Facebook: $750 Mil in Hand Worth More than $2Bil in Sky

Nov 2nd, 2008 Posted in Business | no comment »
facebook
Joseph Pratt asked:


It came up conversationally, but I believe I’m the only person at my company to have firsthand experience as a user of Facebook.com. It was kind of funny to have all these online advertising professionals asking me all about the website everybody used in college. Didn’t they get the memo? I’m new. I should be asking the questions around here. The subject of Facebook.com is an interesting one that’s worth a closer look.

Without question 2005 was the year of MySpace. Before Rupert Murdoch’s $580 million social networking venture took the interactive world by storm, it’s difficult to believe that even the most optimistic of the billionaire’s lackeys would have predicted that new acquisition would more than quadruple its reach within a matter of months. With 23.5 billion page views by February, MySpace became the second most trafficked site on the Internet.

Murdoch’s success naturally generated buying interest in anything deemed online social networking. One proposed deal in March 2006, was Viacom’s unsuccessful $750 million bid for Facebook.com, the phenomenon started by wunderkind Mark Zuckerberg. After Facebook.com declined the offer, its founders pegged Facebook.com’s worth at two billion dollars. Perhaps the brilliant sparks from MySpace’s success has blinded Facebook.com to the flipside reality of Friendster’s paradise lost. There’s a real chance Facebook won’t see an offer this generous again.

Facebook.com is essentially an online medium of communication for college students and high schoolers. For its valued reach Zuckerberg and his crew of Harvard dropouts (taking their cue from Bill Gates, no doubt) must be looking for Google-sized compensation, but the two billion dollar figure is arbitrary and difficult to justify. Perhaps Facebook is emboldened by their own wise decision in not selling to Yahoo for $15 million in 2004.

Zuckerberg was likely trying to establish a market value for his creation, not an unwise move on the face of things. However, Viacom’s offer was not by any stretch of the imagination pocket change and the number of entities that can and will double the bid Facebook already got is finite.

Facebook’s traffic numbers, as referenced on Alexa.com, during the last three months are not encouraging; that is, if the goal is to fish for more and greater buyout bids. The numbers actually have trended downward since March, anathema for enticing hyper bidding growth. These diminishing statistics can be at least partially attributed to the cyclical nature of the school year since Facebook, after all, is geared towards the college student. It doesn’t matter how great the product is, it won’t keep students from doing their own thing during summer vacation and this yearly dip is potentially damaging.

Seeing as how fast online fads can expand and contract in social networking as we’ve seen in its short time span, what if the numbers don’t come back? What if something new pops up in two months that steals Facebook’s thunder? (And, again, MySpace’s success serves as good reason why this thunder is worth stealing.)

Facebook.com’s success has also been marred with some controversy that could taint its popularity with students. At Syracuse University a flap over freedom of expression ensued when a Facebook.com group went overboard in critiquing a student teacher and ended up with expulsions from the class and social suspension before three students transferred. After Penn State’s football team beat Ohio State this year students rushed the field and made a ruckus. Overwhelmed police made only two arrests that day, but later in the week they logged onto Facebook.com and, like Canadian Mounties who always get their man, got plenty of names and faces and photos from the info posted by students about their on-field shenanigans. Kids talk and these stories spread like wildfire, which may affect Facebook.com negatively – they can’t control misuse of their product and the negative repercussions that come from it.

The future is promising for the social networking business space and I don’t believe Facebook.com is doomed. Still, given the nature of short-lived and over-hyped dotcoms, Facebook may have reached their growth climax this school year, with possibility for expansion and success only contingent on acquisition. Time may not be on their side because as the pages of the calendar turn there will doubtlessly be new fads and trends that will threaten to m



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Using Social Networking Sites Such as Facebook, Myspace, Friendster, and Others. What are They and How are They Used?

Nov 2nd, 2008 Posted in Business | no comment »
facebook
Stig Kristoffersen asked:


Learn about using social networking sites such as Facebook, MySpace, Friendster, and others. What are they and how are they used?

A small but rapidly growing percentage of employers are using social networking sites as part of their recruiting process as well as part of their business processes.

