vineri, 17 august 2012

Damn Cool Pics

Damn Cool Pics


Bad Lip Reading Soundbite - More Mitt

Posted: 16 Aug 2012 09:20 PM PDT



Watch this hilarious "Bad Lip Reading" video of Mitt Romney.


And Not a Single F*ck Was Given That Day

Posted: 16 Aug 2012 08:17 PM PDT







































































































































Best Movie One-Liners

Posted: 16 Aug 2012 07:17 PM PDT

Movies have an ending, but great lines last forever. Which one's your favorite?

The Dark Knight


The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring


300


Finding Nemo


Taxi Driver


Terminator


Star Wars


The Wizard of Oz


Sudden Impact


A Few Good Men


The Princess Bride


Lion King


Judge Dredd


The Sixth Sense


The Shining


A League of Their Own


Toy Story


The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers


The Matrix


Avatar


Up


Top 10 Things You Didn't Know About Wind

The White House Friday, August 16, 2012
 

Top 10 Things You Didn't Know About Wind

The Department of Energy put together a list of the top ten things most people don't know about wind energy. Check it out:

10. Human civilizations have harnessed wind power for thousands of years. Early forms of windmills used wind to crush grain or pump water. Now, modern wind turbines use the wind to create electricity. Learn how here.

9. A wind turbine has as many as 8,000 different components.

8. Wind turbines are big. A wind turbine blade can be up to 150 feet long, and a turbine tower can be over 250 feet tall, almost as tall as the Statue of Liberty.

7. Higher wind speeds mean more electricity, and wind turbines are getting taller to reach higher altitudes where it’s even windier. See the Energy Department’s website to find average wind speeds in your state or hometown.

6. Most of the components of wind turbines installed in the United States are manufactured here. Facilities for building wind turbine parts are located in more than 40 states, and the U.S. wind energy industry currently employs 75,000 people.

5. The technical resource potential of the winds above U.S. coastal waters is enough to provide over 4,000 gigawatts of electricity, or approximately four times the generating capacity of the current U.S. electric power system. Although not all of these resources will be developed, this represents a major opportunity to provide power to highly-populated coastal cities. See what the Energy Department is doing to develop offshore wind in the United States.

4. The United States generates more wind energy than any other country except China, and wind accounts for 35 percent of all newly installed U.S. electricity generation capacity over the last four years.

3. The United States’ wind power capacity reached 47,000 megawatts by the end of 2011 and has since grown to 50,000 megawatts. That’s enough electricity to power over 12 million homes annually -- as many homes as in the entire state of California -- and represents an 18-fold increase in capacity since 2000.

2. Wind energy is affordable. Wind prices for power contracts signed in 2011 are 50 percent lower than those signed in 2009, and levelized wind prices (the price the utility pays to buy power from a wind farm) are as low as 3 cents per kilowatt-hour in some areas of the country.

1. As much as 20 percent of our nation’s electricity could come from wind energy by 2030 but continued support for clean energy tax credits is critical to achieving this target. That’s why President Obama is calling for an extension on the Production Tax Credit -- to support wind producers in the U.S. and continue to help drive the wind industry’s growth.
 

Get Updates

To learn more about the President’s vision for a more secure energy future and sign up to get updates, please visit: WhiteHouse.gov/energy.

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8 Link Building Tips - Whiteboard Friday

8 Link Building Tips - Whiteboard Friday


8 Link Building Tips - Whiteboard Friday

Posted: 16 Aug 2012 08:02 PM PDT

Posted by Paddy_Moogan

For today's Whiteboard Friday, I'll be covering eight tips to help you build more links. This follows on from my talk at MozCon which covered 35 ways to get links in around 35 minutes.

At MozCon, I explained how link building is hard, it takes time and can be very tough for most of us. Unfortunately for most of us, it isn't as simple as just producing content which automatically gets links. Our content needs a push to make it get links, and over time, it does become easier if you build the right relationships.

These techniques can help you build those relationships with the right people in your niche and get the links you deserve. Not only now, but in the future. Let's get to it and I'd love to hear your feedback in the comments.



Video Transcription

Hi SEOmoz fans. I'm Paddy, I work at Distilled. Welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. We're going to go through eight link building tips in eight minutes. I've just presented at MozCon, and we did 35 ways to get links in 35 minutes. This is a lot shorter, but hopefully you'll get some good tips out of it.

So, number one, this is a little technique you can use to mine through your competitors backlinks and pull out the links which are good for you. So the process, you go to Open Site Explorer, put in your competitor's URL, you can download an Excel file, put that Excel file into a Google custom search engine, then you can search for whatever you want. So you can search for guest posts, you can search for competition, you can search for sponsored links, you can find all of these really cool places your competitors have got links and average those guys as well and just piggyback off the back of their link building.

Number two: Go to Meetup.com and search for the word "blogger" and refine the results by your area, and you'll find local bloggers meeting up in the same place. So you may find music bloggers, design bloggers, fashion bloggers. Instead of emailing all of those people, just go to the event. Go and meet them, say hello, buy them a drink, go and have dinner. It's a much better way of building a relationship than just firing a bunch of emails out, and this is going to build a good long-term relationship with those guys.

