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<title>On Time Technology Solutions</title>
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<description>The latest updates from On Time Technology Solutions.</description>
<pubDate>Mon, 05 Oct 2009 16:30:07 -0500</pubDate>
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<title>Designer &amp; Client – A Partnership of Sorts</title>
<author>bwilson@ontimecomputing.com (On Time Technology Solutions)</author>
<link>http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=23</link>
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<pubDate>Mon, 05 Oct 2009 16:30:07 -0500</pubDate>
<description>I have found that sometimes web designers and clients both don’t realize and understand that developing a successful website (it was two words instead of one) doesn’t fall solely on the shoulders of the developer. Rather I find that the best possible results will come by way of a partnership of sorts. It’s a team effort. The client needs the developer’s help, but the developer needs the client’s help, as well.
 

Content Needs
Content is king, yet it is often treated as an afterthought. That’s a shame. The content is the message; the reputation; the public image. The message should be clear in the client’s mind and properly conveyed to the developer. But not (but shouldn’t be a start of a sentence. You need to find a different word or add a comma) necessarily directed in an absolute manner. As I wrote, making a good site is a team effort. So while the client must have a firm idea of what he or she wants to get across, the web developer has valuable experience in regards to what works and what doesn’t, how much content should be presented, and where it should be on a site. Great content is meaningless if it won’t be properly digested by the site’s visitors.
Assuming the developer isn’t the copy writer, which is usually impossible unless the developer has an intimate knowledge of the client’s business, the method of content delivery (from client to developer) is important. The site’s content must be presented to in an organized manner once pages and sections are determined. (needs to reword this sentence. Either take the to out or add another word) Content shouldn’t be given in a random fashion spread across multiple emails without regard to the predetermined organization of the site-to-be. The site’s content is usually best given as text files organized by page and section sent as a single email’s attachments or on disc. I say text files because it is usually best provided as plain text. Spending hours un-formatting a fancy Word file is difficult and time consuming. Plain text files work just fine.

Imagery Concerns
For most users, the web is a largely visual medium and should be utilized in this way to the fullest. The developer must be sure to let the client know that important content delivered via imagery will need to be backed up with text for accessibility and SEO reasons, but the client needs to deliver quality imagery unless other artistic or photographic arrangements are made ahead of time. Like written content, imagery shouldn’t be an afterthought. Ideally the client will provide a wide selection of images from which the developer can pick and choose. These images are best presented in reasonable sizes on disc or zipped up and sent as an email attachment, and organized if pertinent to specific bodies of content. Images will usually be sized and optimized by the developer so they don’t have to be delivered in finished sizes.
If no images are available, then provisions should be made so the developer can purchase stock photos and such unless, again, other artistic or photographic arrangements are made ahead of time. Personally I’ve had some clients give me a disc with a ton of high quality photos while others have only provided a single small, fuzzy photo. For creativity reasons the former is greatly preferred and can have a huge impact on the outcome.

Post-Launch Promotion
The web developer can do everything right and work in the best interest of the client if the client is given this information and both parties work as a team towards a common goal. But the site can still fail. (Can’t start a sentence with but) The site needs to be promoted. This part really falls on the shoulders of the client. The client needs to tell people about the site, advertise the site, and get others to link to the site. The developer can submit the site to search engines — which isn’t even that necessary — but this hardly guarantees success if the client doesn’t work towards site promotion as well. I have some clients that get most of their visitors from our web portfolio because they haven’t done anything to help their own cause. Other clients, with the same basic structure and site organization, have had tremendous success because they put forth the required effort to make it so. Regardless of how optimized the site is in terms of accessibility and SEO (Search Engine Optimization), without the client’s help, it’ll never rank high unless its content is extremely unique and highly sought after (a rare combination indeed). The client can request a site that reaches the top-spot on Google, and the developer can do what’s required on his or her end, but working only from one end, it’ll likely never make it to the top.</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>I have found that sometimes web designers and clients both don’t realize and understand that developing a successful website (it was two words instead of one) doesn’t fall solely on the shoulders of the developer. Rather I find that the best possible results will come by way of a partnership of sorts. It’s a team effort. The client needs the developer’s help, but the developer needs the client’s help, as well.</strong></p>
<h2>Content Needs</h2>
<p>Content is king, yet it is often treated as an afterthought. That’s a shame. The content is the message; the reputation; the public image. The message should be clear in the client’s mind and properly conveyed to the developer. But not (but shouldn’t be a start of a sentence. You need to find a different word or add a comma) necessarily directed in an absolute manner. As I wrote, making a good site is a team effort. So while the client must have a firm idea of what he or she wants to get across, the web developer has valuable experience in regards to what works and what doesn’t, how much content should be presented, and where it should be on a site. Great content is meaningless if it won’t be properly digested by the site’s visitors.<br />
Assuming the developer isn’t the copy writer, which is usually impossible unless the developer has an intimate knowledge of the client’s business, the method of content delivery (from client to developer) is important. The site’s content must be presented to in an organized manner once pages and sections are determined. (needs to reword this sentence. Either take the to out or add another word) Content shouldn’t be given in a random fashion spread across multiple emails without regard to the predetermined organization of the site-to-be. The site’s content is usually best given as text files organized by page and section sent as a single email’s attachments or on disc. I say text files because it is usually best provided as plain text. Spending hours un-formatting a fancy Word file is difficult and time consuming. Plain text files work just fine.</p>
<h2>Imagery Concerns</h2>
<p>For most users, the web is a largely visual medium and should be utilized in this way to the fullest. The developer must be sure to let the client know that important content delivered via imagery will need to be backed up with text for accessibility and SEO reasons, but the client needs to deliver quality imagery unless other artistic or photographic arrangements are made ahead of time. Like written content, imagery shouldn’t be an afterthought. Ideally the client will provide a wide selection of images from which the developer can pick and choose. These images are best presented in reasonable sizes on disc or zipped up and sent as an email attachment, and organized if pertinent to specific bodies of content. Images will usually be sized and optimized by the developer so they don’t have to be delivered in finished sizes.<br />
If no images are available, then provisions should be made so the developer can purchase stock photos and such unless, again, other artistic or photographic arrangements are made ahead of time. Personally I’ve had some clients give me a disc with a ton of high quality photos while others have only provided a single small, fuzzy photo. For creativity reasons the former is greatly preferred and can have a huge impact on the outcome.</p>
<h2>Post-Launch Promotion</h2>
<p>The web developer can do everything right and work in the best interest of the client if the client is given this information and both parties work as a team towards a common goal. But the site can still fail. (Can’t start a sentence with but) The site needs to be promoted. This part really falls on the shoulders of the client. The client needs to tell people about the site, advertise the site, and get others to link to the site. The developer can submit the site to search engines — which isn’t even that necessary — but this hardly guarantees success if the client doesn’t work towards site promotion as well. I have some clients that get most of their visitors from our web portfolio because they haven’t done anything to help their own cause. Other clients, with the same basic structure and site organization, have had tremendous success because they put forth the required effort to make it so. Regardless of how optimized the site is in terms of accessibility and SEO (Search Engine Optimization), without the client’s help, it’ll never rank high unless its content is extremely unique and highly sought after (a rare combination indeed). The client can request a site that reaches the top-spot on Google, and the developer can do what’s required on his or her end, but working only from one end, it’ll likely never make it to the top.</p>]]></content:encoded>
<comments>http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=23#comments</comments>
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<item>
<title>Want Your Organization Featured In Our Newsletter?</title>
<author>bwilson@ontimecomputing.com (On Time Technology Solutions)</author>
<link>http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=21</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=21</guid>
<pubDate>Tue, 07 Jul 2009 16:40:41 -0500</pubDate>
<description>As we get into the groove of writing for our monthly newsletter, we would like to showcase clients that we work for.  Clients who we have implemented a solution to help them save money or help them become more productive in their business.

Our first newsletter showcased GPI, Inc.  We helped them move to a new solution to help them run more efficiently.  We will be showcasing one client every month from now on.

If you are a client and would like to be in our monthly newsletter please send an email to arod at ontimecomputing.com.

We would love to show the community what you are doing with technology.

Our Newsletter and Blog</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As we get into the groove of writing for our monthly newsletter, we would like to showcase clients that we work for.  Clients who we have implemented a solution to help them save money or help them become more productive in their business.</p>
<p>Our first newsletter showcased GPI, Inc.  We helped them move to a new solution to help them run more efficiently.  We will be showcasing one client every month from now on.</p>
<p>If you are a client and would like to be in our monthly newsletter please send an email to arod at ontimecomputing.com.</p>
<p>We would love to show the community what you are doing with technology.</p>
<p>Our <a href="http://www.ontimecomputing.com/newsletter">Newsletter</a> and <a href="http://www.ontimecomputing.com/updates.php">Blog</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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<slash:comments>2</slash:comments>
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<item>
<title>Is Facebook Dangerous! It Might Be!</title>
<author>bwilson@ontimecomputing.com (On Time Technology Solutions)</author>
<link>http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=20</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=20</guid>
<pubDate>Mon, 06 Jul 2009 16:13:55 -0500</pubDate>
<description>The headline is not meant to scare you away from sites like Facebook or MySpace.  I just want to make you aware of the dangers out there and what to watch out for as you make posts on your favorite social networking site.  It can be fun if you just take a few precautions when posting about how you just got a new job or how you are going on that date with the girl you have been crushing on.

Social networking sites like Facebook, MySpace and many others are no more dangerous than email, chatting or downloading music from peer to peer sites.  You still need to be aware of the dangers because hackers are just waiting for you to click on their nasty set of tricks!

