Synap Software Blog

Putting the Log Back in Blog

by Scott on February 22, 2007

If weblog conventions were developed today, they would probably be different than those that evolved from the first web logs, because so much of blogging has nothing to do with “logging”. This blog is that way. This is not so much a log of anything as a place to share ideas on business and technology.

Wanting a place to simply log plans, accomplishments, and daily updates for our products and for our company I am launching two new blogs with the intent that they host simple “what happened today” log entries.

Product Blog

The product blog was launched today and will get postings of product plans, accomplishments, features, feedback, and system status. This new blog is about how to get the most from LeadsOnRails.

MicroISV Blog

What, you say? You thought this was a micro-isv blog? It was – it is. But again, I still want a place to actually log daily events. To launch next week, it will be an account of our day-to-day micro isv activities. Maybe it will be so mundane that no one reads it – and that is fine. This new blog will be just for the sake of keeping a record so that when we look back we can remember where all the time went and what fun we had. Tentative name: microisvjournal.com. I’ll make one more posting when it launches, and then probably will not really talk much about it here after that.

Focus

So why separate blogs instead of just tacking them onto here? The answer is focus and an attempt to keep content relevant to the blog’s topic.

I just started reading Bob Walsh’s newest book clear blogging (full review later) and jumped right to Chapter 4: What Do Good Blogs Share to try to soak up some ideas from the masters. Focus caught my attention. Blogs can quickly become a big bucket into which the author pours his or her thoughts about everything and anything. I hope to be finding ways to focus information to only those people that find it relevant. (I am starting a couple other blogs on top of these two mentioned here as well. More on those later.)

So there – I’ve done my part today to contribute to the 175,000 new blogs that are started every single day!

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Low Tech Local

by Scott on February 21, 2007

In her popular blog EscapeFromCubicleNation , Pamela Slim recommended several things her readers can learn from media-darling and cooking- turned lifestyle expert Rachael Ray. One of those is ”to get national media, start local.”

Here is one easy way to plug into the local business scene: subscribers to Business Journals’ free email receive daily updates on the local business news of the cities of their choice. Subscribers can receive daily updates from many cities as a way to “start local” and be tuned in to local-level business buzz across the U.S.

Some software company owners might say, ‘what’s this talk of ‘media’ have to do with me, a small software company?’. To which, we need to look at the company’s target market.

For some products, more potential users read USA Today than Technorati.

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Find Your Name

by Scott on February 21, 2007

Lately I have enjoyed sharing some recent and not-so-recent websites and tools that we have used in our business.

Now that we have looked at a reputable place to register names for $2.95 (until 2/28), here are a couple places to help you find that million-dollar domain name.

Nameboy.com.

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Stake Your Claim with Copyright

by Scott on February 19, 2007

Though all written works, including websites and computer programs, are automatically protected by copyright, authors should still register their works for increased protection. Benefits of registering include:

1. Registration provides an established public record of the copyright claim.

2. Registered copyright holders are prepared to file suit for infringement (registration is a prerequisite before a case can be filed).

3. If made within 5 years of publication, registration provides “prima facie” (i.e. legal presumption of) evidence of the validity of the copyright as stated in the certificate.

4. If made within 3 months after publication or prior to infringement, registered copyright holders can be awarded statutory damages and attorney’s fees. Otherwise, copyright holders receive only actual damages.

5. Copyright holders can register with U.S. Customs for protection against importation of infringing copies.

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Business Cards

by Scott on February 18, 2007

Review – Overnight Prints

In the past week I’ve shared my picks for domain name registration and stock photography. Needing to order more business cards this weekend prompted me to share that Overnight Prints has provided good results in the past and I recommend them if you are looking for an printer online.

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