|
|
|
Use this tool to learn about websites, specifically the one you just entered.
If you find some aspect of it inappropriate it is not our fault.
If you are the owner of this website: yes we are a real search engine, we do have a real web crawler called FyberSpider and you can block it if you feel the urge.
We are in the process of updating this tool. Until we are done just use our search results to check the inclusion status of your site.
Submit your site to major search engines within 48 hours.
Find out if your site has been cataloged by top search engines for only $8.99.
Below you will see site info taken directly from the URL you entered in real time. This is also known as our URL Breakdown tool and can be used independently of our site info tool.
Take Note - Dan Dickinson: The Primary Vivid Weblog
This is just a sample of the content found on this website. Please visit the website to read the entire page.
"Dan Dickinson: The Primary Vivid Weblog
Struggling with the dark and responding to the light.
Take Note
When I was in middle school, I was given my first messanger-style backpack. I hated traditional backpacks, and I fell in love with the thing, except for one problem: paper handling.
To this day, I have never been any good with paper, growing large piles of it in my varies phases of school like some strange paper farmer, hearding piles around and flipping frantically through them for my prize winning notes when the fair comes to town. This happened through all my years at school, including college. To be perfectly honest, my inability to organize the files led me to pulling my hair out and was probably a huge detriment to my education.
The thing is, I like taking notes, especially when I'm gaining knowledge.
While I've been at WCMC, I noticed that I was not alone in these habits and shortfalls. Nearly everyone has a pad of paper with them at meetings, or at least a sheet to jot notes on. I've seen cubicles with gigantic piles of papers, in no way organized outside of a few pointers in the owner's head.
It was not long after I started at WCMC that I realized I was going to go paperless. Not that I merely was , but I had to, for my own sanity - space is limited, I hate retaining physical things longer than necessary, et cetera. I gave myself these simple guidelines to help define the system I ended up using:
Dirt Simple - minimal effort needed to take/keep/distribute notes. Notetaking should not be a time suck.
Flexible End Results - we have a document management system, and I need to be able to author into that, preferably with full metadata. I also occasionally need to publish notes to th"
....
read entire page
|
Links to Pages on Other Domain Names
|
|
Links to Pages on the Same Domain Name
|
|