marți, 19 octombrie 2010

Damn Cool Pics

Damn Cool Pics


Cop Jumps into Car to Escape Pack of Wolves on Highway

Posted: 19 Oct 2010 11:30 AM PDT

Allegedly, this video was taken from security camera footage from a highway in the Russian city of Rostov-on-Don. A police officer pulls over a motorist. As he talks to the driver, a pack of wolves or wild dogs attack him. The officer jumps into the backseat of the car to escape them.

Some people on the Internet think that this video is fake. What do you think? For more details.



Sexy Halloween Costumes

Posted: 19 Oct 2010 11:00 AM PDT

A collection of really hot girls in Halloween costumes that can give you many great ideas of what you can dress up as for this holiday. You will also find, as a bonus, celebrities in their hot Halloween outfits from the previous years after the jump.



































































































Celebs in their sexy Halloween costumes



































Japanese Dancing Robot Girl

Posted: 19 Oct 2010 04:11 AM PDT

Such images scare the hell out of me. It makes me think about all these Terminator movies and I think it's just the matter of time before all these robots find weapons and start the war against humans. Or they won't? This HRP-4C cybernetic human girl looks very friendly and is a good dancer. Take a look.






















Source: pinktentacle


Incredible Hulk Boys

Posted: 19 Oct 2010 01:08 AM PDT

Here are two very strong boys. The first one is 5-year-old Giuliano Stroe who was born in Romania and has been training since the age of two in Italy. The second boy is 16-year-old Richard "Tiny Tarzan" Sandrak. He was born in Ukraine and moved to the USA to become a movie star starring in Little Hercules. He could bench press 210 pounds (95 kg) at the age of six.

5-year-old Giuliano Stroe






















16-year-old Richard "Tiny Tarzan" Sandrak



















The Funniest Facebook Wins

Posted: 19 Oct 2010 12:49 AM PDT

The top 10 of Facebook ownings. It's just priceless.




















A Detailed Look at Sex Injuries

Posted: 19 Oct 2010 12:36 AM PDT

As much fun as sex is, it can also be very dangerous (and let's be honest, isn't that the most fun kind of sex anyway?) — here's a detailed look at some of the most common injuries sustained during intercourse, both by the participants as well as the surroundings.

More Infographics.

Click to Enlarge.



Source: medicalinsurance


SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog

SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog


Catastrophic Canonicalization

Posted: 18 Oct 2010 11:27 AM PDT

Posted by Dr. Pete

Since Google released the Canonical Tag in early 2009, we've heard a similar SEO horror story replay itself. It boils down to this: "I accidentally canonicalized my entire site to one page, and my site was completely dropped from the index." Although the evidence of rel-canonical going very wrong was overwhelming, I decided it was time to get some firsthand data in an effort to help people both avoid this problem and potentially fix it.

warningWarning!
The following SEO experiment was conducted by a trained professional (allegedly), and it didn't turn out to be a very good idea even for him. Kids, don't try this at home. Seriously.

Experiment Overview

First things first – throughout this post, I'll refer to the "Canonical Tag," by which I mean the meta directive <link rel="canonical"... /> and not canonicalization in general. On August 23, 2010, I added the Canonical Tag sitewide to my usability blog. Each tag was identical, canonicalizing every page to my home-page:

<link rel="canonical" href="http://www.usereffect.com" />

As much as possible, I made no other content changes during the experiment. Every day, I measured ranking for a couple of critical terms along with Google's indexed page count (using the "site:" operator).

Stage I – The Decline

The graph below shows indexed pages from the day I put the Canonical Tag in place until the day I removed it, just under 3 weeks later:

 Graph of index decline

Despite a short-term bump in indexed pages, the overall impact was huge, even in a relatively short term. Total indexed pages dropped from 237 to 103 (57%). The lower, light-red line shows the non-supplemental page count (the pages prior to hitting omitted results). I thought this might be worth tracking, but the pattern was very similar. Although canonicalization can be used to remove duplicate content, Google does NOT consider a wrongly canonicalized page to be a duplicate – the page is simply removed from the index.

I'm going to briefly discuss some major milestones along the decline. Each milestone is marked with the date and the number of days that passed after putting the tag in place (e.g. +1 = 1 day after).

Day +1 (Aug 24) – SEOmoz Canonical Warning
Just over a day past turning the Canonical Tags "on," I noticed a handful of Rel-Canonical warnings in the SEOmoz campaign manager under the "On-page" tab. If you have no Canonical Tag or a self-referencing tag, you should see this:

SEOmoz campaign manager screenshot

Keep in mind that an unchecked box may be fine – obviously, some Canonical Tags will point to different URLs. If you start seeing this in huge volumes, though, you may have a problem. Unfortunately, Google Webmaster Tools shows no errors for bad canonicalization.

Day +3 (Aug 26) – Top Page #1 De-indexed
Although indexation actually showed a bump around this time, my most trafficked page, with the #1 spot on Google for a solid 2-word phrase, was de-indexed. My home-page took its place in the rankings for that phrase. This demonstrates a critical point. With many SEO problems, strong pages are buffered a bit due to their "authority", link profile, etc. In this case, since high authority means more frequent crawling, the top pages on my site were the first to be affected. By the time you notice the damage of a bad sitewide canonicalization, your top pages may have been de-indexed for weeks.

