Domain name investing is currently a booming industry and a lot of people are making surprising returns on their investments. But before you jump in to this business you should do a little research. Domain name forums are filled with stories of people who spent their life saving investing in domain names only to lose every dollar they invested. These should help you out to get started in the domain business.
Buy slowly, Visit the Forums, Know the Market: 11 Tips for Domain Investing by Paul Reiser
February 21st, 2008 · 1 Comment
→ 1 CommentTags: Buy Domain · Domain Tips · Tips Domain
Is These Domain Really Experied?
February 20th, 2008 · No Comments
I got some name say expired, please check out for 1000 and more name below:
0033WINE0086.COM
007JACKNEWYEARS.COM
007NEWYEARS.COM
01-PRODUCTIONS.COM
01FIRST.COM
01NUMERIQUE.COM
02FATBOY.COM
02NEWMEDIA.COM
06-PACA.COM
06310.COM
0755B.COM
0796JX.COM
0988STOCK.COM
→ No CommentsTags: Expired Domain
Are You Newbie in Domain Name? I’m Too, But This Is Domain Extentions Mean
February 7th, 2008 · No Comments
Are You Newbie in Domain Name? I’m Too, But This Is Domain Extentions Mean
.com represents the word “commercial,” and is the most widely used extension in the world. Most businesses prefer a .com domain name because it is a highly recognized symbol for having a business presence on the Internet.
→ No CommentsTags: Uncategorized
Rumor Google to Kill Domain Tasting
January 29th, 2008 · 2 Comments
A confidential informant says Google will stop monetizing all domains if they are less then five days old. This potential new policy change by Google could stop all Domain Tasting in its tracks. The Add Grace Period (AGP) is a time period when registrars can delete a domain at no cost, but in this time frame a registrant could register millions of these temporary domains and place Google Adsense for Domains on them. Google has been quietly enabling this practice for years.? Most of the big Domain Tasters are now using Google ad syndication feeds to monetize the traffic - those dollars will come knocking on Yahoo’s door soon.
→ 2 CommentsTags: Domain Tasting
About “Domain Pictures” from Google
January 23rd, 2008 · 1 Comment
→ 1 CommentTags: Collection Domain · Domain Pictures
Good Tips From Jakomo: 10 Tips Before Buy An Expired Domain
January 22nd, 2008 · 2 Comments
There’ good tips from nickname Jakomo in namepros.com. A couple of tips before buy an expired domain. 1- Check out the real backlinks, for example if you make in Google link:thedomain.com, maybe Google shoot 43434 backlinks, you say Great! But before say something… I high recommend visit some backlinks to check if the domain is. As you know Google doesn’t update daily the backlinks. To make it easy open FireFox browser –> Edit –> See Source Code, then search the domain (in Firefox Ctrol+F), this process save time! If the domain name is not more in the backlink website, in the next Google PR update the domain will lose the power
→ 2 CommentsTags: Buy Domain · Expired Domain
Quick Guide for Beginners to Convert Current Music Files into PSP Format Audio Files
January 17th, 2008 · No Comments
First of all, you need to download software onto your PSP that allows you to convert MP3 files into PSP MP4 format. One of the more popular PSP convertor software out there, is the Xilisoft CD Ripper and Xilisoft PSP Video Converter. Xilisoft PSP Video Converter is a superb MP4 video converter which helps you convert video to Sony PSP movie (MP4 file).
→ No CommentsTags: Uncategorized
“Chocoholics Unite!”
January 6th, 2008 · 1 Comment
No matter what you pick from a box of assorted chocolates, you can be assured that FDA standards ensure the highest quality. In recent months, several newspapers came out in defense of a new cause: the quality of chocolate. “Hands off my chocolate, FDA!” read one headline. Another said “Chocoholics Unite!” The heated outcry—echoed in hundreds of letters FDA has received from consumers—was sparked by concerns about some of FDA’s oldest and most trusted regulations: rules ensuring that America’s favorite food products have the right amount of key ingredients, are properly made, and are not packaged in containers of deceiving size. These so-called “standards of identity, quality, and fill of container for food” have been a trusted barrier against substandard and fraudulently packaged food since their enactment in the 1938 Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act. Last fall, when a trade association petitioned the agency to make some of these standards more flexible, it therefore touched a raw nerve.
→ 1 CommentTags: Uncategorized

