H O P P E R P E D I A ©
-Brian Hammons


June 14, 2010: 34,853 hits




"First impressions count"

A professional web or blog design that effectively communicates your services and generates customer interaction is the best recipe for online success. Question: how is your income going to be generated? Will it be from advertising, from site membership fees, from affiliate programs, or from selling your own product? What are your capabilities and how will you use them to maintain a competitive advantage over your rivals?


HFP 4 KEYS TO SUCCEED:

• Planning
• Development
• Testing
• Launch




INTRANET - EXTRANETS - WIKIs


Intranets and Wikis provide greater workforce productivity, save search time for relavant information, they serve as powerful tools for communication within an organization. (vertically and horizontally) They allow for immediate up-to-date documentation & revision, are used to deploy applications to support business operations, are cost effective, promotes common corporate culture, & are cross-platform compatible.

Components: Intranets and Extranets

Intranets and extranets are parts or extensions of a computer network, usually a local area network. An intranet is a set of networks, using the Internet Protocol and IP-based tools such as web browsers and file transfer applications, that is under the control of a single administrative entity. That administrative entity closes the intranet to all but specific, authorized users. Most commonly, an intranet is the internal network of an organization. A large intranet will typically have at least one web server to provide users with organizational information. An extranet is a network that is limited in scope to a single organization or entity and also has limited connections to the networks of one or more other usually, but not necessarily, trusted organizations or entities (e.g., a company's customers may be given access to some part of its intranet creating in this way an extranet, while at the same time the customers may not be considered 'trusted' from a security standpoint). Technically, an extranet may also be categorized as a CAN, MAN, WAN, or other type of network, although, by definition, an extranet cannot consist of a single LAN; it must have at least one connection with an external network.