After over a year of soul-searching, I decide to spin off my book support topics to their own site.
I built my first Web site back in the mid 1990s. It was a simple site, created in HTML, that provided information about me and my books.
A [Very] Brief History of my Web Site(s)
The Internet was young back then — at least as far as the masses were concerned. Few people surfed. In fact, the whole idea of going online was so new and radical back then that my first book proposal, which was about telecommunications on a Mac, was turned down because publishers felt that there wouldn’t be enough people interested in it.
Anyway, as things heated up, I soon saw the benefits of putting more information on the Web. And then, in 2003, I discovered blogging. Surely my personal blog should be separate from what I write to support my books and articles, right? So I spun off a new site, LangerBooks.com, and published plain HTML Web pages with book promotional and support information.
Meanwhile, I fell in love with the whole blogging interface. There was no question in my mind: a blog was a perfect tool for presenting new content while automatically archiving old content. So I got LangerBooks.com into a blog format, with a separate blog for each title.
Back in those days (2003-2004), it wasn’t easy for me. I’d decided to blog with a program called iBlog that had a lot of promise. Unfortunately, its author wasn’t willing or able to keep up with technology. His software generated static HTML documents for each page of a blog. The more you wrote, the more cumbersome the whole blog updating process became. And, as those of you who read this blog regularly know, I can write an awful lot.
So in January 2005, I made the jump to WordPress. It was a big jump indeed, since I knew absolutely nothing about PHP or MySQL and very little about CSS. (What made it even bigger was that I was hosting my own blog on my own server.) I learned what I needed to know. One of the best things about WordPress is that you don’t need to know much to build a really professional looking site.
Around the same time, I decided that I didn’t want to maintain separate blogs for my books. So I brought all the books back under MariaLanger.com and came up with some creative ways to keep Book Support topics separate from the rest of the site. Creative, yes. Effective, perhaps.
One Blog to Rule them All?
Of course, the whole time I was doing this, I was reading from “pro bloggers” about how important it is to keep your blog on just one topic. These guys were blogging to make money, I argued to myself. They weren’t in it because of a need to blog or a desire to provide additional information to book readers. So I pretty much ignored them.
But their advice was eating away at my brain in the back of my mind. After much thought, I realized that having too many widespread topics in my blog was preventing the blog from being more popular. For example, people interested in my flying and lifestyle posts — which, according to a poll on my site, is about 30% of the site’s visitors — were probably bored silly with my Mac OS and Excel and WordPress posts. And people interested in getting book support (16% of visitors) weren’t interested in wading through the other content to get the bits of information that could help them. This was preventing me from getting more site subscribers and regular readers.
So about two weeks ago, I decided to make the split.
Drumroll, Please
The question of how I did it is something I can discuss as a WordPress-related post. Let’s just say that I’ve done the basic work and have enough content in the new blog to open it to the public.
So here’s the formal announcement:
Support for my books and articles can now be found at the Maria’s Guides Web site: http://www.mariasguides.com/.
If you’re reading this post there, you’ve already found it. Otherwise, if you’re interested in articles, tips, and downloads related to my books about Mac OS, Excel, Word, and WordPress, please go check it out.
And yes, occasionally there will be cross posts, like this one. But I’ll try to keep that to a minimum.
Why Maria’s Guides?
A few years back, I made a false start on a line of eBooks. I abandoned the project, primarily because I got busy with other things that were more interesting (and lucrative). I’m thinking of revisiting the idea with shorter eBooks covering a wider range of topics. Maria’s Guides was the working title of the series and I own the domain name, so why not?
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An update on the book’s revision status.
At this point, Peachpit Press has decided not to revise my QuickBooks 2006 for Macintosh: Visual QuickStart Guide for the next version of QuickBooks. This is a financially-based decision; the current book’s sales were not sufficient to warrant a revision.
That doesn’t mean we won’t revise the book for a future version. We just don’t plan on doing it for the next version. (Remember, we also skipped the 2005 version.)
If you’d like to see an edition of the QuickBooks VQS for the next version of QuickBooks for Macintosh, contact Peachpit Press and let them know. If enough people contact Peachpit about this, they could reconsider their decision.
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I retire the old, underutilized system and replace it with a simpler, spam-protected solution.
One of the biggest challenges I have as an author is providing clarifications and corrections of my work to readers on request.
In the beginning, I used to just answer questions submitted via e-mail. But when I started getting dozens of questions a week — half of which covered the same handful of topics over and over — I knew I needed a better solution.
