miercuri, 23 iulie 2014

Damn Cool Pics

Damn Cool Pics


Ford F-150 Converted Into A Hummer H1

Posted: 23 Jul 2014 02:13 PM PDT

Sick of that old pickup truck you've got sitting in the driveway? Turn it into a Hummer!


















The Street Dentists of Delhi

Posted: 23 Jul 2014 02:07 PM PDT
















30 Insane Facts About Sleep [Infographic]

Posted: 23 Jul 2014 02:02 PM PDT

Can anyone of you tell me what's the official term/jargon for that kind of sleep where dreams make themselves look vintage/foggy/amazingly pale? Well, learn more of that in this infographic.

Click on Image to Enlarge.



Small Kids Are Safe With Big Dogs

Posted: 22 Jul 2014 07:47 PM PDT

You know your child is in the right hands (or should we say paws) when one of these big dogs is looking out for them.

















Having Fun With Statues And Monuments

Posted: 22 Jul 2014 07:35 PM PDT

Even old statues and monuments need a good laugh every once in a while.


















The VP has the white board marker:

The White House Wednesday, July 23, 2014
 

The VP has the white board marker:

Over the past couple years, administration officials have picked up a marker and taken to our "White House white board" to explain how to fix our immigration system, break down how health reform helps your day-to-day life, and outline exactly what our budget's paying for.

Today, Vice President Joe Biden is taking the pen, and he's talking about something he knows like the back of his hand:

The current state of our country's crumbling roads and bridges -- and exactly why it's so important to invest in them right now.

You're going to want to watch this one. Take a look, and pass it on:

Watch the VP discuss our nation's infrastructure.

Our roads and bridges do far more than get people and goods from Point A to Point B.

A high-quality transportation system keeps jobs here in America, allows our businesses to grow, and keeps down the prices of household goods.

Our country's infrastructure crisis isn't a far-off problem: 65% of our major roads are rated in less than good condition. 25% of our bridges require significant repair or can't handle today's traffic.

It looks like Congress is going to act soon to pass a short-term resolution that would continue to fund the projects fixing our roads and bridges -- but we need to solve the problem, not just kick the can down the road.

Watch the Vice President explain the need for a long-term investment, and break down exactly what our plan looks like.

Then, be sure to pass this one on.

Stay Connected

 

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Short Video: Infrastructure with the Vice President

 
Here's what's going on at the White House today.
 
 
 
 
 
  Featured

Video: Infrastructure with the Vice President

Rebuilding our country's roads and bridges helps our families, fuels our economy, and better positions America for the future.

Want to know how? Vice President Biden takes the marker in our newest White House White Board, and spends a few minutes explaining the history of America's infrastructure -- and why we need a long-term solution that will repair our transportation grid, invest in new infrastructure technologies, and rebuild America for a 21st-century economy.

Watch the Vice President talk about our infrastructure in the latest White House White Board.

The Vice President talks about our nation's infrastructure.


 
 
  Top Stories

The First Significant Legislative Reform of Our Job-Training System in a Number of Years:

Yesterday, President Obama signed into law the Workforce Innovation and Opportunity Act (WIOA), which helps bring job-training programs into the 21st-century.

READ MORE

The Apollo 11 Mission: 45 Years Later

Forty-five years ago today, two American astronauts -- Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong -- landed on the moon's Sea of Tranquility, and Neil Armstrong planted the first footprint on the surface of the moon. As he made those first steps, Armstrong uttered that simple phrase we still remember today: "That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind."

READ MORE

Why Job-Training Programs Matter:

In the President's State of the Union address, he tasked Vice President Biden with leading a review of federal employment and training programs, with the goal of training workers with the skills that today's economy demands. The review is now complete, and we've identified what's working around the country.

