I've never tried this, but you can answer your own questions in order to get more improves, questions and answers. Let me know if it works
for me if you make to searches better your wedsite and easy to search to all user you need to post your site to all social site.
Generally , no. The purpose of the site is not to be a marketplace. But it would be possible to get in contact with another site user who might happen to have a dog for sale.
Integrating your site will make it better so the risk in not integrating your site is the UX(user experience) is low.
Yes, the WikiAnswers site is very user-friendly.
user as in a user of this site
In both cases, the site must keep a database record for the user. With HTTP authentication, the user first registers with the site. During each subsequent visit, the user provides a username and password, which allows the site to identify the user and update the user's record. With cookies, the user does not explicitly provide a username and password. However, browser identifies the user by sending the user's cookie number each time the user accesses the site.
Watch32 claims to be a legal site. As long as a user is not downloading a file, like a torrent, directly from a site, it is not the user's fault if the site is a bootleg.
In this case, the site must keep a database record for the user. With cookies, the user does not explicitly provide a username and password each time it visits the site. However, browser identifies the user by sending the user's cookie number each time the user accesses the site.
A user name in this site looking at questions when she is here. A user name in this site looking at questions when she/he is here.
This is the date when the user visited the site.
In the title bar a web site's title appear when a user is visiting the site but page of the website display at url bar.
I am not sure whether you actually need it, perhaps you do. The point is, if any Web site has Java applets - components programmed for Java - then the user must install Java to make it work. Java (and alternative technologies, such as Flash, or SilverLight) make it possible to make "richer" Web pages, i.e., Web pages with more options, and a better visual presentation.I am not sure whether you actually need it, perhaps you do. The point is, if any Web site has Java applets - components programmed for Java - then the user must install Java to make it work. Java (and alternative technologies, such as Flash, or SilverLight) make it possible to make "richer" Web pages, i.e., Web pages with more options, and a better visual presentation.I am not sure whether you actually need it, perhaps you do. The point is, if any Web site has Java applets - components programmed for Java - then the user must install Java to make it work. Java (and alternative technologies, such as Flash, or SilverLight) make it possible to make "richer" Web pages, i.e., Web pages with more options, and a better visual presentation.I am not sure whether you actually need it, perhaps you do. The point is, if any Web site has Java applets - components programmed for Java - then the user must install Java to make it work. Java (and alternative technologies, such as Flash, or SilverLight) make it possible to make "richer" Web pages, i.e., Web pages with more options, and a better visual presentation.