Facebook Worms

One thing these worms have in common is that do not tell the truth.  They compromise your privacy and the privacy of your Facebook friends.  I am not saying to stop Facebooking just be careful!

Koobface Virus – It makes you think you are going to watch a funny video or a funny photo of a friend.
Profileye Worm- It tells you people are looking at your profile which makes you curious as to who it could be.
Error Check Worm- It tells you that some of your friends are having trouble viewing your page.
Facebook Shuts You Down- Instructs you that Facebook has just shut down your page because you did something wrong.

It’s Just Not Facebook!

Facebook is not the only one in the news with worms, but there not the only social networking site that’s being targeted, or can be targeted.  All of them are vulnerable, just as are other forms of online media.

Protect Yourself
Here are some simple things you can do to protect yourself from online problems: 
•	Use antivirus and adware software - This will only protect you against certain things. It won't protect you against many of the worms that are application based, but it will protect you against some of them (and many other things). 
•	Only Update From a Software Site - If you go to view a video on Facebook and you're told to update your software, think twice. Don't update it from there. If you think you may really need to update your software, go to the website of the software itself and update it. 
•	Don't Click Strange Links - If you get a message saying something like &quot;Facebook has a message for you, click here&quot;, don't click there. If Facebook has something to tell you, they would have emailed it to you. If you have a question about a message you received, email them. 
•	Ask First - If you're not sure if your friend sent you something, maybe it looks suspicious, ask them. Just send them an email asking them if they sent it before clicking on anything. 

Don’t Be Scared

Facebook is just as safe, if not safer than your standard email client.  Facebook is safer then downloading music or videos from a peer to peer website.  Safer then browsing some personal sites.
These are not the kinds of worms or virus' that shut down your computer or anything like that. These just send out messages to your friends using your own friend list, or something similar.

Social networking has, in some ways, replaced email. In some ways it's better; less spam, more people get the message. As long as you're careful, social networking can be a great way to make friends and network.</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The headline is not meant to scare you away from sites like Facebook or MySpace.  I just want to make you aware of the dangers out there and what to watch out for as you make posts on your favorite social networking site.  It can be fun if you just take a few precautions when posting about how you just got a new job or how you are going on that date with the girl you have been crushing on.</p>
<p>Social networking sites like Facebook, MySpace and many others are no more dangerous than email, chatting or downloading music from peer to peer sites.  You still need to be aware of the dangers because hackers are just waiting for you to click on their nasty set of tricks!</p>
<p><strong>Facebook Worms</strong></p>
<p>One thing these worms have in common is that do not tell the truth.  They compromise your privacy and the privacy of your Facebook friends.  I am not saying to stop Facebooking just be careful!</p>
<p><strong>Koobface Virus</strong> – It makes you think you are going to watch a funny video or a funny photo of a friend.<br />
<strong>Profileye Worm</strong>- It tells you people are looking at your profile which makes you curious as to who it could be.<br />
<strong>Error Check Worm</strong>- It tells you that some of your friends are having trouble viewing your page.<br />
<strong>Facebook Shuts You Down</strong>- Instructs you that Facebook has just shut down your page because you did something wrong.</p>
<p><strong>It’s Just Not Facebook!</strong></p>
<p>Facebook is not the only one in the news with worms, but there not the only social networking site that’s being targeted, or can be targeted.  All of them are vulnerable, just as are other forms of online media.<br />
<strong><br />
Protect Yourself</strong><br />
Here are some simple things you can do to protect yourself from online problems:<br />
•	<strong>Use antivirus and adware software</strong>&#8212;This will only protect you against certain things. It won&#8217;t protect you against many of the worms that are application based, but it will protect you against some of them (and many other things).<br />
•	<strong>Only Update From a Software Site</strong>&#8212;If you go to view a video on Facebook and you&#8217;re told to update your software, think twice. Don&#8217;t update it from there. If you think you may really need to update your software, go to the website of the software itself and update it.<br />
•	<strong>Don&#8217;t Click Strange Links</strong>&#8212;If you get a message saying something like &#8220;Facebook has a message for you, click here&#8221;, don&#8217;t click there. If Facebook has something to tell you, they would have emailed it to you. If you have a question about a message you received, email them.<br />
•	<strong>Ask First</strong>&#8212;If you&#8217;re not sure if your friend sent you something, maybe it looks suspicious, ask them. Just send them an email asking them if they sent it before clicking on anything.<br />
<strong><br />
Don’t Be Scared</strong></p>
<p>Facebook is just as safe, if not safer than your standard email client.  Facebook is safer then downloading music or videos from a peer to peer website.  Safer then browsing some personal sites.<br />
These are not the kinds of worms or virus&#8217; that shut down your computer or anything like that. These just send out messages to your friends using your own friend list, or something similar.</p>
<p>Social networking has, in some ways, replaced email. In some ways it&#8217;s better; less spam, more people get the message. As long as you&#8217;re careful, social networking can be a great way to make friends and network.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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</item>
<item>
<title>Is stuff in life really free?</title>
<author>bwilson@ontimecomputing.com (On Time Technology Solutions)</author>
<link>http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=19</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=19</guid>
<pubDate>Mon, 06 Jul 2009 10:51:33 -0500</pubDate>
<description>You just bought a new laptop or desktop computer.  You boot it up and see that there is not any anti-virus installed.  If there is, it is just a 90 day trial of Norton.  What are you to do?  I mean you just spent your hard earned money on the laptop and now you have to spend more money on software?!!  
Not to worry!   There are a lot of  software out there that will help you secure your laptop from viruses, spam and hackers.  Here is a list of 4 programs that will get you started.

1. Anti-virus: Vipre Antivirus + Antispyware is high-performance security software that doesn't slow down your PC like older, traditional antivirus products. Vipre combines antivirus, antispyware, anti-rootkit, anti-malware, and other security technologies into a seamless, tightly-integrated security solution. Vipre delivers comprehensive protection against today's highly complex spyware, viruses, and blended malware threats for PC and e-mail security.  	 

2. Spam Filtering:  Mail Washer Free- Introducing MailWasher, the leader in spam filter software, and the easiest way to check and manage your e-mails before you download them.  MailWasher is free to use and won't ever expire. It works with Outlook, Outlook Express, Incredimail, Thunderbird, Windows Mail, GMail, Hotmail and every other email program. Use this powerful spam blocker software to effectively stop email spam. Discover the safe way to stop unwanted e-mails before they get to your computer.

3.  Firewall: PC Tools Firewall Plus is a powerful free personal firewall for Windows® that protects your computer by preventing unauthorized users from gaining access to your computer through the Internet or a network. By monitoring applications that connect to the network Firewall Plus can stop Trojans, backdoors, keyloggers and other malware from damaging your computer and stealing your private information.

4.  Backup Solution: FBackup is a free backup software for both personal and commercial use. It protects your important data by backing it up automatically to any USB/Firewire device, local or network location. The backed up data can be either compressed (using standard zip compression) or an exact copy of the original files.