Social networking sites can be dangerous when used as part of a background checking process but present tremendous opportunities when used as part of the sourcing process.

MySpace, Facebook, and Friendster are amongst the most popular sites, especially amongst high school and college students. Unlike most sites where even regular visitors spend at most minutes a week and look at a handful of pages, visitors to social networking sites often invest hours a day at the sites, viewing, and disclose a tremendous amount of information about themselves and their friends.

On-line recruiting expert Steven Rothberg of CollegeRecruiter.com career site has tried to demystify social networking sites and demonstrate the tremendous risks and opportunities they present to employers in articles he has written. The articles are recommended for people who want to find out more about these sites and their scopes and opportunities, both positive and negative sides.

We realize that more and more companies use Facebook for a reference check amongst new hires candidates. Whether this is positive or not, whether it is ethical or not is not the discussion here, but we should ask ourselves. Has our private sphere become to public, and do we have a responsibility ourselves as individuals to protect our private information if we do not want some elements of society to use them against us? My personal answer is that we should be careful with information publicized in sites like Facebook. Both legal as well as illegal companies and individuals can use the information on Facebook if it serves their purpose. Therefore the trap for us as individuals could be that we open up for big brother syndrome ourselves, without thinking of the consequences of this.

Serena Software uses Facebook as part of their intranet. 800 employees in 18 countries. Facebook is the frontend of their intranet with links to a cheap CMS system that is beind their firewall. It all started with Facebook Friday. The management in Serena Software encouraged their workers to use one hour every Friday to update their profile on Faceboook and create relations to collegues, customers and partners, friends and family. So Facebook acts as a front end with a CMS in the back end where links to confidential documents behind the firewall is performed. The process of change in Serena Software was focused on web 2.0. 35% of their 800 coworkers 800 does virtual work together. The management wanted that these coworkers should know each other better and get to the same understanding, make relations and feel engagement in the company’s activities. Facebook is free and a good web 2.0 sofware, so it fell natural for Serena to use this application as part of their intranet. They made privat groups for the employees on Faceboook and developed some simple programs for the intranet. Then they made links to relevant documents inside the firewall and therefore secure.The make press releases on Facebook and the human relationship department makes links to relevant information sources. This way the employees learns not only about the documents, but also about their coworkers behind the documents.

Some customers communicates today with Serena Software through Facebook. These customers does not use e-mail anymore. The relations between the customers and the coworkers in Serena Software has become stronger, since they know each other very well on a personal level Both employees in Serena Software as well as the customers updates their profiles on a regular basis and tell each others what they do, so it creates a stronger bond through Facebook.

Serena also use Facebook to recruit employees to the company. Potential coworkers knows about Serenas cooperation tools and therefore easy can get in touch with the environment and potential decision makers easier, Serena will know about the candidates since they also updates their Facebook on a regular basis and therefore latest news around this person is known.

Ernst & Young hires more than 5,500 college students and recent graduates pr year for internships and entry level career opportunities, only in North America alone. In addition to the traditional on-campus recruiting efforts, employee referrals, and advertising on job boards and other media, Ernst&Young now has a page on Facebook, which is one of the most popular social networking sites amongst college students.

Ernst &Young’s sponsored Facebook page contains information and discussion boards aimed at college students. Although students and other individuals use Facebook for free, Ernst&Young’s paid an undisclosed fee to Facebook as their page is more like advertising than it is to a traditional Facebook profile page. The risk of this is of course that there could be negative comments posted to their page by students and other individuals who use Facebook and even enabling people who don’t like Ernst &Young to connect more easily and perhaps allow their negative views to be more widely disseminated.

The price paid for the presence on Facebook is only part of the true cost, since Ernst & Young will have to take the costs related to the tremendous amount of staff time required to properly maintain a Facebook page. If they are not responsive to students who contact them through the page, they will look out-of-touch and do more harm to their brand than good.

