https://vimeo.com/bravodesignince

Google Apps – A Great Value for Small Businesses

So you’re a small business owner, and you’re looking to take advantage of the internet marketplace. Well hopefully you’ve already considered getting a website, and you’re at least familiar with the social networks like Facebook and Twitter. You’re also familiar with Google, and if you’re not I suggest you check out Wikipedia, it’s like an encyclopedia but made out of electricity instead of paper.

All joking aside, Google is an amazing resource and you won’t get a better service at their pricing. Google offers their Apps for free (up to 50 users) and they offer extended services for businesses at a rate of $50 per user per year (not even $0.14 a day). “But what if I don’t want to sign up for a bunch of services?” If that’s the case, then you probably shouldn’t be starting a website in the first place, and you really shouldn’t start a sentence with ‘But.’ Who are you? Robert W. Burchfield?

Here’s the beauty of Google, it’s pretty much all a one-stop-shop. Create your business Gmail account, mybusinessname@gmail.com, and you’ll be able use your Gmail account to gain access to a wide variety of Google’s products and functionality. Learn more about Gmail. Here are a few of the the biggies:

  1. Google Analytics
    Track your website traffic and visitors in a plethora of dimensions.
  2. Google AdSense/AdWords
    If you’re interested in search-engine marketing, whether you plan to advertise your business or offer space on your website to advertisers, you’ll need a Gmail account.
  3. Recaptcha
    Great service to link up to your website’s contact forms, to prevent unwanted spam feedback. Ever seen the crazy text blocks you have to re-enter at the bottom of a form? Chances are that’s Recaptcha.
  4. Goo.gl
    If you’re looking to post links on Twitter, you’ll need to shorten some URLs. Goo.gl will let you enter an impossibly long URL and it’ll spit out a cute short URL to post on Twitter without losing all your characters.

These are just a few of the services that Google offers free-of-charge. So back to Google Apps, you’ve just created your website and now you need to set up your email. Hold it! Before you go spending an unnecessary amount of money on an email account with your hosting provider, set up Google Apps for your site, Google Apps Free. You’ll need FTP access to your website, and/or access to your DNS (domain name servers) panel, and/or access to your web developer (just tell him/her you want Google Apps).

Better yet, Google offers their entire Docs system absolutely free (with Google Apps Free). You’re able to create, edit and print .doc, .xls, .ppt and .pdf files online from anywhere when logged into your Google Apps account. Look out Microsoft Office, Google’s gunning for you! So what’s the advantage if you’ve already purchased Microsoft Office for your computer (don’t curse the gods just yet)? All the files you create/upload in Google Docs are backed up and available online, and administrators (you’ll be one if you set up the apps account) are able to edit the permissions to decide which users are able to access which files. Learn more about Google Docs.

If you knew what DNS stood for before I parenthetically spelled it out, feel free to check out this great link walking you through setting up your email accounts through Google Apps. Just click on “Creating MX Records,” select your domain host from the list below and follow the steps to completion.

Here’s a quick breakdown of the Google Apps edition comparisons:

I hope I’ve helped sway your opinion, or at least provided you with a couple links to do some research of your own. There’s a reason why Google is the vanguard of the internet… they’re awesome.

https://vimeo.com/bravodesignince

Identify Your Fonts With Ease

This article applies to anyone who has been given the daunting task of finding a specific font.

The old way, you’d bust out a massive font book and start flipping pages based on some simple schema (serif vs. sans). Maybe you were a little more internet-savvy so you’d high-tail it to dafont.com or fontfile.com and browse a huge catalog online with a slightly better taxonomy (Fancy, Old School, Script, Destorted, etc.).

Until now…

Thankfully the powers that be, at MyFonts.com, engineered the incredible and incredibly useful “What The Font!”

No more time wasted browsing countless pages of font families with no end in sight. Now it’s as simple as taking a screenshot and uploading the image to put a name to the typeface. MyFonts provides some key points to using their font identifier effectively. Namely, ensuring contrast between the type and background (figure/ground), trying to maintain space between the characters (a lowercase “L” and a lowercase “O” sure looks like a lowercase “B” to me), and keeping the text as horizontal as possible.

And, if by some fluke, you aren’t able to identify your fonts using What The Font, they have a great community to discuss font-finding techniques and get font ID feedback from the typographically-sensitive masses.

https://vimeo.com/bravodesignince

VLC, the Only Video Player You’ll Ever Need

The internet is filled with a lot of junk.

If you haven’t been presented with some shady online media player demanding that you download some Xvid codec to watch a water-skiing squirrel video, chances are you’re a n00b. And if that’s the case, there’s an even better chance that you’ll actually download the shady Xvid codec only to realize that it’s some crappy virus or spyware designed to steal all your passwords while a bouncing Charlie Sheen head laughs hysterically and verbally mocks you.

VLC player to the rescue! If you’ve already downloaded and installed the VLC player feel free to pat yourself on the back and grab an ice cream. Those of you who have yet to experience the empowering glory of the VLC player, brace yourselves.

Multi-platform (Mac OSX, Windows, GNU/Linux and many more), open-source sweetness engineered to eliminate the need to download countless codecs and juggle multiple media players (sorry, Divx, Quicktime and Windows Media Player). Since downloading VLC player in 2007, I’ve played every video format that I’ve come across: .mpg, .avi, .mkv, .flv, .f4v, .mov, .ogg, .3gg, and a few others that escape me at the moment. If VLC doesn’t play it, you probably shouldn’t be trying to watch it in the first place (“why isn’t TRON_LEGACY.docx playing?!”).

Developed by our friends at the non-profit Video LAN Organization, VLC player has brought about a new standard for watching videos on your computer.

Go ahead, check it out and download the free program that will only make your life easier.*

*Your life may actually get harder depending on the amount of time spent watching videos on your computer instead of focusing on work and responsibilities.