Monday, December 5, 2011

-iT time-

GloSSaRY

Web Design and Marketing

above the fold - the section of a Web page that is visible without scrolling.
ad space - the space on a Web page available for advertisements.
ALT text - HTML attribute that provides alternative text when non-textual elements, typically images, cannot be displayed.
animated GIF - a graphic in the GIF89a file format that creates the effect of animation by rotating through a series of static images.
bookmark - a link stored in a Web browser for future reference.
cascading style sheets (CSS) - a data format used to separate style from structure on Web pages.
favicon - a small icon that is used by some browsers to identify a bookmarked Web site.
Flash - multimedia technology developed by Macromedia to allow much interactivity to fit in a relatively small file size.
frames - a structure that allows for the dividing of a Web page into two or more independent parts.
home page - the main page of a Web site.
JavaScript - a scripting language developed by Netscape and used to create interactive Web sites.
linkrot - when Web pages previously accessible at a particular URL are no longer reachable at that URL due to movement or deletion of the pages.
navigation - that which facilitates movement from one Web page to another Web page.
shopping cart - software used to make a site's product catalogue available for online ordering, whereby visitors may select, view, add/delete, and purchase merchandise.
site search - search functionality specific to one site.
splash page - a branding page before the home page of a Web site.
Web browser - a software application that allows for the browsing of the World Wide Web.
Web design - the selection and coordination of available components to create the layout and structure of a Web page.
Web site usability - The ease with which visitors are able to use a Web site.

Sunday, December 4, 2011

Monday, November 28, 2011

e-commerce market place

morning.........all my frens

iT

Brick and Mortar
By , About.com Guide
 
Definition: Refers to retail shops that are located in a building as opposed to an online shopping destination, door-to-door sales, kiosk or other similar site not housed within a structure.

It

Bricks and clicks (aka clicks and bricks, click and mortar, or bricks, clicks and flips) is a business model by which a company integrates both offline (bricks) and online (clicks) presences, sometimes with the third extra flips (physical catalogs). Additionally, many will also offer telephone ordering as well, or at least provide telephone sales support.
A popular example of the bricks and clicks model is when a chain of stores allows the customer to order products either online or physically in one of their stores, also allowing them to either pick-up their order directly at a local branch of the store or get it delivered to their home. There are many alternative combinations of this model.
The bricks and clicks model has typically been used by traditional retailers who have extensive logistics and supply chains, but are well known and often respected for their traditional physical presence. Part of the reason for its success is that it is far easier for a traditional retailer to establish an online presence, than it is for a start-up company to employ a successful purely online one, or for an online only retailer to establish a traditional presence, including a strong and well recognised brand, without having a large marketing budget.[citation needed] Although the major factor in the success or failure of this business model is in the control of costs, as usually maintaining a physical presence —paying for many physical store premises and their staffing— requires larger capital expenditure which online only businesses do not usually have. Some business sectors may lend themselves better to a bricks and clicks model than others. For example, supermarkets often have different customers types requiring alternative shopping options; one group may wish to see the goods directly before purchase and like the convenience of quickly shopping on-the-fly, while another group may require a different convenience of shopping online and getting the order delivered when it suits them. Conversely, a business selling more luxurious, often expensive, or only occasionally purchased products —like cars— may find sales are more common with a physical presence, due to the more considered nature of the purchasing decision, though they may still offer online product information.
The success of the model in many sectors has lessened the credibility of some analysts who argued that the Internet would render traditional retailers obsolete through disintermediation.[citation needed]
"On the other hand, an online-only service can remain a best-in-class operation because its executives focus on just the online business." It has been argued that a bricks and clicks business model is more difficult to implement than an online only model.[1] In the future, the bricks and clicks model may be more successful, but in 2010 some online only businesses grew at a staggering 30%, while some bricks and clicks businesses grew at a paltry 3%.[2] The key factor for a bricks and clicks business model to be successful "will, to a large extent, be determined by a company’s ability to manage the trade-offs between separation and integration" of their retail and online businesses.[3]


Read more: http://www.answers.com/topic/clicks-and-mortar#ixzz1f2qsAf5U

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

about.....................reverse auctions work

How Do Reverse Auctions Work?