We have made it easy for you to download all of this software at one convenient location.  Just point your browser to www.ontimecomputing.com/freestuff  and enjoy!</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>You just bought a new laptop or desktop computer.  You boot it up and see that there is not any anti-virus installed.  If there is, it is just a 90 day trial of Norton.  What are you to do?  I mean you just spent your hard earned money on the laptop and now you have to spend more money on software?!!<br />
Not to worry!   There are a lot of  software out there that will help you secure your laptop from viruses, spam and hackers.  Here is a list of 4 programs that will get you started.</p>
<ol>
<li>
<p>Anti-virus: <strong>Vipre Antivirus + Antispyware</strong> is high-performance security software that doesn&#8217;t slow down your PC like older, traditional antivirus products. Vipre combines antivirus, antispyware, anti-rootkit, anti-malware, and other security technologies into a seamless, tightly-integrated security solution. Vipre delivers comprehensive protection against today&#8217;s highly complex spyware, viruses, and blended malware threats for PC and e-mail security.  	 </p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Spam Filtering:  <strong>Mail Washer Free</strong>- Introducing MailWasher, the leader in spam filter software, and the easiest way to check and manage your e-mails before you download them.  MailWasher is free to use and won&#8217;t ever expire. It works with Outlook, Outlook Express, Incredimail, Thunderbird, Windows Mail, GMail, Hotmail and every other email program. Use this powerful spam blocker software to effectively stop email spam. Discover the safe way to stop unwanted e-mails before they get to your computer.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Firewall: <strong>PC Tools Firewall Plus</strong> is a powerful free personal firewall for Windows® that protects your computer by preventing unauthorized users from gaining access to your computer through the Internet or a network. By monitoring applications that connect to the network Firewall Plus can stop Trojans, backdoors, keyloggers and other malware from damaging your computer and stealing your private information.</p>
</li>
<li>
<p>Backup Solution: <strong>FBackup</strong> is a free backup software for both personal and commercial use. It protects your important data by backing it up automatically to any USB/Firewire device, local or network location. The backed up data can be either compressed (using standard zip compression) or an exact copy of the original files.</p>
</li>
</ol>
<p>We have made it easy for you to download all of this software at one convenient location.  Just point your browser to <a href="http://www.ontimecomputing.com/freestuff">www.ontimecomputing.com/freestuff</a>  and enjoy!</p>]]></content:encoded>
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</item>
<item>
<title>Are You a Regional or a Global Business?</title>
<author>bwilson@ontimecomputing.com (On Time Technology Solutions)</author>
<link>http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=18</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=18</guid>
<pubDate>Mon, 06 Jul 2009 10:40:31 -0500</pubDate>
<description>It’s a simple question, but amazingly, a large percentage of business owners only think and operate on a strictly local or regional level.  Often times they view expanding their business as simply running an ad in the “next towns’” newspaper and hoping for the best.   In some regions like the Texas panhandle the “next town over” can be quite a long distance for someone to travel to get to their store, so advertising in other towns has a diminishing return the further away the town.  The truly surprising thing is that many of the businesses with this type of thinking have web sites that either they did, or a buddy was able to build one with a web development tool.  This is a good step in the right direction but is still regional thinking just like running an ad in the local newspaper.  To think on a truly global scale they need to take the next step and not just offer a web site that is little more than a sales brochure, but actually have a  ecommerce web store where anyone can purchase their products or services from anywhere in the world.   This simple thing can catapult your potential customer base from being only the closest two or three towns of maybe 100,000, to  literally hundreds of millions of potential customers worldwide.   Real online web stores can get quite complicated when all the different aspects such as secure payment processing, database management, order processing, and many other details are addressed. This is why many businesses stop with a simple brochure style web site, but web site generator tools just cannot handle all the details.  Here at On Time Technology Solutions we took care of all the complicated details and are now proud to offer a full featured ecommerce solution for virtually any type of business.  It features a complete web store with full featured shopping cart, order processing, product browsing, and many other items.  A complete administration program is also included to allow you to manage your own web stores products, pricing, appearance, order processing, shipping, and statistics to help you manage your business.
It has been estimated that by 2008 50% of U.S. population will shop on-line.  In 2000 ecommerce sales were reported to be 27 billion dollars and in 2008 had grown to 134 billion dollars. That is almost a 400% growth in just eight years.  Online retail sales accounted for 10 percent of total U.S. retail sales in 2008.
 A professionally built web site and integrated web store can be about the same price as a few news paper ads and provides not just a global market presence but a permanent advertisement that is available 24 hours a day 7 days a week.  Visit www.ProVentory.Com and see what the web development professionals at On Time Technology Solutions can do to help your business expand and become truly global.</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It’s a simple question, but amazingly, a large percentage of business owners only think and operate on a strictly local or regional level.  Often times they view expanding their business as simply running an ad in the “next towns’” newspaper and hoping for the best.   In some regions like the Texas panhandle the “next town over” can be quite a long distance for someone to travel to get to their store, so advertising in other towns has a diminishing return the further away the town.  The truly surprising thing is that many of the businesses with this type of thinking have web sites that either they did, or a buddy was able to build one with a web development tool.  This is a good step in the right direction but is still regional thinking just like running an ad in the local newspaper.  To think on a truly global scale they need to take the next step and not just offer a web site that is little more than a sales brochure, but actually have a  ecommerce web store where anyone can purchase their products or services from anywhere in the world.   This simple thing can catapult your potential customer base from being only the closest two or three towns of maybe 100,000, to  literally hundreds of millions of potential customers worldwide.   Real online web stores can get quite complicated when all the different aspects such as secure payment processing, database management, order processing, and many other details are addressed. This is why many businesses stop with a simple brochure style web site, but web site generator tools just cannot handle all the details.  Here at On Time Technology Solutions we took care of all the complicated details and are now proud to offer a full featured ecommerce solution for virtually any type of business.  It features a complete web store with full featured shopping cart, order processing, product browsing, and many other items.  A complete administration program is also included to allow you to manage your own web stores products, pricing, appearance, order processing, shipping, and statistics to help you manage your business.<br />
It has been estimated that by 2008 50% of U.S. population will shop on-line.  In 2000 ecommerce sales were reported to be 27 billion dollars and in 2008 had grown to 134 billion dollars. That is almost a 400% growth in just eight years.  Online retail sales accounted for 10 percent of total U.S. retail sales in 2008.<br />
 A professionally built web site and integrated web store can be about the same price as a few news paper ads and provides not just a global market presence but a permanent advertisement that is available 24 hours a day 7 days a week.  Visit <a href="http://www.ProVentory.Com">www.ProVentory.Com</a> and see what the web development professionals at On Time Technology Solutions can do to help your business expand and become truly global.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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<item>
<title>No Time to Wait - Install Those Patches Today</title>
<author>bwilson@ontimecomputing.com (On Time Technology Solutions)</author>
<link>http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=16</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=16</guid>
<pubDate>Wed, 15 Apr 2009 17:19:54 -0500</pubDate>
<description>No Time to Wait - Install Those Patches Today
Microsoft Security Updates (patches) are usually delivered on the second Tuesday of each month, commonly known as Patch Tuesday.  Installing these patches ensures your computers are up-to-date and not vulnerable to computer worms and other malware.  Yesterday, Microsoft released eight updates which address issues with 23 vulnerabilities; and five of the updates are rated as critical.  Some of the updates are for vulnerabilites that have zero-day exploits.  A zero-day exploit is a security vulnerability that is already being taken advantage of on the same day that the vulnerability is generally known.  In other words, this means a hacker has already discovered the vulnerability and exploiting it.  Experts predict for the attacks to get worse and faster as hackers get more professional.  The new exploits, such as Conficker, are designed to avoid detection and will not call too much attention to themselves.  In some cases, users were tricked into thinking their systems were patched.  This changes things.  IT Pros can no longer wait around before they install these patches, or they're putting their computers at risk.

At On Time Technology Solutions, we protect our clients with a combination of our Managed IT program, that includes Patch Management, and our Proactive Maintenance.  The Microsoft Security Updates are tested in a lab, sent through our approval policy, and then downloaded to the computers managed under our system.  Then, the updates are installed on the servers by our System Engineers or onsite during a Proactive Maintenance visit.  If you haven't already, you may want to review your Patch Management Policy to ensure your computers are safe.  You don't want to be caught with your pants down!

