Friday, January 1, 2010

How to Show Blogger Widget Only In Home Page Or Post Pages of blogger

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How to Show Blogger Widget Only In Home Page Or Post Pages of blogger,as you have seen in wordpress blog its your wish to what widget and what add you want to show in sidebar of that page but this service cant be used in blogger as all sidebar bar widgets are linked to all pages in blogger including home page but now you can select the option which sidebar widget you want to show in blogger homepage and which one in all other blogger post pages.

how to show only post titles in blogger home and label pages has also been released,dont forget to red about it.

Lets follow on this tutorial i.e how to show blogger widget only in home page or blogger posts pages.
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Thursday, December 17, 2009

How to make NetworkedBlogs more usefull for your blog popularity through facebook

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Make the best of NetworkedBlogs

  • 1. First, add your blog to our directory so others can find it.
    Visit the app's home page and click on "+ Add a New Blog".
  • 2. Import your feed and push it to the stream for all your friends and fans to see.
    This is one of the best ways to promote your blog. Make sure your posts show on your wall and in the news feed of your friends and fans. NetworkedBlogs provides several options to do that. On your blog page, click "feed settings" to enable this feature. And if you have a Facebook page, you can use this feature too through your page's 'edit page' menu.

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Sunday, October 25, 2009

How to make facebook notification email from facebook become combine in single email which receive in your inbox once a day

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You get an email notification from Facebook every time someone adds you as a friend on Facebook or confirms your existing friendship request. You also get emails when people post something on your wall or comment on photos that you have shared on Facebook.

If you are connected with only a limited number of people on Facebook, these notifications are probably not an issue but if you have a few hundred friends on Facebook, these "not so urgent" notifications might well be choking your mailbox.
Dealing with Facebook Email Overload

You can do a search for from:facebookmail.com inside Gmail to find the number of emails that you are getting just because of that Facebook account.

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Thursday, August 13, 2009

How Hallo - Hello - Hi - Pronounce and used in different countries?

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Afrikaans - haai (Pronounced Ha-I)

Albanian - tungjatjeta (Pronounced Toon-jat-yeta)

Arabic – mArHAbAn (pronounced Mar-ha-ban) Assalamualaikum

Armenian - barev or parev

Azerbaijani - salam pronounced Sa-laam

Bahamas – hello (for.), hi or heyello (informal)

Basque - kaixo (Pronounced kai-show)

Bavarian and Austrian German - grüß Gott (Pronounced gruess gott),

Bengali — 'aas salamu alaay kum' (In Bangladesh) 'namaskar (In West Bengal, India)

Bremnian - koali (Pronounced kowalee)

Bulgarian - zdraveite, zdrasti (informal)

Burmese - mingalarbar

Cape-Verdean Creole - oi, olá

Catalan - hola (Pronounced o-la),

Chichewa - moni bambo! (to a male), moni mayi! (to a female)

Chinese - 你好, Cantonese nei ho or lei ho (Pronounced nay ho or lay ho) Mandarin 你好 (pronounced ni hao), 早上好(pronounced zao shang hao; good morning!)

Congo - Mambo

Cree - Tansi (Pronounced Dawnsay)

Czech - dobré ráno (until about 8 or 9 a.m.), dobrý den (formal), dobrý večer (evening), ahoj (informal; pronounced ahoy)

Danish - hej (informal; pronounced hey),

Double Dutch - hutch-e-lul-lul-o (hello),

Dutch - hoi (very informal), hallo (informal)

English - hello (formal), hi (informal), hey (informal,)

Esperanto - saluton (formal), sal (informal)

Estonian - tere'

Fijian - bula uro

Finnish - hyvää päivää (formal), moi or hei (informal)

French - salut (informal; silent 't'), bonjour (formal, Pronounced Bonju; 'n' as a nasal vowel),

Gaelic - dia duit (informal; pronounced dee-ah gwitch; literally "God be with you")

German - hallo (informal), Guten Tag (formal; pronounced gootan taag), Tag (very informal;

Greek - yia sou (pronounced yah-soo; informal), yia sas (formal)

Hawaiian - aloha

Hebrew - shalom (means "hello", "goodbye" and "peace"), hi (informal),

Hindi and Nepali - नमस्ते, namaste, namaskar (pronounced na-mus-tei),

Hungarian, Magyar - jo napot (pronounced yoh naput; formal), szervusz (pronounced sairvoose; informal), szia (pronounced seeya; informal)

Icelandic - góðan dag (formal; pronounced gothan dagg), hæ (informal)

Igbo - nde-ewo (pronounced enday aywo), nna-ewo (pronounced enna wo)

Indonesian - selamat pagi (morning), selamat siang (afternoon), selamat malam (evening)

Italian - ciào (pronounced chow; informal; also means "goodbye"),

Japanese - ohayou gozaimasu (pronounced o-ha-yo go-zai-mass; good morning), konnichi wa (pronounced ko-nee-chee-wa; afternoon), konbawa (pronounced gong-ban-wa; evening); moshi moshi (pronounced moh-shee moh-shee; when answering the phone); doumo (pronounced doh-moh; informal way of greeting,

Jibberish - huthegelluthego, h-idiguh-el l-idiguh-o (formal), h-diguh-i (informal),

Jamaican(slang)- Yow Wah gwaan (pronounced wa-gwaan)

Kanien'kéha (Mohawk) - kwe kwe (pronounced gway gway)

Kannada – namaskaaram

Kazakh - Salem

Korean - ahn nyeong ha se yo (formal; pronouned ahn-yan-ha-say-yo), ahn nyeong (informal; can also be used to mean "goodbye")

Kurdish — choni, roj bahsh (day; pronounced rohzj bahsh)

Lao - sabaidee (pronounced sa-bai-dee)

Latin (Classical) - salve (pronounced sal-way; to one person), salvete (pronounced sal-way-tay; to more than one person), ave (pronounced ar-way; to one respected person), avete (pronounced ar-way-tay; to more than one respected person)

Latvian - labdien, sveiki, chau (informal; pronounced chow).

