Showing posts with label prominent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label prominent. Show all posts
Wednesday, August 26, 2015
How to Create an Academic Website
Make a decision on whether to host your site on a university server or your own hosting space with your own domain. For an established academic with tenure, university hosting may make the most sense. For a graduate student or early career academic generally personal hosting is going be the better option. Even though you may have to pay out of pocket for personal hosting, if you are going to be or might be at a different institution in the future you don't want your Web presence tied to an account you can lose.
Start laying out how you want your site to look. Academic sites generally tend to have fairly conservative layouts, which is not a bad thing. Some are a simple one- page affair with contact information and a list of prominent publications. Several page layouts aren't out of the question, though, as long as you can find reasons for creating each page. Less established academics are generally going to benefit from having a larger Web presence, but it should be fairly conservative in style.
Give some thought to how you are going to handle the problem of displaying your CV online. A lot of CVs are simply going to be too big to put online as a single HTML document. While the CV can be good start for outlining your site, the CV itself may best be offered as a .pdf download from one of your pages. The reason I suggest the .pdf format is that it looks much more professional, and is much more of a standard than a word processing document. It ensures that someone printing out your CV has it looking as you intended it; other file formats may put the appearance of your CV at the hands of a stranger's print driver (or Web browser if you offer it in HTML).
Start assembling your site. Make sure you understand the File Transfer Protocol (ftp) for the page or pages you create for your hosting provider. After seeing how your idea looks live on the Internet, you may find it doesn't quite looks as your imagined. Just tweak things and publish the page again.
Once your site is up and running, link it to your profile on your department's site. If policies require you to host your site on university space to get linked, put up a place holder on the university server and link it to your external site.
VPS Hosting
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Tuesday, August 25, 2015
How to Tell Who Is Hosting a Website
Launch your Web browser and navigate to an online Web hosting search utility. (See Resources.)
Locate the search box on the Web hosting tool's home page. This is usually prominent and at the top of the page.
Enter the Web address for the website you wish to find the host for in the search box. Include the 'www' prefix on the website address. You can include the 'http://' part of the address, but it's not usually necessary.
Click 'Search' and wait for the search tool to find and return the correct Web host for the site.
Read the details for the Web hosting company in the search results pane. This usually includes a link to the Web host's own website so that you can contact the company directly. Or, copy and note down the information for future reference.
VPS Hosting
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