Day +12 (Sep 4) – Top Page #2 De-indexed
Just over a week later, I noticed that my 2nd top page had disappeared from the index, also for a pretty competitive keyphrase. My home-page took its place, but unfortunately the ranking dropped from #1 to #9. Unfortunately, I wasn't monitoring this page from the start, so it was probably de-indexed earlier.

Day +19 (Sep 11) – Major Traffic Loss
The de-indexation by itself was starting to worry me at this point, especially for the top pages, but by the 2nd week I was starting to also see significant loss of search traffic:

Graph of search traffic decline

The graph covers 4 weeks, including the week before the canonicalization. It was about this time that I lost my nerve and decided I'd had enough. So, I set about reversing the process.

Stage II – The "Recovery"

On September 11th, I removed the sitewide Canonical Tag. I continued collecting data until October 14th. Here's the graph of Google's indexed pages during the recovery:

Graph of index recovery

There was a fairly quick bump in indexed pages, followed by a couple of leveling-off periods. The total count (149 on the last day) never regained the original indexation count of 237, even after a full month, but some of that content may have been duplicated.

Unfortunately, while indexation seemed to jump in the first few days, regaining status for my top pages took a while longer. Below are a few milestones, measured from the day I removed the sitewide Canonical Tag.

Day +18 (Sep 29) – Resubmitted XML Sitemap
For the purposes of the experiment, I tried to let recovery proceed on its own, but after a couple of weeks of not regaining my top pages, I started to get itchy. My first step was an easy one, resubmitting my XML sitemap via Google Webmaster Tools.

Day +21 (Oct 2) – Resubmitted Partial XML
Knowing that a basic resubmission probably wouldn't accomplish much, I created a 2nd XML sitemap with just my Top 3 pages and submitted that separately. I didn't have high hopes, but I figured I'd try to kick-start the crawlers.

Day +24 (Oct 5) – Added Unique Canonical Tags
Since the top affected pages were all blog posts, I decided to add back in Canonical Tags, but this time proper tags pointing to the correct, individual pages. My hope was that a good Canonical Tag might offset a bad one, or at least get the crawlers' attention.

Day +26 (Oct 7) – Submitted Reconsideration Request
Finally, almost 4 weeks after removing the Canonical Tag, I got a bit desperate. I submitted my first Google reconsideration request in quite a while. I'll talk about that a bit more later.

Day +27 (Oct 8) – Top Page #1 Re-indexed
Just a day after filing for reconsideration, my Top page regained its #1 spot and kicked out the home-page. Given the timing, I doubt this had anything to do with the request, but the re-implemented Canonical Tags may have helped.

Day +28 (Oct 9) – Top Page #2 Re-indexed
The next day, my #2 page regained its status. This was more important in a way – while the #1 page was just replaced by the home-page in the rankings, the #2 page had fallen off the rankings entirely. Not only was the page re-indexed, but it immediately regained its ranking position. After 4 full weeks, I finally saw some light at the end of the tunnel.

Stage III – The Pleading

Consider this a bit of an epilogue (as if this post wasn't already long enough). I thought our readers might enjoy seeing my reconsideration request. If nothing else, it's honest:

I did something bad. Let's get that out in the open. In late August, I rel-canonicaled my entire site (www.usereffect.com) to the home-page. Here's the thing - I did it on purpose. "Why would you do something that stupid on purpose?" you might ask. Fair enough.

Full disclosure - I write for a well-known SEO blog (SEOmoz.org). For months, we've been hearing horror stories from people who accidentally rel-canonicaled their site to one page. The problem is, they usually didn't know when it started (since it was accidental) and they didn't have much data. So, I decided to collect some. I wasn't trying to mess with Google - I just wanted to get some good data for business owners to help them avoid a costly mistake.

The good news is that my experiment was wildly successful. Within 3 weeks my Google index was chopped in half and my most prominent pages were replaced in the SERPs with the home-page. I decided I made my point and reversed the tags on September 11th (probably not the best choice of dates, in retrospect).

Almost a month later, and some of my key pages are still gone from the index. These are strong pages with good, natural link profiles. I've resubmitted my XML sitemap, submitted a focused sitemap with just those pages and have added new rel-canonicals self-referencing those pages. So far, nothing.

So, embarrassing as it is, I have no option left but to beg the forgiveness of you, the Google Gods. You who are mighty atop your Mountain View, each one better looking and more brilliant than the last, I beseech thee - please look with pity on this mere mortal and grant your bounty upon the following pages that have provoked your disfavor:

[short list of URLs]

Yours in humility,

Dr. Peter J. Meyers ("Dr. Pete")

Lessons Learned

I think the lesson here is pretty straightforward – don't do this. Of course, you'd never canonicalize your entire site to one page on purpose, but with today's sitewide headers and CMS systems, it's shockingly easy to write a header tag that affects your entire site, even across 1000s of pages. I'm not bashing the Canonical Tag as a tool – I think it has some very strategic uses. The problem is that it is one of those rare cases where you can effectively destroy your SEO efforts by changing just one line of code.