Lingala - mbote

Lithuanian - laba diena (formal), labas, sveikas (informal; when speaking to a male), sveika (informal; when speaking to a female), sveiki (informal; when speaking to more than one person).

Luxembourgish - moïen (pronounced MOY-en)

Malayalam - namaskkaram

Maori - kia ora (kia o ra), tena koe, ata marie, morena (good morning)

Mexican - hola

Mongolian - sain baina uu? (pronounced saa-yen baya-nu; formal), sain uu? (pronounced say-noo; informal), ugluunii mend (morning; pronounced ohglohny mend), udriin mend (afternoon, pronounced ohdriin mend), oroin mend (evening; pronounced or-oh-in mend)

Nahuatl - niltze, hao

Navajo - ya'at'eeh

Niuean - faka lofa lahi atu (formal) fakalofa (informal)

Neapolitan - cia, cha

Northern German - moin moin

Northern Shoto - dumelang

Norwegian - hei ("hi"), hallo ("hello")

Oshikwanyama - wa uhala po, meme? (to a female;), wa uhala po, tate? (to a male; response is ee) nawa tuu? (response is ee; formal)

Oromo(Afan Oromo) - asham (hi')

Persian - salaam or do-rood (see note above - salaam is an abbreviation, the full version being as-salaam-o-aleykum in all Islamic societies)

Pig Latin - eyhay (informal), ellohay (formal)

Polish - dzień dobry (formal), witaj (hello) cześć (hi, pronounced, "cheshch")

Portuguese - oi, boas, olá or alô (informal);

Romanian - salut, buna dimineata (formal; morning) buna ziua (formal; daytime) buna searaformal; evening), buna (usually when speaking to a female pronounced boo-nhuh)

Russian - pree-vyet (informal), zdravstvuyte (formal; pronounced ZDRA-stvooy-tyeh)

Samoan - talofa (formal), malo (informal)

Scanian - haja (universal), hallå (informal), go'da (formal), go'maren (morning), go'aften (evening)

Senegal - salamaleikum

Serbian - zdravo (informal), dobro jutro (morning, pronounced dobro yutro), dobar dan (afternoon), dobro veče (pronounced dobro vetchay evening), laku noć (night)

Sinhala - a`yubowan (pronounced ar-yu-bo-wan; meaning "long live")

Slovak - dobrý deň (formal), ahoj (pronounced ahoy), čau (pronounced chow) and dobrý (informal abbreviation)

Slovenian — živjo (informal; pronounced zhivyo), dobro jutro (morning), dober dan (afternoon), dober večer (evening; pronounced doh-bear vetch-air)

South African English - hoezit (pronounced howzit; informal)

Spanish - hola (pronounced with a silent 'h': o-la),

Sulka - marot (morning; pronounced mah-rote , mavlemas (afternoon; v is pronounced as a fricative b), masegin (evening; g is pronounced as a fricative)

Swahili - jambo, Habari (hello)

Swedish - tja (very informal; pronounced sha), hej (informal; pronounced hey), god dag (formal)

Swiss German - grüzi (pronounced grew-tsi)

Tahitian - ia orana

Tamil - vanakkam

Telugu- namaskaram

Tetum (Timor - Leste) - bondia (morning), botarde (afternoon), bonite (evening)

Thai - sawa dee-ka (said by a female), sawa dee-krap (said by a male)

Tongan - malo e lelei

Tsonga (South Africa) - minjhani (when greeting adults), kunjhani (when greeting your peer group or your juniors)

Turkish - merhaba (formal), nevar? (Informal)

Ukranian - dobriy ranok (formal; morning), dobriy den (formal; afternoon), dobriy vechir (formal; evening), pryvit (informal)

Uzbek - Assalomu Alay Assalamualaikum
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Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Basics Blogging Tips - Introduction to Blogging

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Starting a new blog is difficult and this can put many people off, there are then other people who have blogs with no comments or visits. You want to stand out from this crowd of millions of bloggers, you want to be one of the few hundred thousand blogs that are actually visited. So here are some simple tips to help you on your way to blogging mastery:

  1. Post regularly, but don't post if you have nothing worth posting about.
  2. Stick with only a few specific genres to talk about.
  3. Don't put 'subscribe' and 'vote me' links all over the front page until you have people that like your blog enough to ignore them (they're usually just in the way).
  4. Use a clean and simple theme if at all possible.
  5. Enjoy, blog for fun, comment on other peoples' blogs (as they normally visit back).
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Nur Rachmat
Nur Rachmat, B.Sc P&O, Prosthetist Orthotist, Professional pembuat Kaki Palsu, Tangan Palsu, Prosthesis Orthosis, dan ALat bantu orang Cacat, Alumni PIPOS (Pakistan Institute of Prosthetic & Orthotic Sciences. untuk pemesanan atau info Kaki palsu dan alat kesehatan yang lain.. hungi saya di nurrachmat@gmail.com atau 0856420-45678
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