Microsoft's April Bulletin Release

■MS09-009 (Maximum severity of Critical): This update resolves a newly discovered, privately reported and a publicly disclosed vulnerability in Microsoft Excel. This update received a 1 – Consistent Exploit Code Likely rating from Microsoft’s Exploitability Index. 
■MS09-010 (Maximum severity of Critical): This update resolves two publicly disclosed vulnerabilities and two privately reported vulnerabilities in Microsoft WordPad and Microsoft Office Text Converters.  This update received a 1 – Consistent Exploit Code Likely rating from Microsoft’s Exploitability Index. 
■MS09-011 (Maximum severity of Critical): This update resolves a newly discovered and privately reported vulnerability in Microsoft DirectX. This update received a 2 – Inconsistent Exploit Code Likely rating from Microsoft’s Exploitability Index. 
■MS09-012 (Maximum severity of Important): This update resolves four publicly disclosed vulnerabilities in Microsoft Windows. This update received a 1 – Consistent Exploit Code Likely rating from Microsoft’s Exploitability Index. 
■MS09-013 (Maximum severity of Critical): This update resolves one publicly disclosed vulnerability and two privately reported vulnerabilities in Microsoft Windows HTTP Services (WinHTTP). This update received a 1 – Consistent Exploit Code Likely rating from Microsoft’s Exploitability Index. 
■MS09-014 (Maximum severity of Critical): This update resolves four privately reported vulnerabilities and two publicly disclosed vulnerabilities in Internet Explorer. This update received a 1 – Consistent Exploit Code Likely rating from Microsoft’s Exploitability Index. 
■MS09-015 (Maximum severity of Moderate): This update resolves one publicly disclosed vulnerability in the Windows SearchPath function. This update received a 2 – Inconsistent Exploit Code Likely rating from Microsoft’s Exploitability Index. 
■MS09-016 (Maximum severity of Important): This update resolves a privately reported vulnerability and a publicly disclosed vulnerability in Microsoft Internet Security and Acceleration (ISA) Server and Microsoft Forefront Threat Management Gateway (TMG), Medium Business Edition (MBE). This update received a 3 – Functioning Exploit Code Unlikely rating from Microsoft’s Exploitability Index.</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>No Time to Wait&#8212;Install Those Patches Today<br />
Microsoft Security Updates (patches) are usually delivered on the second Tuesday of each month, commonly known as Patch Tuesday.  Installing these patches ensures your computers are up-to-date and not vulnerable to computer worms and other malware.  Yesterday, Microsoft released eight updates which address issues with 23 vulnerabilities; and five of the updates are rated as critical.  Some of the updates are for vulnerabilites that have zero-day exploits.  A zero-day exploit is a security vulnerability that is already being taken advantage of on the same day that the vulnerability is generally known.  In other words, this means a hacker has already discovered the vulnerability and exploiting it.  Experts predict for the attacks to get worse and faster as hackers get more professional.  The new exploits, such as Conficker, are designed to avoid detection and will not call too much attention to themselves.  In some cases, users were tricked into thinking their systems were patched.  This changes things.  IT Pros can no longer wait around before they install these patches, or they&#8217;re putting their computers at risk.</p>
<p>At On Time Technology Solutions, we protect our clients with a combination of our Managed IT program, that includes Patch Management, and our Proactive Maintenance.  The Microsoft Security Updates are tested in a lab, sent through our approval policy, and then downloaded to the computers managed under our system.  Then, the updates are installed on the servers by our System Engineers or onsite during a Proactive Maintenance visit.  If you haven&#8217;t already, you may want to review your Patch Management Policy to ensure your computers are safe.  You don&#8217;t want to be caught with your pants down!</p>
<p>Microsoft&#8217;s April Bulletin Release</p>
<p>■MS09-009 (Maximum severity of Critical): This update resolves a newly discovered, privately reported and a publicly disclosed vulnerability in Microsoft Excel. This update received a 1 – Consistent Exploit Code Likely rating from Microsoft’s Exploitability Index.<br />
■MS09-010 (Maximum severity of Critical): This update resolves two publicly disclosed vulnerabilities and two privately reported vulnerabilities in Microsoft WordPad and Microsoft Office Text Converters.  This update received a 1 – Consistent Exploit Code Likely rating from Microsoft’s Exploitability Index.<br />
■MS09-011 (Maximum severity of Critical): This update resolves a newly discovered and privately reported vulnerability in Microsoft DirectX. This update received a 2 – Inconsistent Exploit Code Likely rating from Microsoft’s Exploitability Index.<br />
■MS09-012 (Maximum severity of Important): This update resolves four publicly disclosed vulnerabilities in Microsoft Windows. This update received a 1 – Consistent Exploit Code Likely rating from Microsoft’s Exploitability Index.<br />
■MS09-013 (Maximum severity of Critical): This update resolves one publicly disclosed vulnerability and two privately reported vulnerabilities in Microsoft Windows HTTP Services (WinHTTP). This update received a 1 – Consistent Exploit Code Likely rating from Microsoft’s Exploitability Index.<br />
■MS09-014 (Maximum severity of Critical): This update resolves four privately reported vulnerabilities and two publicly disclosed vulnerabilities in Internet Explorer. This update received a 1 – Consistent Exploit Code Likely rating from Microsoft’s Exploitability Index.<br />
■MS09-015 (Maximum severity of Moderate): This update resolves one publicly disclosed vulnerability in the Windows SearchPath function. This update received a 2 – Inconsistent Exploit Code Likely rating from Microsoft’s Exploitability Index.<br />
■MS09-016 (Maximum severity of Important): This update resolves a privately reported vulnerability and a publicly disclosed vulnerability in Microsoft Internet Security and Acceleration (ISA) Server and Microsoft Forefront Threat Management Gateway (TMG), Medium Business Edition (MBE). This update received a 3 – Functioning Exploit Code Unlikely rating from Microsoft’s Exploitability Index.</p>]]></content:encoded>
</item>
<item>
<title>18 Reasons for having a Website / eCommerce Site</title>
<author>bwilson@ontimecomputing.com (On Time Technology Solutions)</author>
<link>http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=14</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=14</guid>
<pubDate>Mon, 06 Apr 2009 16:30:02 -0500</pubDate>
<description>1. Your competitors are probably already on the Web
- attracting the people who could be your customers! What frustration, because you know that your products and services are superior to those of your competitors! 
2. Your customers and potential customers are already searching the Web
- for the very services you offer. Even as you read this there will be someone on the Web looking for a business like yours. 
More and more people are using the Internet to purchase products and as a means of gathering initial information about products and services. The attraction to this medium is that the customer is relaxed because he can read and research the information at his own pace and without any &quot;hovering salesmen&quot;. It is quite feasible that the surfer will visit a number of sites before he decides on his final choice of product. You need to be certain that you are one of the sites that he has visited if you are to stand a chance of gaining his business. If you have no web site, you have no chance. 
3. Your web site will promote your business 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Even when you're sleeping your web site can be working for you. 
But so is Yellow Pages ® - so why have a web site too? Yellow Pages ® is generally only available on a local basis; not to mention the fact that unless you can afford a very large advertisement the information you can present is very limited. 
Your web site can be viewed 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 52 weeks a year. If you are selling your products internationally then this is a major advantage as visitors in North America and South America can, for example, view your wares while you are asleep! An email enquiry will be waiting for you when you get up in the morning! 
But even if your business is restricted to the UK, you will be amazed at how many people research for products and services at the weekend and in the evening. They are busy business people and very often this is the best time for them to concentrate on researching for a new product or service. 
4. Your customers can buy your products and pay for them while sitting at their computers.
It is estimated that it costs 8 times more to sell a product from a shop than from the Internet. 
Selling online has to be one of the most cost efficient means of doing business. Night or day, you can do business with a customer in any part of the world, and his payment is made directly into your bank account -without you even knowing! All you need to do is to print off and process the orders. Of course if you have a product that can be sent via the Internet (such as software, documents, written material) you don't even need to do this. 
5. Your web site gives you a much bigger advert for less money. 
You can have pages and pages of information about your company and your products or services - in much more detail than you'd ever be able to pay for in more traditional media. 
You can put an enormous amount of information onto your web site for only a few hundred pounds. Superb value for money. 
6. You can change the information on your website whenever you want. 
You must have been in a situation where your prices have changed or your products have changed, so your catalogue/price list/product literature/marketing literature becomes out of date. Not only is all your existing literature now worthless, but you also need to make a substantial investment in order to produce new updated material. 
With a web site, these problems are minimal. I have a client whose web site can be updated with new prices and information in as little as 45 minutes. The cost to him is 45 minutes of my time - negligible compared to the cost of redesigning, reprinting and redistributing sales literature. 
7. Your website can reach potential customers locally, nationally or worldwide - at no extra cost to you. 
In fact you can adapt your website to the needs of your business. 
There is absolutely no doubt that the Internet is the answer to the small businessman's prayer. For the first time you have at your disposal the whole world market for whatever product or service you happen to provide. In fact the more niche your product, the more successful you will be with your Internet business. 
You can take your products to totally new markets. You may have been restricted to selling your products to customers who passed by your shop in your local high street. Or perhaps you may have been able to expand beyond that limited marketplace by doing targeted (and expensive) advertising in specific magazines. However, for the first time you'll be able to take your product across the world. 
8. Your website can save you a lot of money. 
•	Lower printing costs because you need much less printed letters and brochures. 
•	Lower postage costs for the same reason -email becomes a major (and much cheaper) distribution method. 
•	Lower advertising costs because your web site lasts longer and produces greater results than adverts. 
•	Lower wage costs because your web site can be like an extra person with the automated processes it can carry out. 
9. Your website can work like a kind of robot,
sending information to customers, replying to emails and even making sales - day and night. 
You can reply to your customers or potential customers automatically without you having to get involved at all. With simple devices called &quot;autoresponders&quot; you're able to set it all up whereby specific targeted replies are sent out to different people, night or day. 
10. Your web site can convey a professional and-up-to date image, 
and your customers cannot tell whether you employ 100 staff or none. 
As a small businessman you have the opportunity to present yourself to the marketplace just as effectively and professionally as a multi-million pound company. Just because you're smaller doesn't mean that you cannot now compete with the bigger boys! You can establish credibility in a variety of ways, such as putting useful information on your website, or making files available to download. 
11. Your web site can help you give improved customer service 
by providing information visitors can access. For example there can be a list of 'frequently asked questions' about your service or product. 
This is an area that is often overlooked by web site owners. The simplest example of this is putting up a FAQ page (frequently asked questions) on your web site. Not only is this very helpful to customers because it provides instant answers to their &quot;frequently asked&quot; questions, but it also saves you and your employees considerable management time in not having to answer a string of e-mails/phone calls/faxes. What this usually means is when you do receive that e-mail/phone call/fax it is an actual order rather than an inquiry! 
You can make information readily available to your customers. For example, new information has suddenly become available concerning your products. Put it on your website and communicate via e-mail to your customers -- it's that easy! 
How about a Free downloadable sheet with helpful tips. Your visitors will love it! 
12. You can test out new services or products instantly 
and less expensively by sending emails to your list of current customers and contacts. They can then visit your web site for more detailed information. 
What a glorious, simple and inexpensive way of testing out new ideas! Simply put up a new web page setting out the relevant information, and send an e-mail to your database of existing (and relevant) customers, and ask for their views. 
Market research. You can acquire very quick customer feedback from a large audience with an online form that could be filled out in seconds - providing valuable information to you, with minimal inconvenience to your customer. 
13. You can send details of new offers by email to your current customers and contacts, 
again referring readers to your web site. 
You have some stock that is running out of date and you wish to sell it at a reduced price. Or you have received limited stock of a particular product that is of high appeal to a relatively small number of people. It really doesn't matter what sort of &quot;deal&quot; you have, provided it is presented professionally you can e-mail your database of customers and past enquirers -- all within a matter of seconds! I know a small hotel that sends out an email with forthcoming events to its database of 700+ past enquirers. It takes about 15 minutes to do the whole mailing and costs nothing. The result is that these 'potential customers' are constantly reminded of the hotel and a given percentage phone up and book at a later date. 
14. You can combine email marketing with your web site. 