With just one 57-character tag, I lost ranking on my most competitive terms and cut my indexed pages and search traffic by more than half. The Canonical Tag is a powerful tool, but use it wisely and plan carefully.


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SEO Blog

SEO Blog


Why majority of low cost SEO campaigns end in disappointments?

Posted: 19 Oct 2010 04:45 AM PDT

EYE OPENER: Low Cost, Quick Results in Organic SEO A Cost-effective Offer or a luring SEO TRAP: YOU DECIDE  This article is meant for startups, small companies who are willing to put their Online Identity in the hands of low cost inexperienced freelance companies, promising miracle rise of their website's ranking on major SERPs (Search [...]


Seth's Blog : Killer apps now shipping (early days)

[You're getting this note because you subscribed to Seth Godin's blog.]

Killer apps now shipping (early days)

You may have read about my proposed apps:

One made it easier to run and manage meetings, and the other made it easier to present a powerpoint-style slideshow on the iPad (but better).

I'm delighted to report that early versions of both have been built by loyal readers who read the posts and chose to take action.

Meeting Mngr Pro lets you manage timing, share images and connect among many iPads.

Nonlinear lets you import a PDF or PPT file and then jump around. It's not for building slides, it's for navigating them, and even includes a way to drive an external monitor in a clever way.

For ver. 1.0 products, they're both cheap and pretty cool. I have no doubt that with feedback and loyal users, they'll each develop into very cool tools.

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Michael Gray - Graywolf's SEO Blog

Michael Gray - Graywolf's SEO Blog


Change Your Content Based on Traffic Intent

Posted: 19 Oct 2010 07:38 AM PDT

Post image for Change Your Content Based on Traffic Intent

A few weeks ago, Brent Payne made a post about “whitehat cloaking” and changing your content based on referring website. He asked for some feedback on Twitter, causing some follow up discussions. I had a few people asking for examples about how to do this. In this two part post, first we’ll look at some theory about why would you want to do it, under what circumstances, and how to do it without angering the Google Gods. In tomorrow’s post “How to Conditionally Change Your Content,” I’ll give you some ideas about how to implement this.

Let’s talk about the high level strategy items first. Why would you want to serve different content to different users:

  • Social media traffic is advertising averse, so show them fewer ads and more social oriented content
  • Search traffic can be goal/purchase oriented, so try to serve them content designed to help you do that
  • Direct traffic can get the full brand treatment designed to build subscribers, regular visitors, or a sense of community

To use a cooking metaphor, I’m not serving each of these people a different meal, but I’m varying the seasoning to suit my guest’s individual tastes. Let’s get past the superficial. What are some things you could do differently for, say, social media traffic? Under most situations, social media visitors don’t click adsense, banner ads, and that sort of thing. For social media traffic, your best outcome will be getting them to link to your page, vote/retweet your page, or visit other pages. What you want to think about is how you can change your content to help you meet those goals.

With Google’s announcement that site speed is a factor, many savvy webmasters opted out of third party buttons and began to use smaller, lightweight, on-site graphics. While this helps with site speed, it doesn’t help with social engagement. If you want more social interaction show bigger buttons up top, especially the third party buttons with active vote/tweet counts. I would remove as much advertising as you could. I would replace this with graphics or sections featuring other social content. If you use tags to isolate your social content it would be easy to pull out using a DB query. How about showing your most popular or most emailed pages. Rather than showing a social media audience 25 pages of your top 25 list, consolidate all of the content onto one page.

What about search traffic? How can you change the content to better suit their needs? In some cases you may want to remove content like the sidebar, making your pages more like single page squeeze pages. Of course this will depend on the page content like, say, a product page. You may want to be more aggressive with advertising placement if you run an adsense or affiliate website. You could also vary the advertising a bit. I’ve spoken before about using tags to target your advertising, but why not use search query terms as well. If someone came to your website searching for [cheap mexico vacations], normally you would just serve them ads about cruises, hotels, or vacation packages to Mexico. However, if you trapped for search queries containing the word [cheap] you might also want to mix in some value based vacation advertising.

While there are some advantages to doing this, there are some pitfalls as well. This type of behavior makes for a more complicated website to maintain and run, so make sure you have the resources for the long haul. Secondly you have to be concerned about the search engines and giving the appearance of cloaking with ill intent. The more dramatic the main content is from one version to another, the more likely it is to upset a search engine. For example, if you serve a 1,400 word article to direct traffic, a 700 word trimmed down version to search traffic, and a 400 word version to social traffic, you are taking some risks. I would make sure that search engine bots get a version that is very close if not identical to the version that users coming from a search engine will get.

In the next post I’ll walk you through some of the steps on How to Conditionally Change Your Content from a programming perspective.
Creative Commons License photo credit: Rob Hughes

This post originally came from Michael Gray who is an SEO Consultant. Be sure not to miss the Thesis WordPress Theme review.

Change Your Content Based on Traffic Intent

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