Ernst & Young’s page is the first sponsored page on Facebook that is used exclusively for recruitment purposes. Other organizations such as Microsoft have pages that include information about their hiring efforts, but this is the first time that an organization’s Facebook page has been only about their efforts to hire college students who are searching for internships and recent graduates who are hunting for entry level jobs and other career opportunities.

So far about over 5000 Facebook users have linked to the Ernst & Young page as members. Once you have a Facebook profile, you can search for people or organizations which are of interest to you. You can find the Ernst & Young page by typing in Ernst and Young (without the quotation marks) into the Facebook search engine. Facebook then gives you the option of becoming a member of the Ernst & Young page and you can accept this. That’s all it takes. Now Ernst & Young’s recruiters will be able to review your profile. If you are a college junior or senior with a high GPA in a program such as business, finance, or accounting, the phone would probably be ringing right now.

This is probably a brilliant move by Ernst & Young. This is a big step towards Ernst & Young becoming more transparent. It also sends a powerful message to students that Ernst & Young is listening to their needs, wants, and desires. Recruiters who tell highly qualified candidates that they must apply through traditional channels will lose those candidates if those candidates want to connect through newer channels such as Facebook because those candidates have options and they know it.

Other companies such as Opera software has also adopted Facebook as a part of their business and uses it actively for various purposes.



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Facebook: $750 Mil in Hand Worth More than $2Bil in Sky

Nov 1st, 2008 Posted in Business | no comment »
facebook
Joseph Pratt asked:


It came up conversationally, but I believe I’m the only person at my company to have firsthand experience as a user of Facebook.com. It was kind of funny to have all these online advertising professionals asking me all about the website everybody used in college. Didn’t they get the memo? I’m new. I should be asking the questions around here. The subject of Facebook.com is an interesting one that’s worth a closer look.

Without question 2005 was the year of MySpace. Before Rupert Murdoch’s $580 million social networking venture took the interactive world by storm, it’s difficult to believe that even the most optimistic of the billionaire’s lackeys would have predicted that new acquisition would more than quadruple its reach within a matter of months. With 23.5 billion page views by February, MySpace became the second most trafficked site on the Internet.

Murdoch’s success naturally generated buying interest in anything deemed online social networking. One proposed deal in March 2006, was Viacom’s unsuccessful $750 million bid for Facebook.com, the phenomenon started by wunderkind Mark Zuckerberg. After Facebook.com declined the offer, its founders pegged Facebook.com’s worth at two billion dollars. Perhaps the brilliant sparks from MySpace’s success has blinded Facebook.com to the flipside reality of Friendster’s paradise lost. There’s a real chance Facebook won’t see an offer this generous again.

Facebook.com is essentially an online medium of communication for college students and high schoolers. For its valued reach Zuckerberg and his crew of Harvard dropouts (taking their cue from Bill Gates, no doubt) must be looking for Google-sized compensation, but the two billion dollar figure is arbitrary and difficult to justify. Perhaps Facebook is emboldened by their own wise decision in not selling to Yahoo for $15 million in 2004.

Zuckerberg was likely trying to establish a market value for his creation, not an unwise move on the face of things. However, Viacom’s offer was not by any stretch of the imagination pocket change and the number of entities that can and will double the bid Facebook already got is finite.

Facebook’s traffic numbers, as referenced on Alexa.com, during the last three months are not encouraging; that is, if the goal is to fish for more and greater buyout bids. The numbers actually have trended downward since March, anathema for enticing hyper bidding growth. These diminishing statistics can be at least partially attributed to the cyclical nature of the school year since Facebook, after all, is geared towards the college student. It doesn’t matter how great the product is, it won’t keep students from doing their own thing during summer vacation and this yearly dip is potentially damaging.

Seeing as how fast online fads can expand and contract in social networking as we’ve seen in its short time span, what if the numbers don’t come back? What if something new pops up in two months that steals Facebook’s thunder? (And, again, MySpace’s success serves as good reason why this thunder is worth stealing.)

