01-04-2015, 08:07 AM
01-04-2015, 08:28 AM
That's just AWESOME-- wow is all I can say!!! thanks
01-04-2015, 08:29 AM
Thanks and reps
01-04-2015, 08:33 AM
Here is a mirror nice share,
Magic Button :
Code:
http://mir.cr/1RDONXZW

01-04-2015, 07:50 PM
Great stuff. Thanks for the share!
01-05-2015, 02:33 AM
Many thanks for this share! Great job! Reps added. All the best! Take care!

01-05-2015, 03:22 AM
(01-03-2015 09:47 AM)internetter Wrote: [ -> ]Very nifty share mate - thanks and reppedI wholeheartedly agree, rep to the poster, this is a goldmine of information that will save lots of marketers time and money. getting a leg up on the competition is so sweet. I don't think alot of the members realize,appreciate how valuable this "simple" pdf really is or even apply it at all and NO I wasn't paid to say that LOL. I just feel so wow. I would have gladly paid for something like this.
01-05-2015, 04:17 AM
Thanks a lot! Awesome share +rep
01-05-2015, 01:02 PM
Great Stuff TY Repped +5
A word of caution...ifttt is a great resource as long as you keep your processes in order. There are 2 issues that arise with this service that can wreck your progressions. If you target a site that is known for tough interventions, and or multiple updates to it's API you have to put those problematic sites at the far end of you recipe tree. As such if they crash as they are likely to do you don't loose all your upstream recipes outputs. Sounds straight forward but it's not that easy. for instance Facebook and Wordpress are two sites worth putting at the end of your chain. There may be others that are even more fickle but the idea is getting as much through put in the event one or more recipes go off air. That brings me to another more predominant issue with this service. The recipes get unhooked all the time. So you often times with have to visit the sites one by one and re-initialize the recipes. If you don't they will not work. While every automation solution does attract attention for the ideal circunmstance it is however always the silver lining that is promoted and not the nitty gritty learned through trial and error and hardships toiled. regards igydog
A word of caution...ifttt is a great resource as long as you keep your processes in order. There are 2 issues that arise with this service that can wreck your progressions. If you target a site that is known for tough interventions, and or multiple updates to it's API you have to put those problematic sites at the far end of you recipe tree. As such if they crash as they are likely to do you don't loose all your upstream recipes outputs. Sounds straight forward but it's not that easy. for instance Facebook and Wordpress are two sites worth putting at the end of your chain. There may be others that are even more fickle but the idea is getting as much through put in the event one or more recipes go off air. That brings me to another more predominant issue with this service. The recipes get unhooked all the time. So you often times with have to visit the sites one by one and re-initialize the recipes. If you don't they will not work. While every automation solution does attract attention for the ideal circunmstance it is however always the silver lining that is promoted and not the nitty gritty learned through trial and error and hardships toiled. regards igydog
01-05-2015, 05:19 PM
thanks,very good,i will looking into it.