Archive for the ‘Internet’ Category

Chris Veugeler of Auto Concepts

Thursday, December 31st, 2009

Chris Veugeler of Auto Concepts has launched a new domain about Chris Veugeler and Auto Concepts.

The new website about Chris Veugeler has been established to share links, news and infirmation about Chris and Auto Concepts.

At Auto Concepts we strive to meet the standards that our customers deserve. Whether you’re in the market for a used vehicle, looking at your financing options, or looking for a quick quote on a car, truck, or SUV, our friendly, professional staff is ready to provide you with all the help you need. We invite you to call or visit our dealership, conveniently located just off Interstate 80 at the Richards St. exit, and experience the care every one of our employees takes in the vehicles we sell and the service we give our valued customers.

Chris Veugeler
Auto Concepts
501 Richards St
Joliet, IL 60433
Phone: 888-828-4741

On The Web:
http://www.ChrisVeugeler.com
http://www.cars.com/autoconcepts/

Interchanges.com Florida Web Marketing Company Reviews

Sunday, October 4th, 2009

InterChanges.com is an SEO, Web Designing and Web Marketing firm based out of Jacksonville FL.

Company Information:

Interchanges.com
8833 Perimeter Park Boulevard
Suite 804
Jacksonville, Florida 32216

www.InterChanges.com
Phone: 1-866-313-5969
Fax: 904-807-9216

Customer Testimonials:

“Everyone I dealt with at Interchanges.com was professional, courteous, and easy to work with. They offered advice and guidance that help turn our web site into an attractive and functional utility for our business. The web site is a great compliment to the company image that we maintain. In addition to the overall appearance, it has definitely served to increase our efficiencies. Our clients and sales team use the web site daily. It has definitely streamlined many processes.”

Blair Carter
Sales Manager
Crown Products Company, Inc.

 

“Interchanges makes results happen. They are constantly learning and applying the strategies they promote within their own company and to an ever-growing cadre of satisfied clients. I’m happy to have had the opportunity to work with Interchanges - to learn from them for several years now and to benefit from their extreme talent!!”

Kevin Nations
Owner
SilverBack Marketing Corp

 

” The team at Interchanges.com are responsive, intelligent and possess great integrity. I recommend
them highly.”

Adam Bengal
KTAV.com

 

“Interchanges.com custom designed and implemented an Internet strategy that has proven fruitful for Zabatt.com. Interchanges.com did everything from designing a new web site that gave us a professional appearance on the web, to developing and implementing our entire Internet marketing campaign In addition to the results we have achieved, we have also found the Interchanges.com team to be hands on and proactive in recommending improvements and new solutions. We trust that we will stay ahead of our Internet competitors through Interchanges.com’s ongoing efforts.”

J. Michael Sebastian
Zabatt

 

“Interchanges.com was an excellent resource for information that was useful in helping our company increase market awareness. They spent hours analyzing and planning ways that would lead to a greater internet presence. They were thorough, concise, and personable the entire time. They were constantly available for questions. Interchanges also took the time to help me in the pursuit of personal career goals. They assisted me in reviewing existing practices and offering more effective alternatives that would help increase my personal efficiency. They did not try to take personal praise for there influence in my career objectives, but rather were seeking to see me prosper.”

Todd Thomsen
ERP Manager
The Stellar Group

 

“I would like to let you know how much we appreciate Interchanges.com’s help, their expertise and professionalism in designing our web page. They listen, offer good and constructive advice and then they act promptly. They are patient with us when we are impatient; they are prompt in making changes when we need our information updated. Interchagnes.com care’s about the small company and how they can help them achieve their goals. “

Karen Bassham

 

“ Interchanges operates on the cutting edge of service and productivity. They maintain an effective business model which prioritizes a consistent client experience. That experience speaks for itself over time as clients reap the benefits of there company’s work. Overall, Interchanges should be considered a worthy ‘investment’ for anyone looking to increase their market exposure and productivity.”

Reid Fitzpatrick
Financial Advisor, CRPC
Ameriprise Financial Services

 

“The team at interchanges built my web site and I continue in their partner program. The web site is very well constructed and has received many compliments. More importantly, Interchanges partner program is driving attention and business to my web site - results exceed my expectations! Interchanges is delightful to work with - high integrity, and high value. A true business partner.”

Hal Resnick

 

Write A Review about Interchanges.com on Strong Reputation!

ReputationArmor.com Reputation Armor - SEO

Sunday, September 13th, 2009

Reputation Armor is a reputation management company that helps businesses remove complaints from the top of search result. Since 1999 the team at ReputationArmor has been working in the SEO industry and has a strong knowledge of what is takes to help businesses control their online search engine reputation.