Facebook.com’s success has also been marred with some controversy that could taint its popularity with students. At Syracuse University a flap over freedom of expression ensued when a Facebook.com group went overboard in critiquing a student teacher and ended up with expulsions from the class and social suspension before three students transferred. After Penn State’s football team beat Ohio State this year students rushed the field and made a ruckus. Overwhelmed police made only two arrests that day, but later in the week they logged onto Facebook.com and, like Canadian Mounties who always get their man, got plenty of names and faces and photos from the info posted by students about their on-field shenanigans. Kids talk and these stories spread like wildfire, which may affect Facebook.com negatively – they can’t control misuse of their product and the negative repercussions that come from it.

The future is promising for the social networking business space and I don’t believe Facebook.com is doomed. Still, given the nature of short-lived and over-hyped dotcoms, Facebook may have reached their growth climax this school year, with possibility for expansion and success only contingent on acquisition. Time may not be on their side because as the pages of the calendar turn there will doubtlessly be new fads and trends that will threaten to m



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Facebook: $750 Mil in Hand Worth More than $2Bil in Sky

Nov 1st, 2008 Posted in Business | no comment »
facebook
Joseph Pratt asked:


It came up conversationally, but I believe I’m the only person at my company to have firsthand experience as a user of Facebook.com. It was kind of funny to have all these online advertising professionals asking me all about the website everybody used in college. Didn’t they get the memo? I’m new. I should be asking the questions around here. The subject of Facebook.com is an interesting one that’s worth a closer look.

Without question 2005 was the year of MySpace. Before Rupert Murdoch’s $580 million social networking venture took the interactive world by storm, it’s difficult to believe that even the most optimistic of the billionaire’s lackeys would have predicted that new acquisition would more than quadruple its reach within a matter of months. With 23.5 billion page views by February, MySpace became the second most trafficked site on the Internet.

Murdoch’s success naturally generated buying interest in anything deemed online social networking. One proposed deal in March 2006, was Viacom’s unsuccessful $750 million bid for Facebook.com, the phenomenon started by wunderkind Mark Zuckerberg. After Facebook.com declined the offer, its founders pegged Facebook.com’s worth at two billion dollars. Perhaps the brilliant sparks from MySpace’s success has blinded Facebook.com to the flipside reality of Friendster’s paradise lost. There’s a real chance Facebook won’t see an offer this generous again.

Facebook.com is essentially an online medium of communication for college students and high schoolers. For its valued reach Zuckerberg and his crew of Harvard dropouts (taking their cue from Bill Gates, no doubt) must be looking for Google-sized compensation, but the two billion dollar figure is arbitrary and difficult to justify. Perhaps Facebook is emboldened by their own wise decision in not selling to Yahoo for $15 million in 2004.

Zuckerberg was likely trying to establish a market value for his creation, not an unwise move on the face of things. However, Viacom’s offer was not by any stretch of the imagination pocket change and the number of entities that can and will double the bid Facebook already got is finite.

Facebook’s traffic numbers, as referenced on Alexa.com, during the last three months are not encouraging; that is, if the goal is to fish for more and greater buyout bids. The numbers actually have trended downward since March, anathema for enticing hyper bidding growth. These diminishing statistics can be at least partially attributed to the cyclical nature of the school year since Facebook, after all, is geared towards the college student. It doesn’t matter how great the product is, it won’t keep students from doing their own thing during summer vacation and this yearly dip is potentially damaging.

Seeing as how fast online fads can expand and contract in social networking as we’ve seen in its short time span, what if the numbers don’t come back? What if something new pops up in two months that steals Facebook’s thunder? (And, again, MySpace’s success serves as good reason why this thunder is worth stealing.)

Facebook.com’s success has also been marred with some controversy that could taint its popularity with students. At Syracuse University a flap over freedom of expression ensued when a Facebook.com group went overboard in critiquing a student teacher and ended up with expulsions from the class and social suspension before three students transferred. After Penn State’s football team beat Ohio State this year students rushed the field and made a ruckus. Overwhelmed police made only two arrests that day, but later in the week they logged onto Facebook.com and, like Canadian Mounties who always get their man, got plenty of names and faces and photos from the info posted by students about their on-field shenanigans. Kids talk and these stories spread like wildfire, which may affect Facebook.com negatively – they can’t control misuse of their product and the negative repercussions that come from it.

