In Feburary 2016 20,
Obtain the DNS nameservers used by the company hosting your actual website. These are unique addresses that look something like web addresses (e.g., 'ns1.yourwebhost.com', 'ns2.yourwebhost.com'). There are usually at least two nameservers like these; often, your hosting company provides these to you at signup. If not, contact the hosting company for this information.
Change the DNS nameservers where your domain name is registered to the nameservers provided by your hosting company. Each registrar handles this step differently, but in most cases, you can access your domain name's nameservers online by logging into your account at the registrar's website. If you cannot easily find where to make these changes, contact the company where your domain is registered and ask how to do this. It usually takes between 24 and 48 hours for the changes to take effect once you change the nameservers.
Login to your web hosting account and associate your domain name with your website. Again, this process is different for each provider. Sometimes, you will already have a website created with a temporary web address; other times, you will access your online file manager and create a new folder for the domain name. Consult your hosting company's help documentation, or call the support line if you need assistance with this step. Your domain name will point to whatever webpage you have created as soon as the DNS nameserver changes take effect.
In Feburary 2016 20,
Posts mit dem Label handles werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Posts mit dem Label handles werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Samstag, 20. Februar 2016
How to Link a Domain Name to a Web Hosting PageIn Feburary 2016 20,
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Samstag, 6. Februar 2016
Can You Merge 2 Twitter Accounts?In Feburary 2016 06,
In Feburary 2016 06,
Decide which of the two accounts you want to become the primary account. Consider factors such as the current audience of each account: If one has a smaller but more vocal follower base, it may make more sense to make that account the primary one. Choose the account with the larger number of followers if you are not sure.
Switching Usernames
Twitter allows you to change your account handle at your choosing. This will immediately change the handle your followers see in their timelines, but will retain all existing follower/following relationships, status updates and direct messages. If you'd prefer to combine one account's handle with the other account's follower base and history, you'll need to swap usernames. If you want to switch handles or create a brand-new handle for your chosen primary account, log in to Twitter and choose 'Settings.' Type your new handle in the 'Username' box.Switch usernames by temporarily renaming the first account to anything else, so that its username is now free. Log in to the other Twitter account and change the username to the newly free username. Log in to the first account and update its username to the other account's name. For example, if you want to switch @a and @b: rename @a to @c, rename @b to @a and rename @c to @b, in that order.
Backing Up Followers
While Twitter does not offer a follower import or export tool, you can export your entire list of followers to an Excel spreadsheet using the third-party service Export.ly (exportly.com). As of March 2011, you can export up to 10,000 followers for free. Export followers for the account you don't intend to use anymore and manually re-add those friends on the primary account, using the Excel spreadsheet as your list.
Announcing Your Changes
Send a tweet from the account you are no longer using, asking followers to follow the new account instead. Update the Twitter bio to indicate that newcomers should follow the new primary account instead. Depending on the content and volume of former tweets, you may choose to delete all previous updates on this Twitter account to make it clear that it is inactive.People must use your new handle for replies and direct messages or you will not receive these messages.Update the new primary account's profile to reflect the new merge, if necessary. For example, you might end the Twitter bio with 'Formerly @oldusername' to help alleviate confusion.
In Feburary 2016 06,
Decide which of the two accounts you want to become the primary account. Consider factors such as the current audience of each account: If one has a smaller but more vocal follower base, it may make more sense to make that account the primary one. Choose the account with the larger number of followers if you are not sure.
Switching Usernames
Twitter allows you to change your account handle at your choosing. This will immediately change the handle your followers see in their timelines, but will retain all existing follower/following relationships, status updates and direct messages. If you'd prefer to combine one account's handle with the other account's follower base and history, you'll need to swap usernames. If you want to switch handles or create a brand-new handle for your chosen primary account, log in to Twitter and choose 'Settings.' Type your new handle in the 'Username' box.Switch usernames by temporarily renaming the first account to anything else, so that its username is now free. Log in to the other Twitter account and change the username to the newly free username. Log in to the first account and update its username to the other account's name. For example, if you want to switch @a and @b: rename @a to @c, rename @b to @a and rename @c to @b, in that order.
Backing Up Followers
While Twitter does not offer a follower import or export tool, you can export your entire list of followers to an Excel spreadsheet using the third-party service Export.ly (exportly.com). As of March 2011, you can export up to 10,000 followers for free. Export followers for the account you don't intend to use anymore and manually re-add those friends on the primary account, using the Excel spreadsheet as your list.
Announcing Your Changes
Send a tweet from the account you are no longer using, asking followers to follow the new account instead. Update the Twitter bio to indicate that newcomers should follow the new primary account instead. Depending on the content and volume of former tweets, you may choose to delete all previous updates on this Twitter account to make it clear that it is inactive.People must use your new handle for replies and direct messages or you will not receive these messages.Update the new primary account's profile to reflect the new merge, if necessary. For example, you might end the Twitter bio with 'Formerly @oldusername' to help alleviate confusion.
In Feburary 2016 06,
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