With e-mail you can advertise your website. There is no quicker way of getting your sales messages in front of a prospective customer who can be looking at your web site within 2 seconds of opening your mail! 
You can collect e-mail addresses of people who visit your site and have expressed an interest in your products. You can then use this list to send information on 'deals' you are running or to pass on any other useful information. 
15. You can use your web site to provide information on a regular basis to your company employees. 
You can keep the information secret if you wish by making it accessible only to people who know the password. 
16. You can broaden your market by educating and appealing to totally new sectors.
For example, you are a domestic security company and you have technology/products that are applicable to the protection of boats. This is a totally new sector that would have been too expensive to attempt to penetrate five years ago. With a targeted web site, or targeted pages on your existing web site, this now poses no problem at all. 
17. Your website can keep a track of how many people visit, 
which is the proof of the pudding. With most adverts you will never know how many people read your offers. 
Isn't technology wonderful! With a web site produced and marketed by us, we will be able to tell you exactly how many people have visited your web site, where those people came from, which search term they used in which search engine, which pages they visited on your web site, how long they spent on your web site. What other advertising medium issues this sort of valuable feedback on your selling and marketing material? 
18. You can get a website up and running for a few hundred dollars, but it is wasted money unless people can find it! 
Probably 85% of web sites are either rarely or never seen - because they are often created by artists rather than marketing experts. 
Imagine that the Internet is like a huge library containing all the books that have ever been published, and imagine that your website is just one book. How will anyone find your site amongst the billions of others? 
Well, that's not a problem for the clients of On Time Technology Solutions because we are experts in setting up effective web sites; web sites that are found by prospective customers.</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>1. Your competitors are probably already on the Web</strong><br />
- attracting the people who could be your customers! What frustration, because you know that your products and services are superior to those of your competitors!<br />
<strong>2. Your customers and potential customers are already searching the Web</strong><br />
- for the very services you offer. Even as you read this there will be someone on the Web looking for a business like yours.<br />
More and more people are using the Internet to purchase products and as a means of gathering initial information about products and services. The attraction to this medium is that the customer is relaxed because he can read and research the information at his own pace and without any &#8220;hovering salesmen&#8221;. It is quite feasible that the surfer will visit a number of sites before he decides on his final choice of product. You need to be certain that you are one of the sites that he has visited if you are to stand a chance of gaining his business. If you have no web site, you have no chance.<br />
<strong>3. Your web site will promote your business 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.</strong><br />
Even when you&#8217;re sleeping your web site can be working for you.<br />
But so is Yellow Pages ®&#8212;so why have a web site too? Yellow Pages ® is generally only available on a local basis; not to mention the fact that unless you can afford a very large advertisement the information you can present is very limited.<br />
Your web site can be viewed 24 hours a day, seven days a week, 52 weeks a year. If you are selling your products internationally then this is a major advantage as visitors in North America and South America can, for example, view your wares while you are asleep! An email enquiry will be waiting for you when you get up in the morning!<br />
But even if your business is restricted to the UK, you will be amazed at how many people research for products and services at the weekend and in the evening. They are busy business people and very often this is the best time for them to concentrate on researching for a new product or service.<br />
<strong>4. Your customers can buy your products and pay for them while sitting at their computers.</strong><br />
It is estimated that it costs 8 times more to sell a product from a shop than from the Internet.<br />
Selling online has to be one of the most cost efficient means of doing business. Night or day, you can do business with a customer in any part of the world, and his payment is made directly into your bank account -without you even knowing! All you need to do is to print off and process the orders. Of course if you have a product that can be sent via the Internet (such as software, documents, written material) you don&#8217;t even need to do this.<br />
<strong>5. Your web site gives you a much bigger advert for less money. </strong><br />
You can have pages and pages of information about your company and your products or services&#8212;in much more detail than you&#8217;d ever be able to pay for in more traditional media.<br />
You can put an enormous amount of information onto your web site for only a few hundred pounds. Superb value for money.<br />
<strong>6. You can change the information on your website whenever you want. </strong><br />
You must have been in a situation where your prices have changed or your products have changed, so your catalogue/price list/product literature/marketing literature becomes out of date. Not only is all your existing literature now worthless, but you also need to make a substantial investment in order to produce new updated material.<br />
With a web site, these problems are minimal. I have a client whose web site can be updated with new prices and information in as little as 45 minutes. The cost to him is 45 minutes of my time&#8212;negligible compared to the cost of redesigning, reprinting and redistributing sales literature.<br />
<strong>7. Your website can reach potential customers locally, nationally or worldwide&#8212;at no extra cost to you. </strong><br />
In fact you can adapt your website to the needs of your business.<br />
There is absolutely no doubt that the Internet is the answer to the small businessman&#8217;s prayer. For the first time you have at your disposal the whole world market for whatever product or service you happen to provide. In fact the more niche your product, the more successful you will be with your Internet business.<br />
You can take your products to totally new markets. You may have been restricted to selling your products to customers who passed by your shop in your local high street. Or perhaps you may have been able to expand beyond that limited marketplace by doing targeted (and expensive) advertising in specific magazines. However, for the first time you&#8217;ll be able to take your product across the world.<br />
<strong>8. Your website can save you a lot of money. </strong><br />
•	Lower printing costs because you need much less printed letters and brochures.<br />
•	Lower postage costs for the same reason -email becomes a major (and much cheaper) distribution method.<br />
•	Lower advertising costs because your web site lasts longer and produces greater results than adverts.<br />
•	Lower wage costs because your web site can be like an extra person with the automated processes it can carry out.<br />
<strong>9. Your website can work like a kind of robot,</strong><br />
sending information to customers, replying to emails and even making sales&#8212;day and night.<br />
You can reply to your customers or potential customers automatically without you having to get involved at all. With simple devices called &#8220;autoresponders&#8221; you&#8217;re able to set it all up whereby specific targeted replies are sent out to different people, night or day.<br />
<strong>10. Your web site can convey a professional and-up-to date image, </strong><br />
and your customers cannot tell whether you employ 100 staff or none.<br />
As a small businessman you have the opportunity to present yourself to the marketplace just as effectively and professionally as a multi-million pound company. Just because you&#8217;re smaller doesn&#8217;t mean that you cannot now compete with the bigger boys! You can establish credibility in a variety of ways, such as putting useful information on your website, or making files available to download.<br />
<strong>11. Your web site can help you give improved customer service </strong><br />
by providing information visitors can access. For example there can be a list of &#8216;frequently asked questions&#8217; about your service or product.<br />
This is an area that is often overlooked by web site owners. The simplest example of this is putting up a FAQ page (frequently asked questions) on your web site. Not only is this very helpful to customers because it provides instant answers to their &#8220;frequently asked&#8221; questions, but it also saves you and your employees considerable management time in not having to answer a string of e-mails/phone calls/faxes. What this usually means is when you do receive that e-mail/phone call/fax it is an actual order rather than an inquiry!<br />
You can make information readily available to your customers. For example, new information has suddenly become available concerning your products. Put it on your website and communicate via e-mail to your customers&#8212;it&#8217;s that easy!<br />
How about a Free downloadable sheet with helpful tips. Your visitors will love it!<br />
<strong>12. You can test out new services or products instantly </strong><br />
and less expensively by sending emails to your list of current customers and contacts. They can then visit your web site for more detailed information.<br />
What a glorious, simple and inexpensive way of testing out new ideas! Simply put up a new web page setting out the relevant information, and send an e-mail to your database of existing (and relevant) customers, and ask for their views.<br />
Market research. You can acquire very quick customer feedback from a large audience with an online form that could be filled out in seconds&#8212;providing valuable information to you, with minimal inconvenience to your customer.<br />
<strong>13. You can send details of new offers by email to your current customers and contacts, </strong><br />
again referring readers to your web site.<br />
You have some stock that is running out of date and you wish to sell it at a reduced price. Or you have received limited stock of a particular product that is of high appeal to a relatively small number of people. It really doesn&#8217;t matter what sort of &#8220;deal&#8221; you have, provided it is presented professionally you can e-mail your database of customers and past enquirers&#8212;all within a matter of seconds! I know a small hotel that sends out an email with forthcoming events to its database of 700+ past enquirers. It takes about 15 minutes to do the whole mailing and costs nothing. The result is that these &#8216;potential customers&#8217; are constantly reminded of the hotel and a given percentage phone up and book at a later date.<br />
<strong>14. You can combine email marketing with your web site. </strong><br />
With e-mail you can advertise your website. There is no quicker way of getting your sales messages in front of a prospective customer who can be looking at your web site within 2 seconds of opening your mail!<br />
You can collect e-mail addresses of people who visit your site and have expressed an interest in your products. You can then use this list to send information on &#8216;deals&#8217; you are running or to pass on any other useful information.<br />
<strong>15. You can use your web site to provide information on a regular basis to your company employees. </strong><br />
You can keep the information secret if you wish by making it accessible only to people who know the password.<br />
<strong>16. You can broaden your market by educating and appealing to totally new sectors.</strong><br />
For example, you are a domestic security company and you have technology/products that are applicable to the protection of boats. This is a totally new sector that would have been too expensive to attempt to penetrate five years ago. With a targeted web site, or targeted pages on your existing web site, this now poses no problem at all.<br />
<strong>17. Your website can keep a track of how many people visit, </strong><br />
which is the proof of the pudding. With most adverts you will never know how many people read your offers.<br />
Isn&#8217;t technology wonderful! With a web site produced and marketed by us, we will be able to tell you exactly how many people have visited your web site, where those people came from, which search term they used in which search engine, which pages they visited on your web site, how long they spent on your web site. What other advertising medium issues this sort of valuable feedback on your selling and marketing material?<br />
<strong>18. You can get a website up and running for a few hundred dollars, but it is wasted money unless people can find it! </strong><br />
Probably 85% of web sites are either rarely or never seen&#8212;because they are often created by artists rather than marketing experts.<br />
Imagine that the Internet is like a huge library containing all the books that have ever been published, and imagine that your website is just one book. How will anyone find your site amongst the billions of others?<br />
<strong>Well, that&#8217;s not a problem for the clients of On Time Technology Solutions because we are experts in setting up effective web sites; web sites that are found by prospective customers.</strong></p>]]></content:encoded>
<comments>http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=14#comments</comments>
<wfw:commentRss>http://ontimecomputing.com/blog/rss-comments.php?id=14</wfw:commentRss>
<slash:comments>1</slash:comments>
</item>
<item>
<title>What is eCommerce</title>
<author>bwilson@ontimecomputing.com (On Time Technology Solutions)</author>
<link>http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=12</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=12</guid>
<pubDate>Mon, 06 Apr 2009 15:53:55 -0500</pubDate>
<description>Electronic commerce, commonly known as (electronic marketing) e-commerce or eCommerce, consists of the buying and selling of products or services over electronic systems such as the Internet and other computer networks. The amount of trade conducted electronically has grown extraordinarily with wide-spread Internet usage. A wide variety of commerce is conducted in this way, spurring and drawing on innovations in electronic funds transfer, supply chain management, Internet marketing, online transaction processing, electronic data interchange (EDI), inventory management systems, and automated data collection systems. Modern electronic commerce typically uses the World Wide Web at least at some point in the transaction's lifecycle, although it can encompass a wider range of technologies such as e-mail as well.

