m3php.com

Current Weather: Temp: 4.8°C, Pressure: 1018.0mb, Wind speed: 2.2mph, Rain: 0.0mm at 14:55 on 02 January 200992

06 Nov, 2006

HurlZ.com Changed!

Posted by: peter In: general

Paul & myself have decided that the way we was using HurlZ.com just wasn’t working, the short website address market was already covered mostly by TinyURL.com and really there wasn’t much need for ham radio sites as domains are so cheap these days!

So we’ve taken HurlZ.com in a new direction and that’s social bookmarking some people might be aware of services like del.icio.us (Y! owned) and it’s based on that system just HurlZ.com is only for ham radio related websites.

Paul and I have been going through our own collection of ham radio links and have been adding them to our accounts so there’s already a nice collection growing in the database! But of course we recommend you signup and get adding! It’s a great way of keeping track of ham radio sites plus you can access them anywhere even from work/school/club/friends pc!

So go check it out! http://www.hurlz.com

1 Response to "HurlZ.com Changed!"

1 | Christian

November 6th, 2006 at 10:06 pm

Avatar

Looks nice… One thing I don’t like is the “rel=nofollow…

Since a long time I have killed the rel=nofollow as spammer will spam anyway with or without rel=nofollow. But Spam is no problem in my blog as SpamKarma 2 is working like a charm in combination with the Askimet plugin. I get about 10-20 spam comments per day and all are killed. There have been no false positives.

I think good comments deserve a backlink… The rest is spam anyway …

Comment Form

Flickr PhotoStream

    River Thames OxfordFirst Great Western TrainOsney LockOsney LockOsney LockOsney LockOsney LockOsney LockOsney Lock

About

Welcome to the blog of Peter Goodhall, M3PHP who is 22 and a recent graduate after Multimedia Technology (Web Design) at Buckinghamshire New University. I'm keen about all aspects of amateur radio and run the e-learning website HamTests and recently got awarded the RSGB Kenwood Trophy.

I'm also evolved with a number of other amateur radio web applications and currently work as a freelance web developer.