Call Reputation Armor: 888-358-2766

ReputationArmor works with hundred of clients and takes on 10-20 new clients per month. If you need help with online reputation management reputation armor.com can help you.

Reputation Armor can remove complaints!

Reputation is everything and no company large or small is immune to unwarranted complaints on search engines. The fact is most online complaints are filed by competitors and are fake or half truths.

You can fight back and control what people see on search engines about you or your company. ReputationArmor has beat down many types of online complaints and has even helped people have online complaints completely removed from search results.

Visit Reputation Armor Online: http://www.ReputationArmor.com

New Green Building initiative by Capital Remodeling

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

 

New Green Building initiative by Capital Remodeling

Green building, also called sustainable design, is a term that is sweeping across the construction industry. Green building involves making a concentrated effort to reduce the construction industry’s carbon footprint. Obviously this involves certain decisions that affect decisions and practices during the construction phase, such as transport of resources and supplies, worker practices, and the proper disposal / recycling of left over materials. Green building practices go far beyond the immediate reduction of a construction company’s carbon footprint, however. It should extend well into, and beyond, the life of the building project to have a positive and long term impact on the surrounding community and, by extension, the environment in general.

In order to effectively streamline resources and practices, and truly maximize the efficient usage of materials and resources, careful attention must be paid to design, construction, and maintenance.

Green building practices will concentrate on three specific areas and resources; environmentally friendly materials, energy consumption, and water efficiency. Of course a fourth area, the health and well being of the building project’s intended occupants as well as the community, of which the building project will become a part of, should also be heavily considered.

The main focus of green building and design is to create a neutral to positive impact on the environment. The rewards for choosing to work with the environment instead of against it are obvious and numerous. There are, however, many financial benefits associated with green building practices, as well. A green building project that has been thoughtfully and skilfully designed, constructed and, of course maintained, will reduce overall construction costs by as much as 25%, will significantly lower maintenance costs, and provide other forms of monetary savings and benefits. On top of this, tax breaks, rebates, and positive branding will also contribute to the financial benefits that will result as an outcome of green building and business practices.

In order to effectively streamline resources and practices, and truly maximize the efficient usage of materials and resources, careful attention must be paid to design, construction, and maintenance. Design involves an emphasis on minimizing materials and waste, reusable and recyclable resources are chosen over other materials, and energy and water efficiency is planned at every stage. Along with reusable materials, cool roofing options are also utilized. Guidelines and restrictions for cool roofing colours vary from state to state so it is a good idea to look into exactly what is required before you build.

While looking into guidelines for cool roofing, it is important to also look into LEED certification requirements. LEED is put in place to provide standards of practice for sustainable design, or green building.

Learn more about Capital Remodeling by contacting them directly.

Credit Repair Leads For Credit Repair Firms

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Looking For Credit Repair Leads?

If you are in the credit repair industry then you already know the value of good, fresh, and responsive credit repair leads. You may not know where to buy the best credit repair leads online.

There are dozens of websites that offer credit repair leads and sales leads. There are only a couple that only deal in credit repair leads. A lead company that deals in only one type of lead like credit repair leads will most likely deliver your company the best bang for your buck.

If a lead company sells 15 different lead types then the quality may be diluted. Fresh quality leads will make you money over and over. Watch out for under priced leads and over priced leads! You should expect to pay $3-$5 per lead for credit repair leads if they are the real deal and even more if you want 100% truly exclusive leads (Which I doubt exist).

If you are new to the credit repair industry or sell credit repair letter kits or anything to people with poor credit then credit repair lead may be what you are looking for. You can search Google for “Credit Repair Leads” and compare companies there.

Vacation Travel Club On Avoiding Travel Scams

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Avoid Travel Scams By Vacation Travel Club

Avoiding Vacation and Travel Scams has become a very popular topic this travel season. The team at Vacation Travel Club has compiled a list of common and avoidable travel and vacation related scams that you may encounter while traveling this Vacation season.

Vacation Travel Club is a leader in the online discount vacation industry. Vacation Travel Club offers their members some of the greatest savings and benefits in the industry. The tips to avoid vacation related scams below are provided for information purposes only.

1. Fake car park attendants. Previously prevalent in Italy, this travel scam now pops up in many big European cities, where parking can be notoriously difficult.

The trick can take many forms. You may just drive onto a piece of wasteland where other cars are parked or you may enter a big, official parking lot.

Either way, a “parking attendant” approaches you and hands you an official looking ticket, usually demanding a fairly exorbitant fee. You’re tired, frustrated and there’s a language problem, so you just hand over the cash.