So I built a FileMaker Pro powered database of questions and answers that I called the FAQ system. That worked fine for several years, with only two problems: people who neglected to read the previous questions and answers before repeating a question and readers of one particular Windows book (which will go unnamed here) who were absolutely obnoxious in their requests for help. (I subsequently cut that books questions and answers right of my database and stopped providing support.)
Years passed. I switched to a WordPress-based site. I didn’t have any desire to update the old FileMaker Pro database to match the new site’s interface. I needed a new solution. I switched to an XD-Forum forum-based FAQ system. It worked very much like the FileMaker Pro database, but with one big difference — site visitors refused to use it.
Oh, don’t get me wrong — I did get a few questions I could answer. But the majority of people decided to e-mail me instead. Since I don’t provide support by e-mail anymore, their questions remained unanswered.
Two weeks ago, my support forums were attacked by spammers and I had no software to protect it against future attacks. I needed a new solution.
So today I instituted a comment-based Q & A support system. In the support pages for each of my books, there’s a Q & A link. Following that link takes the visitor to a page that provides introductory information and a list of the questions and answers submitted so far. At the end of the questions and answers is a form they can use to ask a new question. The form utilizes the site’s comment feature, so all entries are filtered by Spam Karma, the excellent spam protection software by dr Dave. Very little spam should get through, and, if it does, getting rid of it is as easy as clicking a link. Registration is not required — although an e-mail address is — and visitors can elect to “subscribe” to comments so they get their answer, as well as related questions and answers, delivered right to their e-mail box. E-mail addresses do not appear online and I don’t use the ones I get for anything. In fact, I don’t even know how to retrieve them from the bowels of WordPress. So you don’t have to worry about spam coming from me.
So if you see any articles on this site referring to an FAQ system, they now refer to the Q & A system.
Let’s hope this works.
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Another Article for Advisor Basics is published.
My article, “Streamlining Data-Entry with Value Lists,” for Advisor Basics of FileMaker Pro has been released.
For those of you who are wondering why I write about FileMaker Pro, here are the reasons:
- I’ve written three books about FileMaker Pro (although none of them are currently in print).
- I’ve been using FileMaker since 1990 (before it was Pro).
- I think FileMaker Pro is the best database applications out there for mortal users.
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Information from the Updater Read Me File
Changes in R4:
File operations
- You can now use QuickBooks on the same network server as the one your
company file is located on. If another user has accessed the company file,
you will see that the file is locked.
- An issue with unexpected QuickBooks behavior when backing up to
QuickBooks for Windows has been resolved.
- An issue with unexpected QuickBooks behavior when opening a company
file with the setting “Show Reminders List when QuickBooks starts” has been
resolved.
- An issue with a memory leak when condensing a company file has been
resolved.
Online banking
- Improvements have been made to the online banking feature, including: 1)
pressing Return in the Downloaded Transactions window automatically
performs the default action, like Add to Register, and 2) after adding a
transaction to the register, the Downloaded Transactions window
automatically selects the next transaction.
- An issue with unexpected QuickBooks behavior when the filename of an
online banking file (.qbo) contains a ‘+’ (plus sign) has been resolved.
- Double-clicking on an online banking file (.qbo) now launches QuickBooks
with the last company file that was opened.
Reports
- Account names are now properly displayed in Profit & Loss reports after
upgrading from QuickBooks 2005 for Mac.
- An issue with unexpected QuickBooks behavior when creating a report that
shows a company name with special characters has been resolved.
- Renaming a memorized report now works properly.
- The QuickReport option is now available for all accounts in the Chart of
Accounts List.
- Invalid characters are no longer displayed in reports when the Company >
Company Settings > Transactions > Use account numbers setting is used.
Lists
Sales receipts and invoices
Payments
- The Receive Payments window no longer constantly reverts back to today’s
date.
- Applying a partial payment to multiple invoices is now properly handled.
PayCycle
Other changes
- Accented characters in a company filename are now displayed in the
Company Settings > Company Information window.
- QuickMath calculations are now properly handled when the setting
“Automatically place decimal point” is enabled.
- Assigning subaccounts in transactions is now properly handled.
- An issue with unexpected QuickBooks behavior when attempting to add
1099 status to a vendor has been resolved.
- QuickFill now selects the correct account when the setting “Use Account
Number” is enabled.
- Changes to the Cost field on an inventory item are now properly retained.
- An issue with unexpected QuickBooks behavior when Contact Sync is turned
on when previously synced First Name fields are empty has been resolved.
- The font used to display the Reconcile window has changed for easier
viewing.
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Informit.com posts sample Chapter of QuickBooks book.
You can now find a sample chapter of my QuickBooks Pro 2006 for Macintosh: Visual QuickStart Guide, in HTML format, on the Informit.com Web site. The chapter covers entering sales and related topics.
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