In working through our 2009 holiday card and promotion, I had to create a 2010 calendar in vector format. Since the holidays are a time of sharing and I am in a festive spirit, below is a zip containing a 2010 calendar in Illustrator, EPS, and PDF format for anybody to use in anything they wish.
Weeks go from Sunday to Saturday, and everything is fully editable. Enjoy!

Two Trees Media is now offering an Etsy Store design and marketing service. Etsy is a site where crafters can sell their creations online to make a few extra bucks or even earn a living.
Whether you knit, make handmade jewlery, crochet, design and make purses, or any number of other crafts that started as a hobby and turned into a passion, Two Trees Media can get your Etsy store up and going with a personalized and professional look that complements your crafting creativity.
Here's how we can help:
If you're interested in any of the above service then contact us today and tell us about yourself and how you want to expand your Etsy business. We'll provide you with a price quote and help you take your crafting business to a higher level.
Imagine a website that has tens of millions of users that you can access for free. This is the idea behind the social networking site Facebook. The site isn't just for giddy teens and college students looking for a good time either. Facebook is also a great way for small businesses to reach out to their customers and potential customers.
Chris Anderson says in his new book Free: The future of a radical price (page 163) says:
Most of the value of Facebook is in the fact that it has created perhaps the world's largest clost market of reputational currency, which is the foundation of its estimated multibillion-dollar valuation.
Chris is talking about how Facebook has managed to become a business worth billions of dollars despite a very low stream of income. Why? Because the "reputational currency" that Facebook offers, the idea that Facebook allows one to build a reputation among a large group of followers, is very lucrative. Add the millions of users to Facebook's closed market system and you have a virtual community worth billions.
Online reputation is everything. If you have no reputation, or worse, a bad reputation, no one will take you seriously and you probably won't be getting many customers in the online world. If you have a stellar reputation, you have a lot of 'virtual currency' you can use to your advantage in terms of marketing, advertising and bringing in more business.
How do you use Facebook to your company's advantage? Here are a few tips:
Keep in mind that building any type of community online takes time and patience. For example, I've been building my personal blog for almost 3 years now and I'm just starting to see the fruits of my labor in the form of advertising revenue. Don't get frustrated if you have a hard time getting followers right away. But as long as you're consistent in your efforts and work to keep a positive reputation, your Facebook community will grow and your company will reap the benefits.
I'm always the first to admit when I make a mistake. And hoo boy, did I ever make one here. I recently created a website for a friend using Drupal. This friend didn't use the site for a few weeks, and when she went to make a blog posting, we discovered that the site had been overrun with comments advertising Viagra, Paxil, Tamiful, "h5n1" masks, and kamagra jelly gel (whatever that is). Overrun to the tune of 48,495 comments in the span of 1 month, to be exact. Yikes!
Rather than have her website become a perpetual illicit online drug store, I quickly fixed my mistakes to deter the comment spammers. Since I feel strongly that one should always learn from his/her mistakes, here's what I did to stop the flood of comment spam so you don't have to learn the hard way like I did.
The biggest mistake I made with this site was to allow anonymous users the ability to post comments without moderation. The first step I took in fixing this problem was to take away that privilege. Anonymous commentators will still be able to leave comments, but you will have to approve them before they can be posted to the website (see our earlier post on how to be notified when new comments are posted).
Do this by going to Administer > User Management > Access Control. Scroll down to the Comment Module, and uncheck the box next to "post comments without approval." Scroll down to the bottom of the page, and click Save Permissions.

This is the meat-and-potatoes of this fix: you'll want to make it as hard as possible for bot or other automated scripts from posting comments. The best way I've found of doing this is requiring a CAPTCHA before visitors can submit their comment. Here's how to enable CAPTCHAs with Drupal:





Warning: the information posted in this step has the potential to completely hose up your website. Please backup your database before trying and proceed with caution!
Now that you've prevented new comment spam from being posted, you'll want to remove the existing spam messages. Log into your website's web control panel, and get to the MySQL admin section (my host uses phpMyAdmin). Find the table named "comments", and browse it. Do you have about a bajillion spam comment records? Good, then you're in the right place.
We're going to run a SQL query to delete all those comment records from the database, so this means you will lose your non-spam comments too. I'd suggest wiping the comment table clean then manually inputting any good comments you have.
delete from comments where status = '0'

