![]() Web.com Site Builder & Hosting Suite Sb By Web.com $49.99 Web.com's Site Builder and Hosting Suite is designed to enable customers to easily register a domain name, build a website, and have it professionally hosted for a full year. After the year of free service, customers will be billed a standard recurring monthly fee to maintain their website, hosting and domain name registration. In addition, Web.com has partnered with Google to offer a $75 credit towards Google AdWords included in every box to help consumers market websites. ![]() 1-800-HOSTING Blog $0.99 Welcome to 1-800-HOSTING blog. We excited to share with you the latest happenings in managed hosting, dedicated hosting, and cloud hosting.Kindle blogs are fully downloaded onto your Kindle so you can read them even when you're not wirelessly connected. And unlike RSS readers which often only provide headlines, blogs on Kindle give you full text content and images, and are updated wirelessly throughout the day. ![]() Web Hosting Company Business Plan - MS Word/Excel $18.95 The Web Hosting Company Business Plan is a comprehensive document that you can use for raising capital from a bank or an investor. This document has fully automated 3 year financials, complete industry research, and a fully automated table of contents. The template also features full documentation that will help you through the business planning process. This is a full and complete business plan with original research, financial models, and marketing/advertising plans that are specific for a Web Hosting Company. Since 2005, BizPlanDB and its parent company have helped raise more than $100,000,000 through its developed plans. ![]() I'm Hosting as Fast as I Can!: Zen and the Art of Staying Sane in Hollywood $25.99 This mediocre life story skips on the details of some of the interesting things Tom Bergeron has done and focuses instead on his many health problems and his constant need to be in the "moment" with his Zen philosophy. Yes, it's his life story. But it's an abridged version that dwells on his physical issues (he comes across as a hypochondriac) and is an attempt to sway readers to his lightweight self-centered spirituality. In the end you probably won't like the guy as much as when you started. This is not a book for someone thinking Tom is a clean-cut, average American. Instead he loves out-of-place profanity, slams those who believe in God, and justifies bouts of anger. He makes some odd choices (he turned down hosting the Price is Right and instead decides to host a lame cable food show?) but he can't bring himself to admit he made a bad choice. The whole book becomes spin--a PR piece in which he tries to make himself look much better than he is. For the things we know him best he gives very few details. The Hollywood Squares section is surprisingly short (spent mostly kissing up to Whoppi Goldberg) and he even admits that he has too many memories from the series to include in the book! Huh? Hey, Tom, share some with us! He quickly glides through the seasons of Dancing with the Stars. He doesn't talk enough about the infamous Fox morning show he hosted. There's a little insight into why Regis's producer Gelman won't book Tom on Live with Regis, but even then you sense Tom is writing the story to make himself look good and isn't being totally honest with himself or the pain he caused others. He is a typical egotistical radio guy, who is a fantastic ad libber but avoids people when not in front of the microphone. He attributes most of his success to himself, yet he doesn't see that often he is either just at the right place at the right time (like getting the America's Funniest Home Videos job after hosting a local awards dinner honoring AFV's producer) or that there is an unseen hand placing him in the right situation. When he claims that the only negative period of his life was when he stopped meditating and started drinking a bit more, he doesn't go into any depth and avoids true introspection by instead giving a glib explanation. The entire book is that way. Despite what Jenny McCarthy is quoted as saying on the cover, there is very little that is inspirational about it. |
|