joi, 7 octombrie 2010

SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog

SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog


SEOmoz Meetups Coming to New York, Sofia, Las Vegas, Dublin, San Diego and More

Posted: 07 Oct 2010 05:36 AM PDT

Posted by randfish

You've probably already noticed that here at SEOmoz, we tend to travel quite a bit. Often times we're speaking at a conference or covering it on the blog, but sometimes we find ourselves wishing we had more time to hang out with the community. We needed to come up with a way to spend some quality time with you. So, we're sending mozzers out to cities all over the world to have Meetups and give us a chance to get to know you in a more intimate setting.

We're interested in learning first-hand what we can we do to make our software work harder for you, if you'd like to learn about a specific subject on the blog and in general, anything you'd like to tell us! Of course, we'll provide the beer, probably some food and at the very least some interesting conversation.

Upcoming Meetups

New York City - Oct. 19, 6-9pm Eastern
637 W. 27th Street - 8th Floor
New York, NY 10001

New York City is probably the best place we could think of to have our first SEOmoz meetup. Promediacorp has been gracious enough to let us use their amazing office to host the event. This should be a really great event as we'll have a few speakers in addition to food and drink. We are limiting the event to 50 people, so if you can definitely join us, please be sure to RSVP!

Register for SEOmoz NY Meetup 2010 in New York, NY  on Eventbrite

NYC Speakers:

Rand Fishkin, CEO, SEOmoz
Topic: Shhhh.... A sneak peek at new research from SEOmoz

Chris Winfield, CMO & Managing Partner, BlueGlass
Topic: Major Trends in SEO as seen from the team at BlueGlass

Greg Gortz, VP Sales, Zemanta
Topic: Link Building Best Practices for 2010 and beyond


Sofia, Bulgaria - Oct. 29, 7-9pm
We're still waiting to finish the final touches on this event. Be sure to follow us on Twitter  or keep an eye on our events page and we'll announce changes as they come up.


Las Vegas - Nov. 10, 5:30-7:30pm Pacific

PubConFor the past few years we've held our annual Search Spam Party. This year at PubCon we'll be hosting a happy hour with free drinks and light appetizers for all PubCon attendees. We're still looking to finalize the exact location but we're planning on having it at or near the Wynn. So after the last session of the day head on over for a fun, relaxing happy hour with all your favorite peeps. Don't miss it!

As PubCon gets closer we'll have more information about the location and a place to sign up.


San Diego - December

We'll have more information about this one soon. The event should take place around December 20th.

But what about my city?

Don't worry! We are planning more SEOmoz events. You can stay up-to-date on the location of the moz team on this new fancy looking page linked to below. This calendar not only shows our meetups but also shows what conferences we'll be speaking at and who's speaking and/or attending. It will be updated often, so if you're ever curious where we are and what we're up to, you can find out here:

SEOmoz Events

By the way, I'll actually be at all of the events we have listed above. I look forward to seeing you there!


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Content Marketing That Stands Out

Posted: 06 Oct 2010 10:54 AM PDT

Posted by Dr. Pete

Red car in a sea of white carsWhen you're a small fish in a sea of competitors, getting noticed by search engines is never easy. If you're a car dealer, local restaurant, real estate agent, lawyer, doctor, etc., you're not only competing with hundreds of other businesses just like yours, but when it comes to link-building, everyone is trying to pick the same low-hanging fruit.

Strong content that attracts natural links can really help break the mold of low quality directories, blog comments, and spammy article marketing, but where do you start and how do you stand out? The world only needs so many mortgage calculators. I'd like to offer a few tactics to get you moving (and thinking) in the right direction.

Car Dealers (Tactic: Positive UGC)

Many companies are afraid of user-generated content (UGC). They imagine the worst – negative comments, brand-bashing, customer service horror stories. Although that fear is often overblown, it's easy to sympathize. It is possible, though, to use UGC and still control the message.

Let me illustrate with a story. In the late 90s, my parents bought a Saturn. Back then, Saturn was known for their unique buying experience – when you signed your paperwork, they took your picture, posted it on the wall, and the employees all came out and cheered. It was a little odd, admittedly, but it was definitely a memorable experience.

Why not use that same approach online? Find your brand evangelists - ask your customers to submit photos of themselves with their cars, for example. This type of positive UGC has a number of advantages:

  • You'll tend to attract brand loyalists.
  • People will link to their content on your site out of vanity.
  • You'll create natural testimonials.

