Contribute to Anywired
In General by SkellieWould you like to advertise yourself to almost 2,000 subscribers and thousands of daily visitors?
I welcome quality guest-posts — including a byline and link — on any of the following topics:
- Earning an income online.
- Remote work.
- Freelancing.
- Product/software/web app reviews.
- Entrepreneurship.
- Web work.
Please send me an email containing your article pitch before writing the article. I’ll let you know if your idea is something I’d like to see on the site. Links to relevant work (i.e. other posts you’ve written) are also welcomed.
You can contact me via the address below:













February 21st, 2008
Very interesting method of publishing your email address. One concern: When search engines are able to recognise images, do you think this method of using images instead of live mailto links are vulnerable to spamming? I was thinking of copying you (forgery = flattery), but then thinking of this shift in technology, which doesn’t seem too far off, I decided against it and just used the good ol “[a]“
February 21st, 2008
I think bots will probably be able to recognize typing tricks before they can read images, but I can’t vouch for that. I use Gmail with Better Gmail (which hides spam count) so I don’t see any spam, anyhow. But feel free to use the image email address if you like it. I’m not the first person to do it :).
February 21st, 2008
Technically bots can already read images (it’s just the same as the OCR software you might have with a scanner) but if they’ll bother for the relatively few email addresses they’ll get is another matter.
Anyway I’d like to send you a guest post sometime, I’ll start drafting my pitch.
February 22nd, 2008
Yes, John, OCR was what I was thinking of. Speaking of which, here’s something I just saw which relates to what we’re talking about:
http://mashable.com/2008/02/20/myfaceid/
February 23rd, 2008
Actually, bots can already read text in images, if they are clear enough. Haven’t you heard of captcha cracking software? Captcha is essentially text in image, still the bots can break it pretty easily…
And Skellie, why don’t you make a Contribute to AnyWired page? This post will get buried soon as you continue posting content.
February 25th, 2008
Just wondering - who owns the copyright of the contributed work?