Brewsterware

October 25, 2007

The greatest web host in the world

Filed under: General,Personal — Joe Brewer @ 6:36 pm

Yesterday my girl and I were treated to an outstanding evening in London care of Rochen Hosting – which I now know is pronounced “Rocken” and not “Rowshen” as I have been telling everyone. The evening started with a champagne reception on the London Eye – I managed to drink two glasses in the time it took to go round. We were then transported to the bluebird restaurant in Chelsea by stretch hummer. We had our own room upstairs in the restaurant which had a glass wall that over looked the bar and restaurant. The red wine that was being served was Château Mazeyres, 1999 Pomerol, and was very light for a red wine – I’ll definately be treating myself to some of this in the near future. The bluebird restaurant is built on the site of the garage that built the bluebird boat that Donald Campbell used to set the water speed record.

So, thanks Rochen for providing and hosting an extremely memorable evening, and for being an extremely efficient web host. Rochen offer hosting at a very reasonable cost, their knowledgable staff are online 24 hours a day, so problems are quick to be sorted.

Here are a few photos of the evening (thanks to Carlos for taking them and giving me permission to publish them here :)):

October 15, 2007

Things you dont know about me – part 1

Filed under: General,Personal — Joe Brewer @ 3:07 pm

A while ago there was an outbreak of posts on peoples blogs which had five things about the blogger that you didn’t know about them. I had been thinking about writing some posts about this for my blog, but have been unable to come up with five interesting things. I have decided to post anyway.

The first is that I was enrolled into a BTEC National Diploma in Electronic Engineering at Crawley College, but changed this two months before the course started to Information Technology. I use to love building electronic projects. This love was fueled by an ITV childrens program called “Video and Chips” – a general technology program which introduced different technologies to kids. I was hooked on this program. I would watch every episode, and then have a go a making whatever they had been making, whether that be an electronic project, hovercraft, hot air balloon or whatever. Every week a different technology would be explained and a new project to construct a new toy. A stamped self addressed envelope assured your fact sheet that detailed each project for this TV program – I still have mine.

The second thing that fueled my interest in electronics was the shop along the road from me. In Handcross, the small village where I used to live, there were the usual range of village shops. There was, however, a ham radio specialist shop – a bit unusual for a small village. I cant ever remember more than one other customer when I visited. This shop stocked electronic projects which could be built by anyone with a soldering iron which I had developed an addiction to – I bought all of the projects that they stocked. Funnily enough, one of the engineers who worked at this shop had a sideline business of building PCs, and I convinced my Dad to buy a PC from him so that I could learn about them. It was a 286 with one meg of ram, a forty meg hard disk and a VGA monitor. It cost 550 pounds. Within a week I had deleted all of the files in the root of the drive which stopped it from booting – it got sent back to have the operating system reinstalled, and I never heard the last of it.

Why did I change my course to Information Technology? I cant quite remember. I think it might have been the maths involved in electronics – maths wasnt my strongest subject. Funnily enough electronics was one of the subjects on the IT course, and I remember tutor’s report saying “this student is not upto the BTEC standard”. Well that greasy haird hippy can stick that report – I now have a batchelors degree 🙂

Incidently, the first video and chips project that I built was called a trembler alarm – an alarm that detects vibrations. Here are the instructions for making it.

Description. The trembler alarm is an ultra sensitive alarm system, It can be made so sensitive that just tapping the table it is on will set it off. The Video and Chips trembler is built using one chip, a transistor, a buzzer, a few resistors, some thin electrical wire and a 6 to 12 mm steel ball. The electronics are very simple to construct although you will need to use a soldering iron so find an adult to help you get started with this project. The trembler is a steel ball sitting on three pins . The ball makes electrical contact with the pins and provided the ball is still the contact remains. If the ball moves, even for one 40 millionth of a second, the circuit is broken and the alarm is set off. Only pressing the switch will turn it off and reset the alarm.

Construction. The trembler is built on small piece of wood, 25mm square. Three panel pins are knocked into the wood with about 15mm left sticking out and the ball is allowed to rest on these. They must be far enough apart to let the ball sit on them without rolling off but not so far apart that the ball falls between them. The best results come from splaying the pins a little once they have been knocked in.

The alarm circuit is built on a piece of strip board. Strip board has copper tracks on one side to conduct electricity while the other side is plain. The circuit is built up using the tracks on the underside and wires on the upper side. To start constructing you will need a piece of Strip Board about 50mm by 50mm. Use the board with the copper strips downwards and running from left to right across the board. Using the diagram below, place the components as shown into the holes. The dotted lines on the diagram are the tracks the components are shown and you should make sure that all the components are on the right tracks. The tracks underneath the Chip socket have to be cut. This can be done using a 4mm drill bit in a small hand brace. Take care not to drill through the board.

