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10 Things You Should Try To Barter For Before Buying 
        1. Information Products - it could be ebooks, "how to" videos, cassettes,  magazines, newsletters, paid e-zines, courses, etc.
  2. Advertising Space - it could be banner ads, ezine ads, ebook ads, magazine ads, newspaper ads, tv... 
 
How to Accept Online Payments Without a Merchant Account 
If you operate a small business from your home and have been thinking of moving it online to take advantage of a "global audience," this article is for you.  A lot of people I talk to are hesitant to start selling online due to the "red tape" of... 
 
Introduction to Affiliate Marketing 
What is Affiliate marketing? Affiliate marketing is also synonymous with the following terms: associate marketing, associate programs, bounty programs, revenue-sharing, referral and partnership programs.   Originating in the USA several years ago... 
 
Marketing Tourism Online, part one: The Basics 
 This is part one of an article series which will introduce some basic strategies, considerations, elements, and techniques for marketing tourism products online. We plan to update and refine these articles as situations change and when we have new... 
 
Tool Talk: All About Internet Marketing Tools 
Who doesn't want inexpensive internet marketing tools? In this
day and age when advertising your business online is the way to
go, it's a must that you avail of internet marketing tools at
the lowest cost possible. How can you avail of them? How... 
 
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			Search the Web More Efficiently: Tips, Techniques and Strategies (Part I)
  
				 Search the Web More Efficiently: Tips, Techniques and Strategies (Part I)   By Daniel Bazac - November 6, 2003 Copyright © 2003. All Rights Reserved.   Studies show that after email, searching the Web is the most  popular activity on the Internet. Searching is easy; finding  what you're looking for can sometimes be difficult.  Hopefully the advice below will make your next Web search a  breeze.    Do you really need the Web?   Before using the Web to search for information, you'll have  to ask yourself if the Web is the most appropriate medium to  use to find your information. You can find a florist shop in  your neighborhood faster by using the local, printed Yellow  Pages instead of using the Web. And sometimes a library can  give you better, more comprehensive answers than the Web.    However, in most of the cases, the best and fastest way to  find information is... a Web search.    Obviously, the first thing you need to search the Web is a  computer with Internet access.    Before really starting your search, you'll have to decide  which browser you are going to use. As a reminder, a  browser, according to WhatIs.com is a program "that  provides a way to look at and interact with all the  information on the World Wide Web." You can select a  popular browser such as Explorer, Netscape, Mozilla or Opera  or you can use an alternative browser. My favorite: Avant  Browser. (I have NO connection with them) Keep in mind that some browsers are faster or have  more options. You can download these browsers from their  companies' web sites.    Tools for searching the Web   There are many search tools available: search engines,  subject directories / virtual libraries, invisible (deep)  web databases, meta search engines, etc.    A search engine is a keyword searchable database of Internet  files that uses a software program to continually scour the  Web. The resulting information is then indexed and stored in  its database.    My favorite search engines are:   * Google™ [ http://www.google.com/ ] * AlltheWeb [ http://www.alltheweb.com/ ] * MSN [ http://www.msn.com/ ]  * Teoma [ http://www.teoma.com/ ] * AltaVista [ http://www.altavista.com/ ] * WiseNut [ http://www.wisenut.com/ ]   A subject directory (web directory) is a searchable  collection of Web pages gathered, selected and organized by  human editors into hierarchically subject categories. A  virtual library is a web directory that includes highly  selective links, chosen mostly by librarians.    Web directories cover a much smaller proportion of the Web  but using them will bring you more highly relevant results.  The largest web directories index a few million pages  compared with the billions of pages indexed by some major  search engines.    Remember that the web directories - like the search engines  - do not search the Web directly. Instead, they search their  own databases of indexed Web pages. Also, be aware that  directories might not be up-to-date. Some search engines are  in fact hybrid search tools because they are both search  engines and web directories. (Google™, for example, has a  search engine and a directory, powered by Open Directory  Project)    Some widely used web directories are:   * Google™ Directory [ http://directory.google.com/ ] * Open Directory Project (ODP) [ http://www.dmoz.org/ ] * Yahoo! [  
				
				
 
				 http://www.yahoo.com/ ] * Zeal [ http://www.zeal.com/ ] * JoeAnt [ http://www.joeant.com/ ] * Gimpsy [ http://www.gimpsy.com/ ]   Popular virtual libraries include:   * Librarians' Index to the Internet [ http://www.lii.org/ ] * Internet Public Library [ http://www.ipl.org/ ] * The WWW Virtual Library [ http://www.vlib.org/ ] * Internet Scout Project [ http://www.scout.wisc.edu/Archives/ ] * BUBL Link [ http://www.bubl.ac.uk/ ]   The so-called invisible (deep) web is a collection of online  information stored in live databases accessible on the Web  but not indexed by traditional search engines. Examples of  excellent invisible web databases are:   * ProFusion [ http://www.profusion.com/ ] * Invisible-web.net [ http://www.invisible-web.net/ ] * Complete Planet [ http://www.completeplanet.com/ ] * Resource Discovery Network [ http://www.rdn.ac.uk/ ] * direct search (Gary Price) [ http://www.freepint.com/gary/direct.htm ]   A meta search engine (also known as metacrawler or  multithreaded engine) is a search tool that sends your query  simultaneously to several search engines, web directories  and sometimes to the so-called invisible (deep) web. After  collecting the results, the meta search engine removes the  duplicate links and - according to its algorithm - will  combine and rank the results into a single merged list.    Because most of the meta search engines take only the top 10  or 20 from each search engine, you can expect excellent  results, "la crème de la crème."    But be aware that because some search engines and web  directories do not support advanced searching techniques -  such as quotation marks to enclose phrases or Boolean  operators - no results from those search engines will appear  in the meta search engines' results list when those  techniques are used.    Remember, meta search engines do not maintain their own  databases and therefore cannot accept web site submissions.    The best meta search engines are:   * ez2Find [ http://www.ez2find.com/ ] * Vivisimo [ http://www.vivisimo.com/ ] * InfoGrid [ http://www.infogrid.com/ ] * Infonetware [ http://www.infonetware.com/ ] * iBoogie [ http://www.iboogie.com/ ]   A special kind of meta search engine is the search utility  (also called desktop search programs or client-side search  software). Unlike the web-based meta search engines listed  above, search utilities are software programs that you  download to your computer. The most popular are:    * Copernic [ http://www.copernic.com/en/index.html ] * Arrow Search [ http://www.rt-software.co.uk/arrow_search/ ] * SearchRocket [ http://www.searchrocket.com/ ] * WebFerret [ http://www.ferretsoft.com/index.html ] * ProtoSearch [ http://www.npccenterprises.com/products.shtml ]   Meta search engines are excellent tools, but they do not  eliminate the need for search engines.    For more about meta search engines, see my article: The Meta  Search Engines: A Web Searcher's Best Friends.
  Please see Part II.
  About the Author 
 Daniel Bazac is the Search Engine Marketer for  Web Design in New York [ http://www.web-design-in-new-york.com ],  a site design, search engine optimization and promotion company.  He also maintains Bazac Weblog [ http://www.bazac.blogspot.com/ ]  a blog about the search engines and search engine marketing news and  articles. He can be reached at mailto:danielbazac@hotmail.com .
  
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