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Customer Relationship Building – Using .Net in Commercial Settings

April 6th, 2013

Customer relationship building is an important part of being a business owner. The key is to communicate with your past customers as often as possible. If your customer buys a product or service from you, you should add them to your email list. You can send out emails to your customers to let them know about new products, promotions or discounts. This will keep your product or service on your customer’s mind. You can also send promotions that are attached to shipping confirmation emails. This is Read the rest of this entry »

Keeping .Net going with a Strong Network

April 16th, 2012

When Microsoft first unveiled its .Net Framework, people were overwhelmingly ecstatic about the prospects it could offer. A new industry-standard for businesses to work within meant greater connectivity and efficiency not just online but also within any company using the Framework. This new Framework also opened the door even wider for budding entrepreneurs looking to start their dream business from home. With this software, a multitude of online tasks and management options were open to the user from memory management to the handling of virtual environments – remote hosting and teleconferencing to name a few of those features. However, as more and more people began to use it, they started to notice the strain being put on the network and that led to a new problem for anyone lacking the kind of robust network to handle all of this online activity.

For most people, when faced with the issue of too much online activity and not having a strong enough network infrastructure, the answer is simply to look into a XO Communications or a T1 internet connection. By investing in a strong network backbone like that, your business can handle all of those online tasks without missing a step because, let’s face it, when you lose time on the network, you lose time doing business and that can make or break a company.

Why To Setup A New User Strategy for .Net

August 31st, 2011

If you run a small home business, or you use your home computer for programming and several other program functions, you are going to want to set up the proper strategy for you to include your microsoft .net server into your home use, in order for you to get the most out of the program. There are several things you must consider, from the server status, to the functions you are going to ask the .net program to run, to the amount of use it is going to get.I found some more information here. You must set up Read the rest of this entry »

Choosing The Best Query Language – .Net Uses At Home

August 28th, 2011

When you are setting up your microsoft .net home programming, there are several issues and concerns you want to take into account, in order to properly set up the program for home use, and in order to get the most of its capabilities for the small home office. You are first going to want to ensure that you configure it with other programs used for your business, so that you can sync all of the capabilities and so that the programs will work in unison to produce the best quality of work. You also want to ensure that you Read the rest of this entry »

Is Microsoft .Net Really The Best In The Industry Today

August 26th, 2011

Microsoft.net is not a computer operating system. Microsoft.net is a software framework commonly called .Net Framework that mainly runs using the Microsoft Windows Operating System. .Net satisfies run time requirements, memory management and has exceptional handling in a virtual environment. Software developers and computer programmers like Microsoft.net because of its seamless and consistent programming ability with applications. Microsoft.net has been described as the best programming model for building software applications and XML web services Read the rest of this entry »

Using .Net To Build A Profitable Business At Home

August 23rd, 2011

You do not normally use Microsoft’s .Net services to build a profitable business. The system was not designed to support this functionality. Microsoft developed the platform at roughly the same time Sun Microsystems introduced Java. The ideas behind Java and the ideas behind the .Net framework are similar. Both systems are designed to let people run cross-platform applications. Java has won out because it supports Unix and Linux environments. Microsoft has offered only limited support for the Linux platform through these services.Didn-t catch that? This explains it.

The ability to run on multiple platforms may Read the rest of this entry »