashton's place to save notes about techniques and things that he learns in his never-ending conquest of the internet. Hopefully it's coherent enough to be useful to you too.

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