my favourite Christmas present
Wednesday December 30th 2009, 9:24 am
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All,
Hearth
My favourite Christmas present this year was from my youngest son.
He likes to make things (especially if it doesn’t cost anything). And also leaves things to the last minute. So on Christmas Eve afternoon he was running around, trying to find a blank CD at home. He didn’t say what for. I didn’t suspect anything.
I couldn’t find one, so he disappeared back into his room, and played with his laptop a bit more. Stayed up late.
On Christmas Day (after finally getting out of bed at 09:30!) he showed me what he’d made.
A powerpoint presentation set to music, of lots of loving, kissing pictures. Mostly free pictures with watermarks that he’d downloaded from Google, they were soppy pictures like Minnie and Mickey mouse kissing.
At one point the music got out of sync, so he improvised on the spot, republished it without sound, and played the music direct from his iTunes account. Very resourceful.
But I couldn’t get over the fact that he had done for fun, what they had been paying me to do at work last week, synchronising sound (and voiceovers) to powerpoint presentations.
(Yes, his copy is legal. I bought him the student version of Office for his Mac, as thats what they use at school).
We should subcontract to him – its much better than waiting for the local papershop to give him the paper-run, after 2 years of being on the waiting list and then seeing them advertise the next street (Cumberland Newspapers – you are sooo disorganised!).
I went into his room yesterday (you have to be brave), and he was there on his laptop, with two other laptops next to him. “I fix things” he said. Although the fan problems on the Lenovo were beyond him, and the battery problems on the Thinkpad. But he happily wiped them, to use them as backups.
Scott, you’ve got a great future ahead of you in IT.
Christmas Events
Sunday December 06th 2009, 5:56 pm
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All
Shameless plug alert.
Just wanted to publicise the fact that I have a Christmas Events page, where people can list their public events such as Christmas Tree Lighting, Carols by Candlelight, Christmas Markets, Church services, etc.
You can search by event type and suburb, so if you’re looking for your closest carols by candlelight, feel welcome to drop in.
Springcleaning affiliate websites
Sunday December 06th 2009, 5:46 pm
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All,
Shopping
The ideal website would be one you could create and leave, letting it chug along earning money, not having to go back and update it.
Unfortunately, those sites are pretty mythical.
Even if you take the lazy man’s approach to earning money online, building websites with affiliate links on them (so that someone else has to fulfil the sales), they still need maintenance.
I have an Online Shopping site that basically lists online shops in Australia.
A lot of the links (apart from shops that I have used and trust), come from two of the main affiliate companies in Australia. I’ll only name my favourite – www.clixgalore.com.au.
This weekend I spent around 4 hours doing spring cleaning, individually going through each link on My Online Shops, double checking that the online shop it linked to, still existed. I’ve still only done a quarter of the sites, so there are many more hours ahead of me.I was surprised and annoyed at how many shops I had to delete from my directory.
I deleted around 40 shops. About half of those, simply no longer existed. I assume the global financial crisis hit them badly, and they went out of business. “Factors outside our control” seemed to be the usual excuse. If the URL even still worked.
But around 20 were shops that no longer were listed at the original affiliate company. Many no longer offered an affiliate link, but a surprisingly large number had transferred their affiliate management to good old clixgalore.
Whilst checking the links, I could imagine that the slow speed of the other affiliate company was a factor. Many times I clicked on a link, and it took ages for the affiliate company to redirect to the online shop. Definitely a deterrent to sales. I had absolutely no sales during November for the slow affiliate company, and a large number for clixgalore.
Apart from maintaining the existing links from the slow affiliate company (simply because they do still have a few good shops there), I will no longer waste my time adding new shops from their lists. On the surface, it seems that their servers aren’t coping, that they sign up shop that can’t last through a downturn, and they send so many emails, that it’s not worth reading them. And so I miss out on the important emails that would have told me which shops or promotions were no longer active.
Long live clixgalore!