One of two ways:
1. DNS forwarding - you contact the registrar and ask them to point the nameservers to the addresses you provide.
2. IP forwarding - like lynxus has explained: just create two A records (one for the domain itself, one to handle WWW) to a specific IP.
Most definitely!
After some good experience with my hosting company, I've learned to actually choose my service providers by seeing how they can assist me via chat...
I second that. W3C could have been great, if anyone actually bothered to follow its advice. From my own experience, W3C compliance has a very small (if any) effect on SEO, so I honestly don't know if I'd recommend anyone to follow the W3 codec strictly...
Hey, that's not bad for a start! :)
You can invest some resources into SEO, and try to boost your rating.
I've heard many times that "contents is king", if you offer your visitor something of a value, he will return and bring his friends along, so to speak.
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