Soldering is an art but a very simple one. 1. Heat up the joint between the component lead and the copper strip with the tip of the iron. 2. Put some solder onto the joint keeping the iron on the joint also. 3. Keep the heat on the joint for a few seconds while the solder flows and then remove the iron. Make all the cross links using lengths of wire pulled down tight against the board. Connect the battery wires to the board RED to + Volts and BLACK to – Volts. Connect the buzzer between points buzzer 1 and 2. (Red to buzzer 1) Connect the switch across the points marked switch 1 and 2.

Connect the three prongs of the tremble sensor to tremble A, B & C on the circuit board and place the ball on the prongs. Lastly solder the transistor in and plug the chip into its socket. The battery, circuit and trembler should all be attched to a single baseboard for ease of use.

Operation. The unit is tested by tapping the ball once the system is on. The push switch resets the alarm. If the circuit does not work the first thing to check is that the connections are all correct and that the chip is in the right way round. Next check that there are no solder bridges between tracks on the underside of the board. The sensitivity can be adjusted by moving the pins in and out. If they are close together the trembler will be very sensitive indeed. To use the device just leave it in your desk or in your bag. If any one or anything moves the bag or the desk the unit will sound the alarm.

Parts List.
– One 4011B Quad dual input NAND
– 0ne 14 Pin DIL socket for the Chip.
– One BC108 Transistor.
– Three 10K Resistors.
— One IK resistor.
— One Push to make switch. One PP3 Battery.
– One PP3 Eatery clip.
– One small piece of Stripboard (VEROboard)
– One 6-12 Volt buzzer.
— Some electrical wire.

The strip board layout.The circuit is built on strip board with the components on top and A wire cross link. The circles with an X indicate a break in the track.

October 6, 2007

affiliate link cloaker

Filed under: Internet,Marketing — Joe Brewer @ 6:17 pm


All affiliate marketers know the problem of commission theft – that is people altering the your url so that you don’t receive your commission from any sales. There are two kinds of theft – the thief can replace the affiliate id from a link with their own or remove it completely. Either way you lose out.This software allows affiliate marketers to cloak their affiliate links using either Mambo or Joomla! CMS to stop people from taking the commission themselves. Not only does this mambot turn the target url into unreadable rubbish like this:

h t t p : / / w w w . h y p n o s i s d o w n l o a d s . c o m ? 5 0 9

It also generates javascript so that the status bar doesn’t display the target url.

How to use:

1. Install the mambot in the usual way.

2. In the link that you want to cloak put the word affiliate. For example, with this link:

<a href=”http://www.netprofitstoday.com/cbae/?a=GmPNICPmNz”>Rosalind Gardners Super Affiliate Handbook</a>

change it to:

<a affiliate href=”http://www.netprofitstoday.com/cbae/?a=GmPNICPmNz”>Rosalind Gardners Super Affiliate Handbook</a>

or if you are using a WYSIWYG editor, change it to:

{mos_afflink href=”http://www.netprofitstoday.com/cbae/?a=GmPNICPmNz”}Rosalind Gardners Super Affiliate Handbook{/mos_afflink}

That’s all there is to it! It couldn’t be simpler.

If you want to make the text in the status bar change when the user puts their mouse over the link, use the “statustext” tag in the link. For example:

<a affiliate statustext=”Rosalind Gardners Super Affiliate Handbook” href=”http://www.netprofitstoday.com/cbae/?a=GmPNICPmNz”>Rosalind Gardners Super Affiliate Handbook</a>

or if you are using a WYSIWYG editor:

{mos_afflink statustext=”Rosalind Gardners Super Affiliate Handbook” href=”http://www.netprofitstoday.com/cbae/?a=GmPNICPmNz”}Rosalind Gardners Super Affiliate Handbook{/mos_afflink}

The Joomla! Mambot will then take care of the rest.

If you don’t run Joomla!, this product does an excellent job of creating cloaked links for your affiliate site: Affiliate Link Cloaker.

Incidentally, if you haven’t got Rosalind Gardeners excellent guide on affiliate marketing if definitely worth a read. Even though it is full of affiliate links, the products that she recommends are high quality, it is full of good advice, and she offers excellent after sales support. Her book starts from the very basics – from how to setup a website, to choosing the subjects to use and selecting the right companies to affiliate with. Buy her ebook here.

Download the new Joomla version (version 2) of my affiliate link cloaker mambot here. This version should work with all WYSIWYG editors.

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