  1. About Reverse Auctions

    • Reverse auctions are business-related auctions held among buyers and suppliers. Suppliers will offer bids for their products or services, and the buyer will take the lowest or most attractive offer. There are several fields where reverse auctions are common, one of the primary being contract work such as construction.
      The buyer will have a specific project that needs to be completed, and various companies will compete to be chosen for the project, offering and counteroffering with lower prices and advertising their value-adding features. The buyer will then choose which company they want to complete the project.

    Players in Reverse Auction

    • Reverse auctions are also a common method of choosing suppliers, especially by government organizations. Sellers will offer to provide specific items at reduced rates or with certain special bonuses attached, such as free shipping or discounts when ordering extra supplies. The buyer can then accept whatever offer is the most attractive, or reject all offers and hold another auction.
      Regular business auction rules generally apply to reverse auctions. The primary difference is that there is one buyer and several sellers instead of the other way around, and prices are driven down instead of driven up. For most reverse auctions, sellers only make one offer, the lowest price they are willing to provide their products or service at. Reverse autions can either be anonymous, where none of the parties knows who else is bidding (at least formally), or open, where companies can see who else they will be bidding against. This puts a large amount of power in the buyer's hands, since it is up to the buyer to choose which company will participate and ultimately which company will win the auction. Sellers do have some power, though, and may decline to take part in an auction for buyer looking for too low or price, or for a buyer without enough prestige to attract high-level sellers.

    Reverse Auction Meeting Places

    • Many reverse auctions take place online or through private means of communication, since there is little to be gained by meeting in person. Rarely there may be a physical or conference-call meeting where suppliers will attempt to outbid each other in person.
      Since these auctions can take place electronically, there are a number of website that provide hosting services for reverse auctions, giving both the buyer and the sellers a safe and private environment in which to conduct business. These sites and other services like them act as auctioneers for the reverse auction, and can set reserve prices, or the highest prices that the buyer is willing to pay for the service or item.

Friday, November 18, 2011

~TinTa BeRmAdAh~

TiNTa BeRMaDaH~


Berburu ke padang datar,
Dapat rusa berbelang kaki
Berguru kepalang ajar
Bagai bunga kembang tak jadi.

Dialah pemberi paling setia
Tiap akar ilmu miliknya
Pelita dan lampu segala
Untuk manusia sebelum jadi dewasa.

Dialah ibu dialah bapa juga sahabat
Alur kesetiaan mengalirkan nasihat
Pemimpin yang ditauliahkan segala umat
Seribu tahun katanya menjadi hikmat.

Jika hari ini seorang Perdana Menteri berkuasa
Jika hari ini seorang Raja menaiki takhta
Jika hari ini seorang Presiden sebuah negara
Jika hari ini seorang ulama yang mulia
Jika hari ini seorang peguam menang bicara
Jika hari ini seorang penulis terkemuka
Jika hari ini siapa sahaja menjadi dewasa;
Sejarahnya dimulakan oleh seorang guru biasa
Dengan lembut sabarnya mengajar tulis-baca.

Di mana-mana dia berdiri di muka muridnya
Di sebuah sekolah mewah di Ibu Kota
Di bangunan tua sekolah Hulu Terengganu
Dia adalah guru mewakili seribu buku.
Semakin terpencil duduknya di ceruk desa
Semakin bererti tugasnya kepada negara.

Jadilah apa pun pada akhir kehidupanmu, guruku
Budi yang diapungkan di dulangi ilmu
Panggilan keramat "cikgu" kekal terpahat
Menjadi kenangan ke akhir hayat.

USMAN AWANG
1979

Monday, November 14, 2011

clas tutor a2

salam.....to all.thnks a lot mis.....today learn about "Internetworked E-Business Enterprise".Firstly the web n internet are a part in oir life likes tv, magazines, edu, biz n everywhere. Secondly about module organization which are WWW(world, wide, web), Search Engines, Webs 2.0, Internet Technologies, n Connecting to the Internet.k la mlm nie smbungnnye...................................^_^.......

my soul ^_^


Monday, October 17, 2011

cls gnti 17/10/2011

cls ari nie start kol 830mlm..................smpai 1030.starting cls bab 4.......best nye mlm nie dpt th new knowledge about it......thnks a lot mis.........

Friday, October 7, 2011