Number three: Build good infographics quickly. Infogr.am is a really, really cool tool for uploading your own data. You can put headlines. You can create really pretty graphs. So without the need of a designer, you can just put out your own infographic really, really quickly. I wouldn't recommend doing this over and over again. But if you get some good wins with it, take it to your boss and show how, "I did this. I'm not a designer. Get us a designer for a day and let's see what we can do." It's really good for building that case, then showing your boss.

Number four: Finding your competitors' guest posts. I'm guessing your competitors are doing guest posting as well as you. They're going to be lazy. They usually write a byline, such as this, so written by "John Smith, CEO of Company X." Just take a snippet out of that bio and search for it in Google. You'll find a bunch of other places that they guest post. You can reach out to those guys as well, and you've got a few easy win links.

Number five: We did this one at Distilled for a client in the UK. Have a profile page for spokespeople and directors of your clients. So when they get quoted by newspapers, by magazines, you can just ask them to link to that profile page. They may not want to link to your homepage if it's quite commercial, but they're quite happy to link to a profile page because they're not commercial. They've got good photos, good information about the person. They're more likely to link to that than a homepage. Also set up Google alerts for the name of that person. So if that person ever gets quoted, you can go along and take a look at that website. See if there's a link. If there's not, contact the website and say, "Hey, thanks a lot for quoting our director. Did you know he's got a profile page here?" And that's going to link to the profile page.

Number six: This is a freebie for you guys. It's a guest blog post search engine. You can get it at http://www.paddymoogan.com/guest-posting-search-engine/, and there will be a link in the blog post as well. When you search this engine for your keywords, you will only see results that accept guest posts. So search for the word "travel,"
search for the word "'food," whatever your industry is, and the only results that get returned, you can reach out to and get a guest post. At the moment, there are about 1,500 domains in the search engine. That's going to grow over the next few weeks as I add more to it, but go away, use it, and get guest posts.

Number seven: This could be a little bit stalkerish, but it's cool. Amazon have a facility where you can search for other people's wish lists using their email address. So if there's a really good blogger who you want to impress, put their email address into Amazon Wish Lists and see if they've got one. If they have, maybe send them a gift with a little note saying it's from your company, you really appreciate the work they do and the blog posts they're putting out. It's a great way of building a relationship. They're going to reply to you. They're going to say thank you.

Number eight: If you're doing any kind of content based link building--so infographics, that kind of thing--you probably want people to tweet it. When they do, use a service like Topsy or BackTweets. Go and see who has tweeted your content, click on their Twitter profile, see if they've got a website. If they have, approach them and say, "Hey, thank you so much for tweeting about our infographic. Did you know you can also embed it on your blog, and here's the embed code." You are going to get a much better response, right, from those people than people who you are just emailing who have never seen that content before. So these guys have already interacted, they've already tweeted, they've shown they like it. So just take that extra step and see if they can embed it and give you a proper link rather than just tweeting about it.

So that's it. Eight link building tips in what was hopefully about eight minutes. I'm Paddy. Feel free to ask any questions in the comments, and thank you.

Video transcription by Speechpad.com


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New Data: The Correlations Between Social Sharing and Inbound Links

Posted: 16 Aug 2012 02:57 AM PDT

Posted by danzarrella

Over the past few years, the topics I’ve researched, written, and spoken about have evolved. One of the most common questions I’m still asked about is the relationship between social media sharing and SEO performance. Thanks to Rand and his awesome team at SEOMoz, I got access to their Mozscape API and was able to actually start to answer these questions in a scientific way.

To complete this analysis, I compiled a database of more than 25,000 URLs that had been shared at least once on the three major social networks (Facebook, Twitter and LIinkedIn), were at least a month old, and had at least one incoming link.

First, I looked at the relationship between the number of times a URL was Tweeted and the number of incoming links it had pointing to it. I found a convincing positive relationship. Those URLs that got more Twitter love, also got more link love.

Secondly, I looked at Facebook and found, somewhat unsurprisingly, almost exactly the same effect. Facebook popularity is related to inbound link popularity for URLs.

Finally, I looked at LinkedIn sharing. Of course the numbers are much smaller here due to sharing activity being much more common on Twitter and Facebook, but I still found another positive relationship.

For all of the “big three” social media networks, I found that social sharing had a positive relationship to incoming links pointing to a URL. This result is basically what I expected to see. However, when I took a step back and compared the actual Pearson’s Correlation Coefficient of the sharing on the three networks to inbound links, what I found was surprising.

While all three networks did have a positive correlation, the strength of the relationship was strongest for LinkedIn. So, while LinkedIn may be the least obvious choice for sharing activity, it is still incredibly important for marketers also interested in SEO performance.

Looking for more insights into online marketing? Don't miss the free webinar on August 20th with Rand from SEOmoz and Dharmesh from Hubspot: The State of SEO and Internet Marketing in 2012.


Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don't have time to hunt down but want to read!