A large percentage of electronic commerce is conducted entirely electronically for virtual items such as access to premium content on a website, but most electronic commerce involves the transportation of physical items in some way. Online retailers are sometimes known as e-tailers and online retail is sometimes known as e-tail. Almost all big retailers have electronic commerce presence on the World Wide Web

Electronic commerce that is conducted between businesses is referred to as business-to-business or B2B. B2B can be open to all interested parties (e.g. commodity exchange) or limited to specific, pre-qualified participants (private electronic market). Electronic commerce that is conducted between businesses and consumers, on the other hand, is referred to as business-to-consumer or B2C. This is the type of electronic commerce conducted by companies such as Amazon.com.

Electronic commerce is generally considered to be the sales aspect of e-business. It also consists of the exchange of data to facilitate the financing and payment aspects of the business transactions.

Early development
The meaning of electronic commerce has changed over the last 30 years. Originally, electronic commerce meant the facilitation of commercial transactions electronically, using technology such as Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) and Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT). These were both introduced in the late 1970s, allowing businesses to send commercial documents like purchase orders or invoices electronically. The growth and acceptance of credit cards, automated teller machines (ATM) and telephone banking in the 1980s were also forms of electronic commerce. Another form of e-commerce was the airline reservation system typified by Sabre in the USA and Travicom in the UK. Online shopping was invented in the UK in 1979 by Michael Aldrich[citation needed] and during the 1980s it was used extensively particularly by auto manufacturers such as Ford,Peugeot-Talbot, General Motors and Nissan. From the 1990s onwards, electronic commerce would additionally include enterprise resource planning systems (ERP), data mining and data warehousing.

The earliest example of many-to-many electronic commerce in physical goods was the Boston Computer Exchange, a marketplace for used computers launched in 1982. The first online information marketplace, including online consulting, was likely the American Information Exchange, another pre-Internet online system introduced in 1991.

Until 1991, commercial enterprise on the Internet was strictly prohibited. Although the Internet became popular worldwide around 1994, it took about five years to introduce security protocols and DSL allowing continual connection to the Internet. And by the end of 2000, a lot of European and American business companies offered their services through the World Wide Web. Since then people began to associate a word &quot;ecommerce&quot; with the ability of purchasing various goods through the Internet using secure protocols and electronic payment services.

Timeline
    * 1990: Tim Berners-Lee writes the first web browser, WorldWideWeb, using a NeXT computer.
    * 1992: J.H. Snider and Terra Ziporyn publish Future Shop: How New Technologies Will Change the Way We Shop and What We Buy. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 0312063598.
    * 1994: Netscape releases the Navigator browser in October under the code name Mozilla. Pizza Hut offers pizza ordering on its Web page. The first online bank opens. Attempts to offer flower delivery and magazine subscriptions online. Adult materials also becomes commercially available, as do cars and bikes. Netscape 1.0 is introduced in late 1994 SSL encryption that made transactions secure.
    * 1995: Jeff Bezos launches Amazon.com and the first commercial-free 24 hour, internet-only radio stations, Radio HK and NetRadio start broadcasting. Dell and Cisco begin to aggressively use Internet for commercial transactions. eBay is founded by computer programmer Pierre Omidyar as AuctionWeb.
    * 1998: Electronic postal stamps can be purchased and downloaded for printing from the Web.
    * 1999: Business.com sold for US $7.5 million to eCompanies, which was purchased in 1997 for US $149,000. The peer-to-peer filesharing software Napster launches.
    * 2000: The dot-com bust.
    * 2002: eBay acquires PayPal for $1.5 billion. Niche retail companies CSN Stores and NetShops are founded with the concept of selling products through several targeted domains, rather than a central portal.
    * 2003: Amazon.com posts first yearly profit.
    * 2007: Business.com acquired by R.H. Donnelley for $345 million.
    * 2008: US eCommerce and Online Retail sales projected to reach $204 billion, an increase of 17 percent over 2007.</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Electronic commerce, commonly known as (electronic marketing) e-commerce or eCommerce, consists of the buying and selling of products or services over electronic systems such as the Internet and other computer networks. The amount of trade conducted electronically has grown extraordinarily with wide-spread Internet usage. A wide variety of commerce is conducted in this way, spurring and drawing on innovations in electronic funds transfer, supply chain management, Internet marketing, online transaction processing, electronic data interchange (EDI), inventory management systems, and automated data collection systems. Modern electronic commerce typically uses the World Wide Web at least at some point in the transaction&#8217;s lifecycle, although it can encompass a wider range of technologies such as e-mail as well.</p>
<p>A large percentage of electronic commerce is conducted entirely electronically for virtual items such as access to premium content on a website, but most electronic commerce involves the transportation of physical items in some way. Online retailers are sometimes known as e-tailers and online retail is sometimes known as e-tail. Almost all big retailers have electronic commerce presence on the World Wide Web</p>
<p>Electronic commerce that is conducted between businesses is referred to as business-to-business or B2B. B2B can be open to all interested parties (e.g. commodity exchange) or limited to specific, pre-qualified participants (private electronic market). Electronic commerce that is conducted between businesses and consumers, on the other hand, is referred to as business-to-consumer or B2C. This is the type of electronic commerce conducted by companies such as Amazon.com.</p>
<p>Electronic commerce is generally considered to be the sales aspect of e-business. It also consists of the exchange of data to facilitate the financing and payment aspects of the business transactions.</p>
<h3>Early development</h3>
<p>The meaning of electronic commerce has changed over the last 30 years. Originally, electronic commerce meant the facilitation of commercial transactions electronically, using technology such as Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) and Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT). These were both introduced in the late 1970s, allowing businesses to send commercial documents like purchase orders or invoices electronically. The growth and acceptance of credit cards, automated teller machines (ATM) and telephone banking in the 1980s were also forms of electronic commerce. Another form of e-commerce was the airline reservation system typified by Sabre in the USA and Travicom in the UK. Online shopping was invented in the UK in 1979 by Michael Aldrich[citation needed] and during the 1980s it was used extensively particularly by auto manufacturers such as Ford,Peugeot-Talbot, General Motors and Nissan. From the 1990s onwards, electronic commerce would additionally include enterprise resource planning systems (ERP), data mining and data warehousing.</p>
<p>The earliest example of many-to-many electronic commerce in physical goods was the Boston Computer Exchange, a marketplace for used computers launched in 1982. The first online information marketplace, including online consulting, was likely the American Information Exchange, another pre-Internet online system introduced in 1991.</p>
<p>Until 1991, commercial enterprise on the Internet was strictly prohibited. Although the Internet became popular worldwide around 1994, it took about five years to introduce security protocols and DSL allowing continual connection to the Internet. And by the end of 2000, a lot of European and American business companies offered their services through the World Wide Web. Since then people began to associate a word &#8220;ecommerce&#8221; with the ability of purchasing various goods through the Internet using secure protocols and electronic payment services.</p>
<h3>Timeline</h3>
<p>    * 1990: Tim Berners-Lee writes the first web browser, WorldWideWeb, using a NeXT computer.<br />
    * 1992: J.H. Snider and Terra Ziporyn publish Future Shop: How New Technologies Will Change the Way We Shop and What We Buy. St. Martin&#8217;s Press. ISBN 0312063598.<br />
    * 1994: Netscape releases the Navigator browser in October under the code name Mozilla. Pizza Hut offers pizza ordering on its Web page. The first online bank opens. Attempts to offer flower delivery and magazine subscriptions online. Adult materials also becomes commercially available, as do cars and bikes. Netscape 1.0 is introduced in late 1994 SSL encryption that made transactions secure.<br />
    * 1995: Jeff Bezos launches Amazon.com and the first commercial-free 24 hour, internet-only radio stations, Radio HK and NetRadio start broadcasting. Dell and Cisco begin to aggressively use Internet for commercial transactions. eBay is founded by computer programmer Pierre Omidyar as AuctionWeb.<br />
    * 1998: Electronic postal stamps can be purchased and downloaded for printing from the Web.<br />
    * 1999: Business.com sold for US $7.5 million to eCompanies, which was purchased in 1997 for US $149,000. The peer-to-peer filesharing software Napster launches.<br />
    * 2000: The dot-com bust.<br />
    * 2002: eBay acquires PayPal for $1.5 billion. Niche retail companies CSN Stores and NetShops are founded with the concept of selling products through several targeted domains, rather than a central portal.<br />
    * 2003: Amazon.com posts first yearly profit.<br />
    * 2007: Business.com acquired by R.H. Donnelley for $345 million.<br />
    * 2008: US eCommerce and Online Retail sales projected to reach $204 billion, an increase of 17 percent over 2007.</p>]]></content:encoded>
<comments>http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=12#comments</comments>
<wfw:commentRss>http://ontimecomputing.com/blog/rss-comments.php?id=12</wfw:commentRss>
<slash:comments>2</slash:comments>
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<item>
<title>Top 5 Excuses For Not Having a Website</title>
<author>bwilson@ontimecomputing.com (On Time Technology Solutions)</author>
<link>http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=13</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=13</guid>
<pubDate>Mon, 06 Apr 2009 14:03:00 -0500</pubDate>
<description>Reason #5: I already have a web page on somebody else's website.
If you have your company listed in an online directory or your Chamber of Commerce, that's a good start. However, it probably only offers basic information such as address and phone number. Your listing is buried among many of your competitors no doubt. The listing does not allow you to stand out from you competitors in any way. Having a website on somebody else's site is equivalent to having an office in somebody else's office or drivng around in somebody else's company car with their details. By having your own website, you have control over the content, the branding, and the message you want to get out to your customers.