The future is promising for the social networking business space and I don’t believe Facebook.com is doomed. Still, given the nature of short-lived and over-hyped dotcoms, Facebook may have reached their growth climax this school year, with possibility for expansion and success only contingent on acquisition. Time may not be on their side because as the pages of the calendar turn there will doubtlessly be new fads and trends that will threaten to m



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5 Tips for Pimping your Myspace Page

Oct 19th, 2008 Posted in Business | no comment »
myspace graphics
Tony Norella asked:


5 Tips For Pimping your MySpace Page

by Tony Norella

I started FreeDiskSpace to help me Pimp out My Space and now you can use it to Jazz up your Site. We add new graphics and layouts every day so there is always something fresh at FreeDiskSpace.com.

1. Choose from Hundreds of Pre-Made Backgrounds

Save yourself the hassle and choose from hundreds of pre-made MySpace Layouts. Everything from Pool Balls, to Movie Stars, to Creatives.

2. Make your Own Layout

Not finding exactly what you need? Then make your own MySpace Layout with our easy to use Layout Generator.

3. Choose the coolest graphics

The coolest MySpace graphics can be found at FreeDiskSpace.com. Everything from Eyeball Graphics, to Customer Graphics, to Car Graphics and much more.

4. Special Codes

Tweak your site with special MySpace codes, like falling objects and scrolling text.

5. Add Videos

We have hundreds of cool MySpace Videos for you to add to your site.

Thanks for taking the time to read this short article and enjoy all the free stuff that you can grab from our site.

Tony Norella is the owner of over 100 Internet Web Businesses and started FreeDiskSpace to give MySpace Users one place to go to get everything they need to Pimp out their My Spaces. Visit http://www.FreeDiskSpace.com

http://www.freediskspace.com



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Myspace Layouts and Backgrounds

Oct 10th, 2008 Posted in Business | no comment »
myspace
Groshan Fabiola asked:


MySpace is a social networking web site which offers a network of personal profiles, blogs, friends, groups, music photos and videos. This network is both interactive and user-submitted. MySpace is reportedly the fifth most popular website in English, and also in top ten of the most popular websites in any language. Its popularity in the United States ranks it among the top five websites, and it is known to have topped the charts quite often. MySpace has become very influential of the popular culture of our times, and it receives about eighty percent of all visits to online social networking websites.

If you have a MySpace profile, but you are displeased with it because it basically looks like everyone else’s, you have the possibility to modify the default layout. MySpace layout and backgrounds can be customized with a simple trick, such as adding hidden HTML code to your profile. If have some knowledge of CSS and HTML, you can try different background images and color themes. On the other hand, if messing with HTML and CSS is too much for you, you can always use one of the numerous MySpace customizing tools that you can find on the web, and which make it quite easy to customize your layout. If you use any of the major search engines to look for MySpace layouts or MySpace backgrounds, you’ll find thousands of websites that can help you with your problem.

The offer of MySpace layouts is huge. However, it can be quite confusing to find the place for the CSS code in order to make your area look just the way you want it. Fortunately, there are web site that provide assistance in doing that, so as to be able to launch into bigger MySpace things. Your profile can be customized with some of the many MySpace layouts or MySpace backgrounds.

Basically, it’s like this: when you have found something you like in MySpace layouts, all you have to do is to click “Preview It” and you will be shown a live preview. If you decide to take that, just get the MySpace layout codes. Then, you have to paste the code into your MySpace profile, in your “About Me” section. Should you find any MySpace layouts that are not working, you are requested to send an email to that everything can be restored.

The MySpace layouts fall into so many categories that your choice is most likely going to be a tough one. You can choose from abstract, animal ,Asian, sports, games, celebrity, Christmas, cartoons, fashion, flowers, nature, retro, stars, stripes, and many, many more. There are MySpace layouts for guys and for girls. You can choose from the brands MySpace layouts, such as Louis Vuitton, or others. If you like, you have a choice of sexy MySpace layouts, such as Playboy. Should any of these categories appeal to you, you still have the possibility to choose from the uncategorized MySpace layouts.