Later, you discover you’re either parked illegally or there’s another fee to pay — this time, the real one.

Action: You put yourself at risk if you don’t know who owns the place where you’re parking or what the real arrangements are for payment. Check them out the best you can. You can ask the attendant to show credentials — but avoid confrontation.

2. Phony travel guides. You may have seen this trick in the movie Slumdog Millionaire.

At a famous venue, a local offers to show you around for a fee. This may be a fairly obvious and transparent ruse, where he’s just trying to make a quick buck.

But some scammers pose as agents for official guides, taking your money and telling you to wait at a particular spot. Of course, they never return and there’s no official guide.

Action: Guidebooks and online sites will tell you the arrangements for official, paid tours.

3. Bad cola, bad karma. In the Indian subcontinent, be wary of drinking unknown beverages when you opt for a familiar Pepsi or Coca-Cola labeled bottle at a roadside cafe, known as a “dhaba.”
What you might get is a carbonated drink that looks (and even tastes) quite like the genuine item. But the only genuine things are the bottle and the cap.

The drinks are made by gangs of street-wise youngsters, who collect thousands of used bottles and caps.

The drinks are usually mixed and bottled in unsanitary conditions in derelict buildings. Drinking them is definitely unsafe.

Action: Even though many dhabas sell genuine colas, you may want to play safe by not purchasing from them and buy drinks at your hotel.
4. Rental car repair rip-off. In this world travel scam, most common in Eastern Europe, you return your rental car, but when the attendant tries to move it, it won’t restart.

They make up a story about what’s wrong with it (usually, they’ve just flooded the carburetor) and blame you. The “cost” of putting things right is often the same as any security deposit you might have paid in advance.

If you didn’t pay a deposit, they demand money now and may even try to confiscate your luggage until you hand over the money. They’re banking on you being in a hurry, and become aggressive if you refuse to pay.

Action: Return your car with plenty of time to spare and ask to see the manager or owner if there’s a problem. Ideally, though, rent your car from a reputable-name agency with whom you can dispute the issue when you get back home.

5. Downgrading your hotel. This is an old travel scam that’s suddenly reappeared in the past year.

You check in at your hotel and are dismayed to learn that your room is in another nearby establishment that’s usually nowhere near as nice. The practice is called “walking.”

Most likely, the hotel has overbooked but it’s also possible someone at the hotel is on the take.
Action: Try refusing the sw

itch — hotels nearly always have empty rooms in reserve. Ask to see the manager or contact whoever made your travel arrangements. If you are prepared to accept the alternative, ask for compensation.

6. Free holiday awards. Although a well known travel scam, we can’t miss out mentioning the “you’ve-won-a-free-vacation” scratch card trick because it’s probably the number one scam on many European and Caribbean beaches this year.

There are numerous angles but the scam boils down to two things — you’ll either have to pay a “processing fee” to get your otherwise free vacation, which is really non-existent, or you’ll be asked to attend a tedious presentation where they try to sell you timeshares or expensive vacation add-ons with high pressure sales tactics.

Action: Every one of these cards is a winner — that ought to be enough to tell you what to do, but we’ll say it anyway: Treat these the same way you would an email that says you’ve won a lottery — trash them.

7. Credit card problems. This is our catch-all for numerous tricks you need to be on the lookout for this year. These are the key ones:
- Try not to let your credit card out of your sight when you’re using it in an unfamiliar place. Out of sight, the number and the crucial security code printed on the reverse could be written down.

- Don’t be taken in by a trader in a foreign country who offers to bill your card in dollars, thereby saving you a foreign exchange fee from your card issuer. The trader will almost certainly use an extortionate exchange rate and you’ll end up out of pocket.

- Check how much your credit card issuer charges for foreign transactions. Some charge nothing, others as much as 3% of the value of the transaction.

8. Don’t hit that Cash Send button. This is a new one that’s cropped up in South Africa and may appear in other parts of the African continent.
ATMs are equipped with a button labeled “CashSend” which enables users to transfer money to other people, even those who don’t have a bank account. They can withdraw it from another ATM.
This is a legitimate banking convenience but tricksters apparently can set up a transfer on an ATM before you use it. They then stand behind you and urge you to hit the CashSend button to speed up your withdrawal.

Action: Just don’t hit that button!

9. Paying for paper tickets. When you book a flight online, you usually have the option of just using an “e-ticket” (basically a printout of your booking confirmation that you take to the check-in desk) or having an old-fashioned paper ticket mailed to you for an additional fee.
Usually, this is $10, which is what the International Air Transport Association says it costs.