Click the Go button on the lower right of the screen. The page will refresh, and you'll get a message saying how many rows were deleted. All my comments were unpublished, so none were deleted.
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delete from comments where status = '1'
This time there should be significantly more records deleted.
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One of my favorite eye candy blogs, Design*Sponge, is running a great series of posts on various aspects of running a small business "to connect and create local support systems" for women. Every Tuesday a new expert chimes in on various ways to start, grow, and run your small business.
Grace Bonney has pulled together some great guest authors and experts for her posts, but some of them stand out as being an absolute must-read for any small business owner (man or woman) in these hard times. Here's some of my favorites:
Keep up the great writing Design*Sponge, I for one have benefited greatly from this series!

(Image courtesy of bancomicsans.com/Jeph Jacques)
As we've previously discussed using the font Papyrus as an example, choosing the right font for a project can be tricky. Far too many people take the easy way out an stick with a narrow palette of default fonts that come with their computer, not aware that there are many thousands of other options out there.
Comic Sans is a font produced by Microsoft that has shipped with every version of Windows since Windows 95. It is a casual face, meant to imitate informal comic book lettering. It has been used in everything from Beanie Baby tags, scientific PowerPoint presentations, passive-aggressive notes, outdoors signage, and municipal signage.
It has been said that the best typeface is one that is never noticed; good fonts match the message they are conveying. By itself, Comic Sans conveys childishness, fun, bubbly, and an overall feeling of lightheartedness. Very inappropriate uses include setting the Qur'an in Comic Sans, college exams, or reports on hazardous nuclear waste. This documentary video sums it up pretty well.
Comic Sans from Sam and Anita on Vimeo.
But alas, there is hope for all the Comic Sans haters! There are many fonts out there, and some really great free alternatives to Comic Sans. Below are some of the best I've found. But please, don't use any of these for serious communications. If you do, I might really have to punch this bunny.
(Ok this one isn't a totally great Comic Sans alternative, but I just really like the little monster digbats that come with the font.)


Sigh. I thought it couldn't get any lamer than the Windows 7 launch party videos. But I just came across this promo video for Windows 386, made in the glory days of corporate fashion for women circa 1987.
As the original poster said, "boring until the 7 minute mark when the production is taken over by crack-smoking monkeys."
Lets all hope and pray the Family Guy Windows 7 infomercial is better than this.

Blogging can seem like a daunting task, especially if you want to post to your business blog regularly. For some people, finding enough ideas to write about is the problem. For others, just finding the time to write a post can seem almost impossible.
The solution to both these problems is quite simple. Here are 3 easy ways to keep posting for long term blogging success:
Once you have been blogging for a while thinking of and writing posts will become easier. But you need to be passionate about your blogging topic. If you're only blogging on a popular topic to make quick money, you'll quickly burn out and lose interests. Worst of all, your readers will see right through your scheme and you risk ruining your online reputation.
Planning ahead and a regular posting schedule will help your blog succeed. Don't get discouraged if it takes some time for your blog to get noticed. Persevere with the same passion you put into your business and you'll be on the path to a healthy readership.
Ah TV. The glass teat. It gives so much, yet asks for so little in return. Every so often, a TV show comes along that has absolutely stellar opening credits. Something that encapsulates what an entire TV series is about in under two minutes. Below is a list of really great TV openings. My personal favorite is Six Feet under, which has a great story of how they were created. Who would have though the boob tube could be so inspiring?
Sometimes I wonder if Microsoft's marketing department isn't just big fail party. First, they blatantly copy Apple and are launching their own brick-and-mortar stores (complete with Answers Bar!). Now they are trying to convince groups of diverse people to hold Windows 7 launch parties with a series of lame videos posted to YouTube.
Really, if this isn't a thinly veiled attempt at corporate propaganda, I don't know what is. I'll admit, I thought the commercials with the girl making a slide show of the Windows 7 reviews was cute, but these videos are just sad. Marketers around the world have got to be collectively shaking their heads.
Come on Microsoft, please come up with more innovative marketing campaigns in the future, mkay?