Thursday, 11 February 2016
HACKERS GROUP: welcome to hackers group guys
HACKERS GROUP: welcome to hackers group guys: hii guys, WELCOME TO OUR SITE..
Wednesday, 10 February 2016
HOW TO MAKE FREE WEBSITE
Hello guys....
This blog is about how to make free website without any cost.
Begin by logging into the “administration area” or theback end of your website. Visit your site’s login page by placing “wp-admin” after your domain name (e.g.http://example.com/wp-admin). You can also place “login” after your domain as of WordPress 3.4. Some themes provide a “login” link or form on thefront end as well. Now log into WordPress using your username and password.
This blog is about how to make free website without any cost.
WordPress.com is a blog web hosting service provider owned by Automattic,and powered by the open source WordPress software. This website provides free blog hosting for registered users and is financially supported via paid upgrades, "VIP" services and advertising.
The site opened to beta testers on August 8, 2005 and opened to the public on November 21, 2005. It was initially launched as an invitation-only service, although at one stage, accounts were also available to users of theFlock web browser. On October 13, 2012, there were over 56 million individual blogs with the service.
Registration is not required to read or comment on blogs hosted on the site, except if chosen by the blog owner. Registration is required to own, or post in, a weblog. All the basic and original features of the site are free-to-use. However, some features (including CSS editor, domain mapping, Domain Registration, Removal of Ads, Website Redirection, Video Upload, and storage upgrades) are available as paid options.
On WordPress.com sites, every day, over one million new articles and over two million comments are published. Some notable clients include CNN, CBS,BBC, Reuters, Sony, Fortune.com, and Volkswagen. It is estimated that more than 40% of internet bloggers use WordPress as their publishing platform.
In September 2010, it was announced that Windows Live Spaces, Microsoft's blogging service, would be closing, and that Microsoft would partner with WordPress.com for blogging services.
Let’s take a step-by-step tour through your WordPress site and see how the different functions work and how to make your new site your own. During the first part of this tutorial, please don’t change anything within the program unless it is part of the tutorial. After following these steps.
LOGIN
Begin by logging into the “administration area” or theback end of your website. Visit your site’s login page by placing “wp-admin” after your domain name (e.g.http://example.com/wp-admin). You can also place “login” after your domain as of WordPress 3.4. Some themes provide a “login” link or form on thefront end as well. Now log into WordPress using your username and password.START UP
After logging in you are on the main Administration Screen called the Dashboard. This is the brain behind your website, the place where you can let your creativity explode, writing brilliant prose and designing the best and most lovely website possible. This is where the organization of your site begins – and this is just the start.
At the top of the screen is the area called the “toolbar.” Click on the link that is your site name. This will take you to a view of your new WordPress site. Like it? Don’t like it? Doesn’t matter, just look at it. This is where you are going to be spending a lot of time!
Test Drive Your WordPress Site
Take time to look at the site before you get into the changing of things and figuring out how all of this works; it’s important to see how the WordPress Twenty Fifteen theme is laid out and how it works. Consider this the test drive before you start adding on all the special features.
The layout you are looking at is called a WordPress Theme. It is the appearance of your website, styling the look of the site and the framing of the content. The WordPress Twenty Fifteen theme features a “header” at the top with the title and tagline for your site. Below this is your Menu. Along the side you will see some titles and links. This comprises Widgets. Within the main middle section of the page is the content area. At the bottom of the page is the footer.
Let’s look at the post for a moment. There is a “title,” and below the title is the date the post was written, then the body of the post, and finally some information about the post. This is called the post meta data and contains information about the post such as the category assigned to that post.
Scroll down the page and notice the bar at the end of the page. This is called the “footer.” It says “Proudly powered by WordPress.
IF U WANT TO MAKE A FREE WEBSITE THEN YOU CAN USE THIS .
WWW.WORDPRESS.COM
FEVICON
Hello frnds....
Today i m posting this post on fevicon.
what is feicon?
The easiest way is to show you. Bookmark this page by clicking here. If you reload the page the icon should display in your browsers address field in a similar way to the illustration.
a favicon is an icon that sits in your Favourites Menu after you bookmark a pageA favicon (short for "favorites icon"), also known as a page icon or an urlicon, is an icon associated with a particular website or webpage. A web designer can create such an icon, and many recent web browsers can then make use of them. Browsers that support favicons may display them in the browser's URL bar, next to the site's name in lists of bookmarks, and next to the page's title in a tabbed document interface.
The original means of defining a favicon was by placing a file called favicon.ico in the root directory of a webserver. This would then automatically be used in Internet Explorer's favorites (bookmarks) display. Later, however, a more flexible system was created, using (X)HTML to indicate the location of an icon for any given page. This is achieved by adding two link elements in the <head> section of the document as detailed here. In this way, any appropriately sized (1616 pixels or larger) image can be used, and although many still use the ICO format, other browsers now also support the animated GIF and PNG image formats. When Microsoft Internet Explorer features animated icons we'll think about producing a script which will do this for you. (Watch This Space)
Most modern browsers implement both methods. Because of this, web servers receive many requests for the file "favicon.ico" even if it doesn't exist. This may annoy web server administrators by creating many server log entries, and unnecessarily loading the disk, CPU, and network. Another common problem is that the favicons may disappear if the browser's cache is emptied.
Originally, Internet Explorer only used favicons for bookmarks, which created a minor privacy concern in that a site owner could tell how many people had bookmarked their site by checking the access logs to see how many people downloaded the favicon.ico file. However, since newer versions of Internet Explorer and most other browsers also display the favicon in the address bar on every visit, that concern may no longer be relevant.
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