Archive for June, 2007

Domain Sales in the Marketplace

So you’re not sure if there is real money going on in the domain market place. Here’s a list of domains that sold at the most recent Moniker live auction:

1. VintageAirplanes.com, $5,700, sold
2. StageRental.com, $5,600, pass
3. Toy.net, $26,000, sold
4. StockTrades.com, $25,000 sold
5. BondFund.com, $12,000 sold
6. IrishWhiskey.com, $8,000 sold
7. BakingSupplies.com, $12,000 sold
8. PrivateTutors.com, $16,000 sold
9. PrivatePilots.com, $20,000 sold
10. Historian.com, $25,000 sold
11. TechnologyFund.com, $10,000 sold
12. PinkRoses.com, $10,000 sold
13. VintageMotorcycles.com, $14,000 sold
14. Booksellers.com, sold $30,000
15. Houses.net, $75,000 sold
16. ComicBooks.com, $300,000 pass
17. Supplies.com, $200,000 pass
18. Breathalyzer.com, $70,000 pass
19. Invest.net, $50,000 pass
20. PX.net, $15,000 pass
21. Tightrope.com, $18,000 sold
22. Sale.mobi, $65,000 pass
23. AutoClassifieds.com, $135,000 pass
24. Six.com, $1,000,000 passm
25. Scotland.com, $3,000,000 pass

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Finding Old Contacts

Finding old contacts is just one of the many reasons I love the Internet. I was looking up some of my old bosses from when I was in the USAF and using the Internet to find people makes life so much easier than it was back in the 80s & early 90s.

Turns out one of my old bosses retired in Hawaii as a 3 star general and the other is now one of the directors at the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency. Although I took a left turn after about 12 years in the USAF and jumped on the dot com bubble, sometimes I wonder what life would have been like if I stayed in for the whole shot. Don’t get me wrong, I don’t regret the decision I made, sometimes you ‘just wonder’ about things. Being able to do what I love, live where I want, schedule time off with my boss (me) is a nice thing.

I think what I miss most about my prior experiences in the military was working with some very interesting people in some very interesting places. The deployments to different parts of the world to be a ‘part of history’ instead of a spectator was also quite a rush.

Anyways, here’s some useful tools for those of you wanting to find old contacts.

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Threadwatch Closes This Friday

As per a post by Aaron Wall on his site threadwatch.org, it will be officially closing this Friday.  It’s a shame to see it go as it was often an interesting place to watch for breaking news in the SEO world.  It also came with an edge that some (myself included) found entertaining.

Aaron presents a list of reasons why he’s closing the doors on this project that one has to respect his openness for disclosing and in the end he wraps up the announcement with this:

“For a short while it will suck for some (including me) that this site ended, but hopefully it doing so will help create an opportunity for something better.

Cheers,
Aaron”

Cheers to you and thanks for an interesting site and always being a great source of information.

type-atcha-later,

Sean

Some Industries Getting More Traffic

Apparently sites in markets such as travel, media, entertainment, business and finance saw double-digit increases in traffic coming from search engines this past month (May 07) in comparison with the previous year.

Google searches accounted for more than 65 per cent of all searches last month according to hitwise, an online statistically gathering company. Yahoo! accounted for 20.89 per cent, while MSN accounted for 8.40 per cent and Ask.com accounted for 3.92 per cent.

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201am and Cranking out Evaluations

Do you ever think that working for yourself from home, living the internet dream is all cookies and cream?

Let me tell you, sure it’s great, but when you occasionally take on one too many clients you end up becoming one of your own worst bosses…forced overtime to get projects done is a reality.

You know the one thing though that makes it all worth while?  Enjoying what you do and being able to have a seriously flexible schedule most of the time.

That’s it for now, just wanted to take a break for a minute before getting back on the horse for another hour or two.

type-atcha-later,

Sean

Domain Registrars - namecheap

The other day I made mention of the domain registrar namecheap.com and that I suspected them of having a practice of quickly snapping domains into their system upon expiration. I recently received an email that cleared a few things up…and what I suspected originally, seems not to be the case these days.

Here are some screen caps on how to recover your domain in namecheap’s system if one of yours passes the expiration date. You still have “up to 29 days after expiration to renew at our regular pricing.” which comes directly from their CEO.

Once you log in, click on the ‘Reactivate Domains’ link:

reactivate at namecheap

Then click the checkbox for the domain or domains you need to renew, add to cart, and proceed through the checkout. That’s it…

renew domains at namecheap

type-atcha-later,

Sean

Why Local Search Marketing Matters

Apparently local search is still a booming trend and it just makes sense doesn’t it? Especially in certain markets. If I’m buying a home locally I know I’d like to speak with someone in my backyard. Although I have bought a house from another state and I must say virtual tours and the Internet made life much easier in this task than I could imagine it would have been, say, in the 1970s.

Here’s a few statistics that ought to get you thinking about putting your business infront of the local search market:

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