But some unscrupulous travel agents and organizers are charging up to $40 or $50 for this questionable privilege.

Vacation Travel Club offers a discount vacation and travel membership that saves travelers up to 65% on select Vacation and Travel products and services. You can learn more about Vacation Travel Club online by Visiting: http://www.VacationTravelClub.org

Domainer Profiting From A Child’s Death - John Gall

Wednesday, May 27th, 2009

Profiting From A Child’s Death
A Domainer John Gall Goes Too Far

Domaining is the business of buying, selling, developing and monetizing Internet domain names not for primary use as a website, but with the goal of profit generation with the intent of resale, like real estate. The noun form is domainer. A domainer is a person who engages in domaining. A person engaging in “domaining” is alternatively referred to as a “domaineer” and the activity is labelled “domaineering”.

There are ethical ways of domaining that I think I great like buying generic domains, expired domains, or popular general topic domains like “SwineFlu.com”.

Then there is a nasty immoral way of domaining. A perfect example of this nasty technique is what I found today when I was researching the death of Mike Tyson’s 4 year old daughter (Exodus Tyson).

Being a semi-domainer and savvy internet user myself I was curious and went straight to the TLD about Exodus Tyson, ExodusTyson-DotCom (I refuse to give this John Gall guy a back link). I understand why John Gall purchased the domain name, I understand the reason behind it, but I do not agree with it in this case.

Being a father of 5 daughters all under the aged of 9 years old, I am a little sensitive on the subject of profiting from a child’s death. When I went to the domain in question (ExodusTyson-DotCom) I expected to see a memorial type of site up or a typical “Ad Free” support the Tyson family site or something of that nature.

What did I see? A domainer’s (John Gall) attempt at a $2.00 profit, a single splash page with a picture of Mike Tyson, A heading that said Exodus Tyson - Daughter of Mike Tyson, a paragraph most likely copied from news stories about the tragic accident, and a weak ass disclaimer that said “This website is not associated with Mike Tyson, Exodus Tyson or the treadmill industry”.

Read The Full story here: Domainers Like John Gall Profiting From a Child’s Death

When does buying/registering a domain name for a couple of dollar profit go too far? I will admit I have registered some domains that were other people’s names before, but these people were alive, older, and simply were not a small child, a little girl who tragically lost a battled to keep her life after an accident.

The domain ExodusTyson-DotCom was registered by a guy named John Gall, the registration info is below and contains his cell phone number. I actually tried to contact him for a statement without a response. John Gall owns about 400 other domain names and is obviously a “Domainer”.

Read the rest of this Exodus Tyson story here: Domainers Like John Gall Profiting From a Child’s Death

Google PageRank Update In Progress March 2009

Tuesday, March 24th, 2009

Yet another post about Google PageRank…

I agree that PageRank is not as important as soom people think but it is a very nice suprise to see your website has earned some Google PageRank.

This morning (March 24, 2009) I noticed a lot of PageRank changes on my sites and other sites I frequent. Keep an eye on your PageRank Toolbar and PageRank gadgets, I think there will be a big change of PR for many sites. I have noticed a drop in PageRank on a few of my domains already and many unchanged.

Get a free pagerank display for your website and test your sites PageRank: http://www.321pr.com

Google PageRank Down? Datacenter down?

Tuesday, March 24th, 2009

Tiday I was trying to use a pagerank tool and noticed that Google’s data servers or pagerank servers might be down.. Has anyone noticed Google data center server issues today?

If you use a pagerank display script on your website you will see it says you have a PR0 but that is because the script can not communicate with Google because the Google Data Center is down.

Anyone seeing this?

Tony Picciano - Picciano Last Name Explained

Tuesday, March 24th, 2009

Tony Picciano - Picciano Last Name Explained:

Picciano is first mentioned in 1049 when Bernardo Earl of Penne, with the Charta Offersionis, gave fields and buildings to build a Benedictine abbey in its hills. This is the first indication of the existence of a town called Picciano. and could be considered its terminus ante quem.

Many legends are known about the origin of the name “Picciano”, the most believable talks about shepherds devoted to the Goddess Pithia; other variants of the name, found in the Charta Convenientiae, is “Piczano” so that perhaps the name of the town can be dated back to the Early Middle Age, avoiding conjectures about Roman origin.

Tony Picciano’s last name dates back to 1049 and is one of the oldest last names found in the US today. Tony Picciano’s last name (Picciano) can be researched on Ancestry.com and online even further. The Picciano last name is mostly concentrated in NY.

Tony Picciano - Picciano