The choice for MySpace Backgrounds is not as varied, but if you take into consideration the fact that you can use any of those images together with MySpace backgrounds, there are tons of possibilities. So, don’t waste a minute longer, and customize your profile with MySpace layouts and backgrounds!

If you are looking for a nice myspace layout or a myspace background please visit http://www.killacodes.com



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Businesses Come to Myspace

Oct 5th, 2008 Posted in Business | no comment »
myspace
Zinn Jeremiah asked:


MySpaces notoriety is truly phenomenal. MySpace is familiar, literally, to people in every corner of the world. This level of recognition might seem to be something admirable or coveted. Further thought about things however might bring about a different perspective. Time and again famously popular brands have seen their appeal plummet back to earth. Theres a fine line in other words between popularity and overexposure. It seems that at some point, people just get plain tired of seeing or hearing about the same old thing.

In the case of MySpace, what was once mostly a virtual gathering spot for teens has been covered from every different angle by the mass media. The media came and told MySpace’s story to millions of people throughout the world. This is the nature of the media, after all. The appearance of the media in MySpace land however may have given core MySpace users the impression that their territory had been intruded upon, and even sold out to mainstream interests.

The feeling of MySpace going corporate may have left a particularly significant impression on MySpace users. Burger King and WalMart, two big companies if there ever were any, once had profiles on MySpace. Both profiles have since been abandoned and at least in WalMart?s particular case their MySpace profile seems to have been removed in response to bad publicity. It seems many MySpace users were not happy with WalMart?s presence on MySpace, and expressed as much through harsh comments left on WalMart?s MySpace profile. So the profile is now gone.

The WalMart scenario may have been a lesson not just that for that company, but for MySpace as well. MySpace has apparently been surpassed in popularity by Facebook, the networking site explicitly for students. Is this due to the general feeling that MySpace had become overrun and corrupted by commercial interests? It?s a possibility certainly. It?s notable that Facebook does show advertising, but under the Facebook format corporate profiles are not allowed: not yet anyway. Perhaps users of any online site have accepted seeing advertising, but not the notion of embracing advertisers as regular members of the community.

All of this isn?t to suggest that MySpace is now somehow irrelevant: there are still hundreds of millions of MySpace profiles, and almost certainly millions and millions of MySpace members. But if there is something to be taken from the response to corporate presences on MySpace it may be that business sites should be presented with a light touch and without an obvious motivation to increase sales or to generate publicity. As with any other community, becoming an accepted part of MySpace takes time and a respectful effort.



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Friendswin Says Its the Next Myspace?

Oct 5th, 2008 Posted in Business | no comment »
hi5
Timothy McGaffin asked:


FriendsWin makes two claims. First, it claims to be the next MySpace and second, Friends Win claims it will create millionaires because it will pay you on your entire social netowork.

Social networking sites like MySpace, Facebook or Hi5 for example have high market value because millions of dollars in ad revenue are generated by the constant flow of traffic from around the world.

Since these social networking sites generate so much traffic, they also generate tons of money in advertising revenue. This makes these kinds of communication platform sites lucrative to the owners.

How many times have you gone to My Space and seen ads from dating sites such as Match.com or E-Harmony etc. or flash banners advertising a new movie coming out or a musician’s new compact disc for example.

Social networking sites are a major money-making trend in the world’s economy right now.

Well, let’s look at the social networking site called FriendsWin and their two claims of becoming the next MySpace and creating millionaires and see if its justified.

1) What Is FriendsWin?

It is a site that pays you on your entire list of friends and contacts. Each member pays $9.97 a month and earns commissions off of every other member they are connected to directly and indirectly.

2) Will People Choose To Join Another Social Network?

Social networking sites like MySpace, Facebook and Hi5 among others are growing at a rate of 89% a year automatically, then we would have to assume the same growth trend would hold true for others such as Friends Win.

But what are the reasons someone would join a social networking site where they pay $9.97.97 a month where they could just get the same services for free somewhere else?