Restaurants (Tactic: Positive UGC)

This is another spin on the car dealership idea. If you're a restaurant, you have to deal with reviews. They can really make or break your business, especially now that there are entire companies dedicated to flooding the internet with positive (or negative) reviews. Why not ask for feedback in a way that naturally spins positive? For example, add a feature to your site where you ask people to post pictures of their favorite dish from your restaurant. No one has a bad favorite dish – the haters will naturally exclude themselves. Meanwhile, the brand evangelists will love seeing their photo posted online and will naturally tell their friends.

Real Estate (Tactic: Local Interest)

Real estate websites and even blogs have a tendency to be generic – they talk about why it's time to buy, how to find a decent interest rate, etc. This information, done well, is fine, but it's hard to stand out when you're saying the same things that 1,000 other realtors are saying.

Why not focus on the local angle? Think more broadly than just real estate – talk about the highlights of the neighborhoods you sell in. This could be everything from the best schools and local tourist attractions to talking about your favorite local restaurants. Don't be afraid to get a little personal, and you'll tap into a few advantages:

  • You'll show you know and like the neighborhood you sell in.
  • Local content will naturally attract local links.
  • You'll naturally highlight the reasons to live in your neighborhood.

Lawyers (Tactic: Local Expertise)

Lawyers, like realtors, face the problem of how to say the same things as everyone else and still sound unique. Again, focus on your own niche and the local angle (assuming you're a smaller office). Highlight local stories that show how the law impacts your area – this could be everything from crime stories to civil suits. Discuss these stories in the context of your practice. You could even have fun with it – talk about weird laws in your state or city, for example. The advantages?

  • You'll show that you're up to date with current laws and events.
  • People will see that you understand how the law impacts them.
  • Local interest stories naturally attract local links.

Don't Be Afraid to Get Creative

If there's a theme here, it's that you can't be afraid to start getting creative, even if you think you're in a "boring" industry. Think about what got you into your business in the first place – there's always a story, and the more you put your own spin on content, the more authentic and unique it will naturally become. Say something that no one else is saying, and natural links will create themselves.

"Hundreds of cars" image provided by ShutterStock.


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Solar Panels on the White House and in the California Desert

The White House Energy and Climate Agenda
Thursday, October 7, 2010
 

The Week in Energy and Climate

This week, Council on Environmental Quality Chair Nancy Sutley and Secretary of Energy Steven Chu announced plans to install solar panels and a solar water heater on the roof of the White House residence. Later that same day, Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar approved the first large-scale solar energy plants on public lands.  

In his Weekly Address on Saturday, President Obama announced that a company called BrightSource will break ground this month on a new, revolutionary type of solar power plant, thanks in part to clean energy incentives launched by the Administration.  The solar power plant will be the largest of its kind in the world, and it will put about 1,000 people to work and power up to 140,000 homes.

In case you missed it, October is National Energy Awareness Month.  Be sure to check out our calendar of energy events happening throughout the Administration in October.  

Highlights

The First Large-Scale Solar Energy Plants on Public Lands
October 5, 2010

Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar announces a big step on our nation’s path to a clean energy future with the approval of the first large-scale solar energy plants ever to be built on public lands.

Commitment to Lead: Solar on the White House
October 5, 2010
At the first annual GreenGov Symposium, Secretary of Energy Steven Chu and White House Council on Environmental Quality Chair Nancy Sutley announce plans to install solar panels on the roof of the White House Residence.

The Paris Motor Show
October 4, 2010
David Sandalow, Assistant Secretary of Energy for Policy and International Affairs, looks at the future of electric cars -- and America's role in it -- at the Paris auto show.

Weekly Address: Solar Power & a Clean Energy Economy
October 2, 2010
The President points to a revolutionary new solar plant that will employ 1,000 people and power 140,000 homes. The plant is possible because of the President’s investments in the clean energy economy, which Congressional Republicans want to eliminate.

Kicking Off National Energy Awareness Month
October 1, 2010
The Obama Administration kicks off National Energy Awareness Month with a calendar of clean energy events and activities from around the Administration.

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Daily Snapshot: A Little Lady Meets the First Lady

The White House Your Daily Snapshot for
Thrusday, October 7, 2010
 

Photo of the Day

Photo of the Day

Lynne Silosky, a niece of Staff Sergeant Robert J. Miller, curtsies with First Lady Michelle Obama during a meeting with Miller’s family in the Oval Office, Oct. 6, 2010. Later, during a ceremony in the East Room of the White House, President Barack Obama awarded Staff Sergeant Miller the Medal of Honor posthumously for his heroic actions in Afghanistan. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

Today's Schedule

All times are Eastern Daylight Time

10:15 AM: The President receives the Presidential Daily Briefing

10:45 AM: The President meets with senior advisors

11:30 AM: The Vice President attends an event for Gubernatorial candidate Tom Barrett