Reason #4: I don't sell anything online.
Regardless of whether or not you sell anything online, people are online and they are searching for products or information about products. By not having your information available to these people, you are giving your customers to your competitors.

Reason #3: I have a son/nephew/niece who's into computers. They are going to make me a website.
Is that person a professional web developer? Would you not go to a doctor for medical problems, a lawyer for legal issues? In the same vein, a professional web designer / developer is more than just a person who puts pretty pictures, flashy animations, and copy on a website. Behind those graphics and copy are various complicated codes and scripts. When done properly, web sites can load faster, drive more traffic to the website, and attain a higher search engine rank. A hobbyist is unlikely to have the in depth knowledge to consider all these factors.

Reason #2: I don't know anything about computers.
Just because you don't know anything about computers doesn't mean other people are not using them. According to research, 69% of North Americans connect to the Internet. People are online and looking for products and information. If you're information is not available, they'll go someplace else. A good web design firm can work with people without computer skills to provide their business with a great online presence.

Reason #1: It's too expensive. I can't afford it.
You get what you pay for. When you go to an expensive restaurant, you expect great service, presentation, and taste. Likewise, when you go to a fast food joint, you expect it to be cheap and quick.

In the end it's not a question of whether you can afford one, but rather, whether you can afford not to have one.

 Visit On Time Web Solutions</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>Reason #5: I already have a web page on somebody else&#8217;s website.</h3>
<p>If you have your company listed in an online directory or your Chamber of Commerce, that&#8217;s a good start. However, it probably only offers basic information such as address and phone number. Your listing is buried among many of your competitors no doubt. The listing does not allow you to stand out from you competitors in any way. Having a website on somebody else&#8217;s site is equivalent to having an office in somebody else&#8217;s office or drivng around in somebody else&#8217;s company car with their details. By having your own website, you have control over the content, the branding, and the message you want to get out to your customers.</p>
<h3>Reason #4: I don&#8217;t sell anything online.</h3>
<p>Regardless of whether or not you sell anything online, people are online and they are searching for products or information about products. By not having your information available to these people, you are giving your customers to your competitors.</p>
<h3>Reason #3: I have a son/nephew/niece who&#8217;s into computers. They are going to make me a website.</h3>
<p>Is that person a professional web developer? Would you not go to a doctor for medical problems, a lawyer for legal issues? In the same vein, a professional web designer / developer is more than just a person who puts pretty pictures, flashy animations, and copy on a website. Behind those graphics and copy are various complicated codes and scripts. When done properly, web sites can load faster, drive more traffic to the website, and attain a higher search engine rank. A hobbyist is unlikely to have the in depth knowledge to consider all these factors.</p>
<h3>Reason #2: I don&#8217;t know anything about computers.</h3>
<p>Just because you don&#8217;t know anything about computers doesn&#8217;t mean other people are not using them. According to research, 69% of North Americans connect to the Internet. People are online and looking for products and information. If you&#8217;re information is not available, they&#8217;ll go someplace else. A good web design firm can work with people without computer skills to provide their business with a great online presence.</p>
<h3>Reason #1: It&#8217;s too expensive. I can&#8217;t afford it.</h3>
<p>You get what you pay for. When you go to an expensive restaurant, you expect great service, presentation, and taste. Likewise, when you go to a fast food joint, you expect it to be cheap and quick.</p>
<p>In the end it&#8217;s not a question of whether you can afford one, but rather, whether you can afford not to have one.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.ontimewebsolutions.com/"> Visit On Time Web Solutions</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
<comments>http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=13#comments</comments>
<wfw:commentRss>http://ontimecomputing.com/blog/rss-comments.php?id=13</wfw:commentRss>
<slash:comments>1</slash:comments>
</item>
<item>
<title>Crucial Components of a Good Website</title>
<author>bwilson@ontimecomputing.com (On Time Technology Solutions)</author>
<link>http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=15</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=15</guid>
<pubDate>Mon, 06 Apr 2009 13:42:00 -0500</pubDate>
<description>As On Time has grown our base of On Time Web Services clients, we’ve realized that a lot of the value we will provide to clients is helping them to execute on the fundamental strategies and tactics that will help their website get more visibility.
While there are many different options out there to drive more traffic to your website, the first and most important thing you should do is to make sure that your website is built with the fundamental components for success. The following is our list of the fundamentals that you should be most concerned with:
1.	Relevant content 
Of the list of fundamentals that we’ll be providing you with today, relevant content is by far and away the most important. Why? Simply put, visitors to your site want to find what they came for. This is simple and obvious enough, but most sites are very infrequently updated, so their content is often stale or no longer representative of the current reality of the business or organization it is representing.
One very important visitor that your content needs to impress is the search engine. Search engines crawl (spider, scan, etc.) the text on your site to determine if your content is relevant for their users. If your content is not relevant to what they are looking for, your site will fall in the search rankings and you’ll get less traffic. 
2.	A clear purpose for each page 
Each page on your site should be treated as an individual, with its own clear purpose and content that suits that purpose. You should be able to capture that purpose in a one-line sentence, and everything you design into the page should be about allowing that page to fulfill its purpose – nothing more. Very often you will find that you have pages on your site that are trying to accomplish more than one purpose; split them up and you will add great clarity for your visitors. 
3.	Effective use of keywords 
Keywords are the words or phrases that searchers are most likely to identify as relevant to your business, products, content or anything else that you are trying to draw attention to. The use of the right keywords helps the search engines to deliver the right sites to their searchers, and delivers you the most appropriate visitors to your website. Optimizing each page of your site around a specific keyword increases the chances that the right searcher is going to find your site.
As an example, On Time could choose to optimize around the words “computer support” to attract visitors to our site. However, we’ve found out through trial-and-error that people who search for that keyword phrase are typically smaller customers that can’t afford and don’t value our services. It turns out that optimizing around language such as “IT management” provides a much better quality of visitor to our site – one that is most likely to be a good On Time customer. As you can see, slight adjustments in getting your keywords right can make a big difference. 
4.	Good page titles 
When constructing a website, each page of the site is given a page title. This title should be unique from the other pages on the site, and it should accurately reflect the purpose of the page. This is critical because the page title often shows up in search engine results, and gave give a potential visitor the last bit of information they need to determine if your site is the one they are looking for. 
5.	A site map 
A site map is a tool to communicate the structure and flow of your site, primarily to the search engines. Search engines “feed” off of the text on your site, and use links as the roadmap to find the text they are looking for. A good site map is like a good atlas for the search engines, illustrating the various links on your site and what they point to. 
6.	Clear “conversion” path/instructions 
Presumably you are looking for visitors to your site to do something: purchase a product, sign up for a newsletter, ask to be contacted by a salesperson, etc. These actions are commonly referred to as “conversions”.
Following the same logic of having a clear purpose for each page, you should also have a clear conversion strategy for your site, and make it as clear and easy as possible for your visitors to take the conversion action you are looking for. This is a study in and of itself, but there are a few fundamentals worth mentioning:
o	Ideally only have one conversion goal for your site. If you must have more than one, make sure each has a separate, clear path for the visitor to follow. 
o	Give your visitors the option to convert everywhere it makes sense to do so, not just on a single page in the site. For example, if you are looking for visitors to register for a newsletter, include a “Sign up now” link on every page. 
o	Make it as easy as possible to take the desired action: remove all unnecessary steps, ask only for critical information, and give clear instructions. 
Good professional sports coaches make their athletes – often already the best in the world at what they do – practice the fundamentals of their sport daily because they know it will make everything else they do better. The same can be said for the fundamental website components above: make sure you are practicing them, and all of your other marketing activities will perform better.</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As On Time has grown our base of On Time Web Services clients, we’ve realized that a lot of the value we will provide to clients is helping them to execute on the fundamental strategies and tactics that will help their website get more visibility.<br />
While there are many different options out there to drive more traffic to your website, the first and most important thing you should do is to make sure that your website is built with the fundamental components for success. The following is our list of the fundamentals that you should be most concerned with:<br />
1.	<strong>Relevant content </strong><br />
Of the list of fundamentals that we’ll be providing you with today, relevant content is by far and away the most important. Why? Simply put, visitors to your site want to find what they came for. This is simple and obvious enough, but most sites are very infrequently updated, so their content is often stale or no longer representative of the current reality of the business or organization it is representing.<br />
One very important visitor that your content needs to impress is the search engine. Search engines crawl (spider, scan, etc.) the text on your site to determine if your content is relevant for their users. If your content is not relevant to what they are looking for, your site will fall in the search rankings and you’ll get less traffic.<br />
2.	<strong>A clear purpose for each page </strong><br />
Each page on your site should be treated as an individual, with its own clear purpose and content that suits that purpose. You should be able to capture that purpose in a one-line sentence, and everything you design into the page should be about allowing that page to fulfill its purpose – nothing more. Very often you will find that you have pages on your site that are trying to accomplish more than one purpose; split them up and you will add great clarity for your visitors.<br />
3.	<strong>Effective use of keywords </strong><br />
Keywords are the words or phrases that searchers are most likely to identify as relevant to your business, products, content or anything else that you are trying to draw attention to. The use of the right keywords helps the search engines to deliver the right sites to their searchers, and delivers you the most appropriate visitors to your website. Optimizing each page of your site around a specific keyword increases the chances that the right searcher is going to find your site.<br />
As an example, On Time could choose to optimize around the words “computer support” to attract visitors to our site. However, we’ve found out through trial-and-error that people who search for that keyword phrase are typically smaller customers that can’t afford and don’t value our services. It turns out that optimizing around language such as “IT management” provides a much better quality of visitor to our site – one that is most likely to be a good On Time customer. As you can see, slight adjustments in getting your keywords right can make a big difference.<br />
4.<strong>	Good page titles </strong><br />
When constructing a website, each page of the site is given a page title. This title should be unique from the other pages on the site, and it should accurately reflect the purpose of the page. This is critical because the page title often shows up in search engine results, and gave give a potential visitor the last bit of information they need to determine if your site is the one they are looking for.<br />
5.	<strong>A site map </strong><br />
A site map is a tool to communicate the structure and flow of your site, primarily to the search engines. Search engines “feed” off of the text on your site, and use links as the roadmap to find the text they are looking for. A good site map is like a good atlas for the search engines, illustrating the various links on your site and what they point to.<br />
6.	<strong>Clear “conversion” path/instructions </strong><br />
Presumably you are looking for visitors to your site to do something: purchase a product, sign up for a newsletter, ask to be contacted by a salesperson, etc. These actions are commonly referred to as “conversions”.<br />
Following the same logic of having a clear purpose for each page, you should also have a clear conversion strategy for your site, and make it as clear and easy as possible for your visitors to take the conversion action you are looking for. This is a study in and of itself, but there are a few fundamentals worth mentioning:<br />
o	Ideally only have one conversion goal for your site. If you must have more than one, make sure each has a separate, clear path for the visitor to follow.<br />
o	Give your visitors the option to convert everywhere it makes sense to do so, not just on a single page in the site. For example, if you are looking for visitors to register for a newsletter, include a “Sign up now” link on every page.<br />
o	Make it as easy as possible to take the desired action: remove all unnecessary steps, ask only for critical information, and give clear instructions.<br />
Good professional sports coaches make their athletes – often already the best in the world at what they do – practice the fundamentals of their sport daily because they know it will make everything else they do better. The same can be said for the fundamental website components above: make sure you are practicing them, and all of your other marketing activities will perform better.</p>]]></content:encoded>
</item>
<item>
<title>Why do i need a backup solution?</title>
<author>bwilson@ontimecomputing.com (On Time Technology Solutions)</author>
<link>http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=11</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=11</guid>
<pubDate>Mon, 06 Apr 2009 10:51:00 -0500</pubDate>
<description>Everyone thinks that it wont happen to me, or, I havent needed it so far.  While that is correct in a lot of cases, if something happens to your server or computer you will be glad you had a backup. And you do not have to backup your entire computer, although this is certainly something that many people do, but only the files that are of the most importance to you.
Some things are easily replaced, and there is no need to backup these sorts of things, but those irreplaceable documents or files that are yours and yours alone should be saved in a place where they cannot be damaged. That way, no matter what happens to your computer, you can have security in the fact that all of your files are available in backup.
Lets take it to another level.  You have a backup solution onsite.  Everything is being backed up to tape and the tapes are changed out everyday.  Awesome!  Until the entire building is blown away.  What now?  Sure you may have a copy at home, but how many days of lost data is there going to be?  How long will it take you to restore that data to a new server?
If your data is importantant enough to be backed up then it needs to be backed up off site to a location that is secure and the ablility to recover up to the minute backups is possible.  That is where On Time Technology Solutions comes in.  We offer a Backup and Disaster recovery Solution that takes all of this into account.  Check out the following link.