3) Your Products

Along with all of the other features that the other networks offer, Friends Win has additional features in the fields of video communication such as video dating, video resume and video business conferencing.

Friends Win brings together the four largest trends in the world right now into one communication platform which means it is a communication model that will bring in a lot of money.

These trends are, social networking, online dating, the employment industry, and the Internet home-based business industry.

4) Your Compensation Plan

The compensation plan in your Friends Win opportunity will focus mainly on a 5×8 Super Matrix.

This is not a so-called pyramid scheme but a systematic matrix structured so all members get paid on their entire networks of contacts and friends.

Each member starts with 5 people on the first level and proceeds down by multiples of 5 until you reach the eighth tier with 390,625 possible members.

So are the two claims that FriendsWin make as far as being the next MySpace and creating millionaires valid? We’ll just have to watch and see.



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5 Tips for Pimping your Myspace Page

Oct 3rd, 2008 Posted in Business | no comment »
myspace graphics
Tony Norella asked:


5 Tips For Pimping your MySpace Page

by Tony Norella

I started FreeDiskSpace to help me Pimp out My Space and now you can use it to Jazz up your Site. We add new graphics and layouts every day so there is always something fresh at FreeDiskSpace.com.

1. Choose from Hundreds of Pre-Made Backgrounds

Save yourself the hassle and choose from hundreds of pre-made MySpace Layouts. Everything from Pool Balls, to Movie Stars, to Creatives.

2. Make your Own Layout

Not finding exactly what you need? Then make your own MySpace Layout with our easy to use Layout Generator.

3. Choose the coolest graphics

The coolest MySpace graphics can be found at FreeDiskSpace.com. Everything from Eyeball Graphics, to Customer Graphics, to Car Graphics and much more.

4. Special Codes

Tweak your site with special MySpace codes, like falling objects and scrolling text.

5. Add Videos

We have hundreds of cool MySpace Videos for you to add to your site.

Thanks for taking the time to read this short article and enjoy all the free stuff that you can grab from our site.

Tony Norella is the owner of over 100 Internet Web Businesses and started FreeDiskSpace to give MySpace Users one place to go to get everything they need to Pimp out their My Spaces. Visit http://www.FreeDiskSpace.com

http://www.freediskspace.com



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Discover the Greatest Myspace Graphics

Oct 1st, 2008 Posted in Business | no comment »
myspace graphics
Groshan Fabiola asked:


Welcome to the world of MySpace, a place where you can meet, greet, network, and make a ton of new friends. Perhaps you are here to boost some business; perhaps you are here to just hang out. Whatever your purpose is in MySpace, it will not take you long to see the success you are looking for if you have the right tools. What are these tools? These include everything from MySpace layouts to MySpace graphics, and if you are looking to seriously connect with any of the 50 million other users on MySpace, you need to make sure you make the statement literally, without saying a word.

Setting up your MySpace page will be the most important step you make towards making this statement. If you have been browsing around MySpace, you know already that MySpace graphics make the difference between a great page and a not so great page. What you may not know, is how to make sure that your MySpace page falls into the great category. MySpace graphics are an excellent way to do this, and there are a million ways to get it done relatively easily.

Take a minute to think about what MySpace graphics you really want before you make your final decisions. You can get just about anything you want in the form of MySpace graphics to amp up your MySpace. The choices of MySpace graphics are literally unlimited, so if you have a specific theme in mind, put some thoughts together before you snag your graphic.

Perhaps you want a glitter name or some headers that really pop out off of the MySpace page. Maybe you want your MySpace graphics to include a specific theme or hobby such as sports, music, career, fashion, animals, love, you name it. Whatever you want you will be able to find it, so think ahead before you start your search.

Don’t worry about tech or HTML, MySpace graphics pages come with all kinds of tutorials and how-to’s that will give you a step by step method to implementing the graphics right into your MySpace. Most of the time there isn’t even anything to download. Just generate the code for the graphic you want, and bam, your MySpace has MySpace graphics.

Don’t ask if MySpace Graphics are really that easy, the answer is right in front of you! Go to http://www.killacodes.com and see for yourself!



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