12:05 PM: The President signs the Intel Authorization Bill

12:20 PM: The President signs the Reducing Over Classification Bill

12:30 PM: Briefing by Press Secretary Robert Gibbs WhiteHouse.gov/live

1:30 PM: The President meets with Secretary of the Treasury Geithner

2:30 PM: The President departs the White House en route Bowie, Maryland

3:15 PM: The President delivers remarks at a rally for Governor Martin O’Malley

4:15 PM: The President departs Bowie, Maryland en route Andrews Air Force Base

4:35 PM: The President departs Andrews Air Force Base en route Chicago, Illinois

6:15 PM: The President arrives in Chicago, Illinois

6:15 PM: The Vice President attends an event for Senatorial candidate Robin Carnahan

7:00 PM: The President delivers remarks at a reception for Alexi Giannoulias

7:40 PM: The President attends a dinner for Alexi Giannoulias

9:20 PM: The President departs Chicago, Illinois en route Andrews Air Force Base

10:55 PM: The President arrives at Andrews Air Force Base

11:10 PM: The President arrives at the White House

WhiteHouse.gov/live  Indicates Events that will be livestreamed on WhiteHouse.gov/live.

In Case You Missed It

Here are some of the top stories from the White House blog

Awarding Staff Sergeant Robert J. Miller the Medal of Honor
The Vice President and the First Lady were also present as the President awarded Robert J. Miller, Staff Sergeant, U.S. Army, the Medal of Honor for conspicuous gallantry.

Honoring Fallen Firefighters, Preparing as Individuals
During Fire Prevention Week, as we remember the sacrifices of our firefighters and first responders, we have a responsibility to make sure our own homes are protected.

DOT Online Map Collects Voices of the Recovery Act; Workers Encouraged to Upload Their Own Video Stories
Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood introduces the new DOT map of videos from workers across the country talking about what the Recovery Act has done for them.

Get Updates

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Seth's Blog : Generous gifts vs. free samples

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

Generous gifts vs. free samples

Free isn't always generous. Free can be a legitimate marketing strategy, an ultimately selfish way to increase sales. Once you spread your ideas (and free is the best way to do that), there are all sorts of ways to profit. But don't be confused. Free samples and free ideas and free bonuses are not necessarily generous acts.

A generous gift comes with no transaction foreseen or anticipated. A gift is a gift, not the beginning of a transaction. When you see a Picasso painting at the Met, Picasso doesn't get anything (he's dead). Even his heirs don't get anything. His art is a gift to anyone who sees it.

Giving gifts is a fairly alien endeavor. In most families, even the holidays are more about present exchange than the selfless act of actually giving a gift.

The cool part, the punchline, is that giving a gift for no reason and with no transaction contemplated is actually incredibly powerful. It changes your approach to the market, it changes your relationship with the recipient and yes, it changes you.

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miercuri, 6 octombrie 2010

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis


Trichet's Exit Strategy Trapped by PIIGS; Currency Tensions Continue to Build; China Tells EU to Stuff It

Posted: 06 Oct 2010 06:04 PM PDT

In the midst of the crisis with sovereign debt of Greece, Spain, and Portugal, Trichet and the ECB acted by offering as much cash as the countries needed. This stabilized things for a while and Trichet was supposed to drop this support.

However, yield spreads between Germany and the PIIGS is once again soaring, and if unlimited lending is withdrawn now, it is a near-certainty that spreads will widen further.

Thus Trichet is 'Trapped' by Banks' Addiction to ECB Cash.
Near-record borrowing costs for nations across the euro region's periphery are making it harder for the ECB to wean commercial banks off the lifeline it introduced two years. The extra yield that investors demand to hold Irish and Portuguese debt over Germany's rose last week to 454 basis points and 441 basis points respectively. Spain's spread hit a two-month high.

The risk for the ECB is that it gets pulled deeper into helping the banking systems of the most indebted nations in the 16-member euro bloc. Governing Council member Ewald Nowotny said Sept. 6 that addiction to ECB liquidity is "a problem" that "needs to be tackled." Complicating the ECB's task is that interbank lending rates have risen, tightening credit conditions and making access to market funding more expensive for banks.

"The ECB is trapped and the exit door is blocked," said Jacques Cailloux, chief European economist at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc in London. "The state of credit markets is going to force them to stay in crisis mode for longer than some of them would like."