READ MORE


 
 
  Today's Schedule

All times are Eastern Time (ET)

12:10 PM: The President arrives San Francisco

13:20 PM: The President attends a House Majority PAC event

2:00 PM: The Vice President delivers remarks to the NAACP National Convention

3:00 PM: The President delivers remarks and answers questions at a DCCC event

4:20 PM: The President departs San Francisco

4:30 PM: The Vice President delivers remarks at a rally for Congressional candidate Erin Bilbray

5:30 PM: The President arrives Los Angeles

7:55 PM: The President attends a DNC event


 

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Dear Google, Links from YouMoz Don't Violate Your Quality Guidelines

Dear Google, Links from YouMoz Don't Violate Your Quality Guidelines


Dear Google, Links from YouMoz Don't Violate Your Quality Guidelines

Posted: 22 Jul 2014 05:15 PM PDT

Posted by randfish

Recently, Moz contributor Scott Wyden, a photographer in New Jersey, received a warning in his Google Webmaster Tools about some links that violated Google's Quality Guidelines. Many, many site owners have received warnings like this, and while some are helpful hints, many (like Scott's) include sites and links that clearly do not violate the guidelines Google's published.

Here's a screenshot of Scott's reconsideration request:

(note that the red text was added by Scott as a reminder to himself)

As founder, board member, and majority shareholder of Moz, which owns Moz.com (of which YouMoz is a part), I'm here to tell Google that Scott's link from the YouMoz post was absolutely editorial. Our content team reviews every YouMoz submission. We reject the vast majority of them. We publish only those that are of value and interest to our community. And we check every frickin' link.

Scott's link, ironically, came from this post about Building Relationships, Not Links. It's a good post with helpful information, good examples, and a message which I strongly support. I also, absolutely, support Scott's pointing a link back to the Photography SEO community and to his page listing business books for photographers (this link was recently removed from the post at Scott's request). Note that "Photography SEO community" isn't just a descriptive name, it's also the official brand name of the site. In both cases, Scott linked the way I believe content creators should on the web: with descriptive anchor text that helps inform a reader what they're going to find on that page. In this case, it may overlap with keywords Scott's targeting for SEO, but I find it ridiculous to hurt usability in the name of tiptoeing around Google's potential overenforcement. That's a one-way ticket to a truly inorganic, Google-shaped web.

If Google doesn't want to count those links, that's their business (though I'd argue they're losing out on a helpful link that improves the link graph and the web overall). What's not OK is Google's misrepresentation of Moz's link as "inorganic" and "in violation of our quality guidelines" in their Webmaster Tools.

I really wish YouMoz was an outlier. Sadly, I've been seeing more and more of these frustratingly misleading warnings from Google Webmaster Tools.

(via this tweet)

Several months ago, Jen Lopez, Moz's director of community, had an email conversation with Google's Head of Webspam, Matt Cutts. Matt granted us permission to publish portions of that discussion, which you can see below:

Jen Lopez: Hey Matt,

I made the mistake of emailing you while you weren't answering outside emails for 30 days. :D I wanted to bring this up again though because we have a question going on in Q&A right now about the topic. People are worried that they can't guest post on Moz: http://moz.com/community/q/could-posting-on-youmoz-get-your-penalized-for-guest-blogging because they'll get penalized. I was curious if you'd like to jump in and respond? Or give your thoughts on the topic?

Thanks!

Matt Cutts: Hey, the short answer is that if a site A links to spammy sites, that can affect site A's reputation. That shouldn't be a shock--I think we've talked about the hazards of linking to bad neighborhoods for a decade or so.

That said, with the specific instance of Moz.com, for the most part it's an example of a site that does good due diligence, so on average Moz.com is linking to non-problematic sites. If Moz were to lower its quality standards then that could eventually affect Moz's reputation.

The factors that make things safer are the commonsense things you'd expect, e.g. adding a nofollow will eliminate the linking issue completely. Short of that, keyword rich anchortext is higher risk than navigational anchortext like a person or site's name, and so on."

Jen, in particular, has been a champion of high standards and non-spammy guest publishing, and I'm very appreciative to Matt for the thoughtful reply (which matches our beliefs). Her talk at SMX Sydney—Guest Blogging Isn't Dead, But Blogging Just for Links Is—and her post—Time for Guest Blogging With a Purpose—helps explain Moz's position on the subject (one I believe Google shares). 

I can promise that our quality standards are only going up (you can read Keri's post on YouMoz policies to get a sense of how seriously we take our publishing), that Scott's link in particular was entirely editorial, organic, and intentional, and that we take great steps to insure that all of our authors and links are carefully vetted.

We'd love if Google's webmaster review team used the same care when reviewing and calling out links in Webmaster Tools. It would help make the web (and Google's search engine) a better place.


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