A Guide to Backlinking?

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Another backlinking alternative is to backlink to HubPages from your own personal blog or website. The best way to do this is to write complementary blog posts or pages. For example, you can write a blog post about a barbecue, and link back to a recipe Hub on a recipe you used at the event.

You can also embed the HubPages widget into your blog or website. It makes it much easier to present your latest Hubs to an audience of people not on HubPages.com. You might also backlink to Hubs from other article sites on which you write.

You can also utilize the HubPages linking tool more. When you provide useful, relevant links to other Hubs, you improve the utility of your articles. The linking tool also makes it very easy to inter-link your own articles.

With regard to inter-linking your Hubs, you might especially consider linking to new Hubs from previously written Hubs if the content is related. For example, if you write a Hub on how to cut up a whole chicken, you can benefit from linking to it from a previous Hub on the best knives for butchering chicken. In short, it is a good practice to link to new Hubs from previously existing ones.

Getting Started on HubPages: Step #1 - Create Great Content.

We’ve come up with our Summer 2012 guide for writers who want to contribute creative quality content to the world without reinventing their blog or website - A practical guide to linking, backlinking and making your webpages conform to a more modern, potentially successful representation of your website content. Penguin represents Google’s forward-thinking policy of policing webpages so that quality information gets rewarded and promoted; while spammy, self-serving and lesser quality webpages earn a lower rank. It’s not a bad thing considering the internet is the new world library being used by real people.

Treat your INSERT the same as a SELECT and use RETURNING in your INSERT-query: INSERT INTO foo (bar) VALUES('Doe') RETURNING id; Fetch the result and you're done. Works since version 8.2.

It works, obviously, but referencing on the serial sequence currval value could be problematic when I have many users adding rows in the same table at the same time. Well, its just a test atm. Referencing on the customer_id_seq, if two user do the same thing in the same time, could happen that them both get the same id from that way... or not?

I have to know the table's sequence name. Any suggestion/better ways?

I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.

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