Web Site Theme- Is your sites theme search engine friendly?
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Web Site Theme- Is your sites theme search engine friendly?

by: Dawn Rowlett

Your websites theme is very important to its success. When your site is indexed by search engines, they
actually review your sites theme as well as other content. The theme must be carefully planned. Here are some
tips for developing a proper web site theme that will make search engines happy as well.

Choose a design that revolves around keywords and keyword phrases. For example, if your sites keywords are
sporting goods, choose design elements that are associated with sporting goods. Use bright colors such as red
and yellow. Use elements that are high impact and exciting, similar to thoughts associated with sporting goods.

Focus on the types of products, services, and information you seek to promote. You are selling sporting goods,
not bedding. Focus on sporting goods and stay on that approach. Don’t get side tracked with a certain color
theme you favor. Make your keywords the main focus of your theme. Make them bigger, and make them stand
out against all the other content.

Search engine spiders review website theme as to how it relates to keywords. It is a complicated algorithm, but it
takes into consideration the use of keywords and links. Search engines look for lots of content related to the
main theme throughout the site, so it’s a good idea to have lots of information written for your site.

Lots of work should go into choosing the perfect theme for your site. Make sure you are truly representing what
you wish to provide. If you get bogged down with too many keywords or keyword phrases, you may need to
consider additional websites that focus around this theme, instead of flooding your own site with too many
products.

Remember, the theme of the website should be appealing to users as well as the search engines. Once a
theme is finalized, there are many more steps to make your site optimized for search engines. A theme is only
the beginning. But it should be a strong foundation from which your site will grow and develop.

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About The Author
This article was written by Dawn Rowlett of Web Submission Services as an
informational piece for website owners. Please visit Web Submission Services for more
information about web site theme,
http://www.internetmarketingwebsites.com/web-site-theme.htm and search engine
optimization techniques,
http://www.internetmarketingwebsites.com/web-design-search-engine-optimization.htm.
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Music and Audio with XP


Great Digital Media with Windows XP includes everything you need to know to play digital music stored on your PC, on audio CDs,
Internet radio stations, and through Web-based streaming audio. But it doesn't end there: With Windows XP, you can almost
endlessly configure Microsoft Media Player for Windows XP (MPXP), manage digital music directly from the Windows shell and
through MPXP, copy music from audio CDs to your PC, and create your own audio "mix" CDs and data CD backups. And best of all,
these capabilities are all built into Windows XP... for free!
Here are some tips for working with digital music and audio in Windows XP.

Copy CD Audio in MP3 format with an MP3 Encoding Add-on Pack
Microsoft Media Player for Windows XP (MPXP) can record CD audio in Windows Media Audio (WMA) 8 format natively, but if you
want to use the more common MP3 format, you will need one of several MP3 Encoding Add-on Packs, which will be available for
download by the time Windows XP is widely released on October 25. The add-on packs will cost less than $10, and will be
available from Cyberlink, InterVideo, and Ravisent.

Use transcoding to save space on portable audio devices.

When copying music from an audio CD to your hard drive, you will probably want to use a decent encoding rate (128 Kbps WMA or
160 Kbps MP3 format) to ensure that the resulting files are as close to CD-quality as possible. But such files are pretty large, and if
you're going to be copying them to a portable audio device--such as an Iomega HipZip or a Pocket PC--you won't be able to bring
very many songs with you on the road. To overcome this problem, Media Player for Windows XP (MPXP) supports a feature called
transcoding, which will let you downsize files on the file as you copy them to a portable device. So you might transcode 128 Kbps
WMA files down to 64 Kbps, for example, to fit twice as many songs in the same amount of space, with only a small loss in sound
quality. To configure this feature, open MPXP and navigate to Tools, Options, Devices. Then, choose the appropriate device and
click Properties. This dialog will allow you to set a custom quality level for music copied to that device.


Use audio CD artwork in your digital media folders.
One of the coolest new features in Windows XP is its album thumbnail generator, which automatically places the appropriate
album cover art on the folder to which you are copying music (WMA 8 format by default). But what about those people that have
already copied their CDs to the hard drive using MP3 format? You can download album cover art from sites such as cdnow.com or
amguide.com, and then use the new Windows XP folder customize feature to display the proper image for each folder. But this
takes time--you have to manually edit the folder properties for every single folder--and you will lose customizations if you have to
reinstall the OS. There's an excellent fix, however. When you download the album cover art from the Web, just save the images as
folder.jpg each time and place them in the appropriate folder. Then, Windows XP will automatically use that image as the
thumbnail for that folder and, best of all, will use that image in Windows Media Player for Windows XP (MPXP) if you choose to
display album cover art instead of a visualization. And the folder customization is automatic, so it survives an OS reinstallation as
well. Your music folders never looked so good! Also, you can save a smaller-sized image albumartsmall.jpg if you'd like: This file
is used to store the album art thumbnails you see in folder icons.
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My Computer Won't Shut Down Itself After Installing XP

There are a number of users who are noticing that their PC will no longer automatically power down/shut off without pressing the
power off button on the computers unlike in Windows Me/95/2000. There could be a number of reasons for this - but the main one
seems to be that ACPI is not enabled on the computer or in Windows XP. Here is how to try that out:

Click - Start - Control Panel - Performance and Maintenance - Power Options Tab

Then click APM - Enable Advanced Power Management Support

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Web Site Theme- Is your sites theme search engine friendly?
Web Site Theme.
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