http://www.ontimecomputing.com/bdr.htm</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Everyone thinks that it wont happen to me, or, I havent needed it so far.  While that is correct in a lot of cases, if something happens to your server or computer you will be glad you had a backup. And you do not have to backup your entire computer, although this is certainly something that many people do, but only the files that are of the most importance to you.<br />
Some things are easily replaced, and there is no need to backup these sorts of things, but those irreplaceable documents or files that are yours and yours alone should be saved in a place where they cannot be damaged. That way, no matter what happens to your computer, you can have security in the fact that all of your files are available in backup.<br />
Lets take it to another level.  You have a backup solution onsite.  Everything is being backed up to tape and the tapes are changed out everyday.  Awesome!  Until the entire building is blown away.  What now?  Sure you may have a copy at home, but how many days of lost data is there going to be?  How long will it take you to restore that data to a new server?<br />
If your data is importantant enough to be backed up then it needs to be backed up off site to a location that is secure and the ablility to recover up to the minute backups is possible.  That is where On Time Technology Solutions comes in.  We offer a Backup and Disaster recovery Solution that takes all of this into account.  Check out the following link.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.ontimecomputing.com/bdr.htm">http://www.ontimecomputing.com/bdr.htm</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
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<wfw:commentRss>http://ontimecomputing.com/blog/rss-comments.php?id=11</wfw:commentRss>
<slash:comments>1</slash:comments>
</item>
<item>
<title>Have you heard of the Conficker Worm?</title>
<author>bwilson@ontimecomputing.com (On Time Technology Solutions)</author>
<link>http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=9</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=9</guid>
<pubDate>Thu, 26 Mar 2009 08:55:00 -0500</pubDate>
<description>Virus set to do harm
This worm, virus or vulnerability that was identified in the Windows Operating System back in the Fall of 2008 is set to cause some major disruptions on April 1, 2009 according to John  Markoff in a recent NY Times article. Now, IT Professionals across the globe are joining forces to search out the author of this malicious software code that infected millions of computers in late 2008.

Since that time, a new variant of Conficker has been released in the ongoing cat and mouse game that security software vendors play with virus writers.  Experts are stating that Conficker may have the same impact as “I Love You” did in the past.  Even Microsoft is getting into the game announcing a $250,000 USD reward for information leading to the capture of the Conficker author.

On April 1, 2009 infected computer systems will attempt to contact the main control system for more instructions.  There has been a range of speculation about what will occur next from these instructions and the overall impact it will have on business.

What experts know is that the Conficker Worm takes residence on an infected computer and it can be programmed remotely by software which in turn has the ability to infect additional systems through its vast distribution system.

What you can do to protect your systems?
Hassle Free IT clients who are on our Hassle Free IT service have already received the necessary updates as part of their overall service.  For those small businesses in Borger and the Panhandle area who are concerned about the Conficker virus and are not sure if they are protected can call our office to arrange a consultation to ensure that the right protection is in place and steps have been taken.

Microsoft has released complex instructions on how to protect your systems.

Click here to go to our website</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Virus set to do harm<br />
This worm, virus or vulnerability that was identified in the Windows Operating System back in the Fall of 2008 is set to cause some major disruptions on April 1, 2009 according to John  Markoff in a recent NY Times article. Now, IT Professionals across the globe are joining forces to search out the author of this malicious software code that infected millions of computers in late 2008.</p>
<p>Since that time, a new variant of Conficker has been released in the ongoing cat and mouse game that security software vendors play with virus writers.  Experts are stating that Conficker may have the same impact as “I Love You” did in the past.  Even Microsoft is getting into the game announcing a $250,000 USD reward for information leading to the capture of the Conficker author.</p>
<p>On April 1, 2009 infected computer systems will attempt to contact the main control system for more instructions.  There has been a range of speculation about what will occur next from these instructions and the overall impact it will have on business.</p>
<p>What experts know is that the Conficker Worm takes residence on an infected computer and it can be programmed remotely by software which in turn has the ability to infect additional systems through its vast distribution system.</p>
<p>What you can do to protect your systems?<br />
Hassle Free IT clients who are on our Hassle Free IT service have already received the necessary updates as part of their overall service.  For those small businesses in Borger and the Panhandle area who are concerned about the Conficker virus and are not sure if they are protected can call our office to arrange a consultation to ensure that the right protection is in place and steps have been taken.</p>
<p>Microsoft has released complex instructions on how to protect your systems.</p>
<p><a href="http://ontimecomputing.com/">Click here to go to our website</a></p>]]></content:encoded>
</item>
<item>
<title>Business Websites in the Recession</title>
<author>bwilson@ontimecomputing.com (On Time Technology Solutions)</author>
<link>http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=8</link>
<guid isPermaLink="true">http://ontimecomputing.com/updates.php?id=8</guid>
<pubDate>Mon, 09 Mar 2009 10:24:00 -0500</pubDate>
<description>In the current state of the economy everyone is hurting.  People are looking for cost-effective ways to market themselves and/or their business.

Purchasing a WEBSITE or redesigning your existing web site is a relatively cheap alternative, and with proper SEO practices can be much more cost effective than traditional advertising techniques.  Advertising only lasts for a certain amount of time and then you have to pay more.</description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In the current state of the economy everyone is hurting.  People are looking for cost-effective ways to market themselves and/or their business.</p>
<p>Purchasing a WEBSITE or redesigning your existing web site is a relatively cheap alternative, and with proper SEO practices can be much more cost effective than traditional advertising techniques.  Advertising only lasts for a certain amount of time and then you have to pay more.</p>]]></content:encoded>
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