Irish 10-year bond yields soared to a record on Sept. 29 on concern the bailouts of Anglo Irish Bank Corp. and Allied Irish Banks Plc. would overwhelm government finances. The Portuguese- German 10-year yield spread, which hit a record on Sept. 28, was at 398 basis points yesterday, up from 88 basis points on March 10.

While it has phased out its 12- and 6-month loans, the central bank still lends unlimited amounts in its weekly, monthly and three-month tenders. In May, it was forced to reintroduce the unlimited three-month loans and start buying government bonds as Europe's deepening debt crisis started to threaten the survival of the euro.

With the ECB unlikely to match other nations' "expansive monetary policy measures," the euro may continue to strengthen, crimping the region's exports and economic expansion, economists at WestLB AG economists said in a research note. The single currency has gained 16 percent against the dollar in the past four months and touched $1.3941 yesterday, the highest since February.
Currency Tensions Build

With the rise in the Euro vs. the US dollar, the Euro is also rising vs the Yuan given the Yuan's peg to the dollar.

Trichet and the EU are pissed that the Euro, and not the Yuan is at the center of global currency trends. Japan is also upset to the point of currency intervention.

China Tells EU to Stuff It

In the midst of global currency debasement wars, China Hardens Opposition Over Yuan Gains, Tells EU to Back Off

China stiffened its opposition to a rapid appreciation of the yuan, setting the stage for a confrontation over exchange rates at this week's international monetary meetings in Washington.

Premier Wen Jiabao said China will stick to its policy of gradually increasing the currency's flexibility and lashed out at European Union leaders for teaming with the U.S. to pressure the Chinese government.

"Europe shouldn't join the choir" clamoring for a higher yuan, Wen told a business conference yesterday before an EU- China summit in Brussels. "If the yuan isn't stable, it will bring disaster to China and the world. If we increase the yuan by 20-40 percent as some people are calling for, many of our factories will shut down and society will be in turmoil."

International exchange-rate diplomacy shifts into high gear at the Oct. 8 Group of Seven meeting in Washington after China rebuffed EU and U.S. pleas, the Bank of Japan sought to drive down the yen by unexpectedly easing monetary policy, and Brazilian Finance Minister Guido Mantega warned of a global "currency war."

"There's a game of brinksmanship being played," David Cohen, an economist at Action Economics in Singapore, said in a Bloomberg Television interview. "I suspect at the end of the day the Chinese will agree to return to gradual appreciation of their currency."
Mistake To Assume Anything

While it's crystal clear a game is underway, it's debatable whether that game is better called "brinksmanship" or "currency wars". Furthermore, it's a mistake to assume China will agree to anything.

Every country wants a weaker currency to stimulate exports, but that is physically impossible, except of course against gold. The irony is rising gold prices will not stimulate anything that central banks want, but global competitive currency debasement sure has stimulated the price of gold and silver.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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Real Time Probabilities of Recession Above 20% Second Consecutive Month

Posted: 06 Oct 2010 10:31 AM PDT

Seeking to eliminate the enormous lag of NBER in declaring the beginning and end of recessions, economist Marcelle Chauvet computes real-time recession probabilities in a manner consistent with the long after the fact findings of the NBER.

The probability is down from last month, nonetheless Real Time Probabilities of Recession are above 20% for the second consecutive month.

Real-time means a one quarter delay, but that is still faster than the NBER is likely to make proclamations.



click on chart for sharper image

Month/YearProbability of Recession%
January 2009100.0%
February 200999.7%
March 200998.9%
April 200994.3%
May 200992.6%
June 200969.4%
July 200941.0%
August 200939.3%
September 200927.1%
October 200918.9%
November 20097.9%
December 20096.5%
January 20104.1%
February 20102.4%
March 20102.1%
April 20101.1%
May 20102.8%
June 201027.0%
July 201020.6%

Note the drop from 69.4% to 41.0% in June/July 2009 accurately timing the end of the recession well in advance of the NBER. Also note the huge leap from 2.8% in April to over 20% in June and July.

For a description of the methodology, please see the Center for Research on Economic and Financial Cycles post CREFC Real Time Probabilities of Recession.

Also see Real Time Analysis of the U.S. Business Cycle

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
Click Here To Scroll Thru My Recent Post List


Hussman calls for 10-Year S&P 500 Total Return in the Low 5% Area; Thoughts on Risk Management

Posted: 06 Oct 2010 06:57 AM PDT

John Hussman is bearish on the economy and stocks. He backs up his beliefs with good commentary and a series of charts in Economic Measures Continue to Slow .

Please see the article for some excellent economic charts. Here are a few snips regarding equity returns.
With the S&P 500 at a Shiller P/E over 21, and our own measures indicating an estimated 10-year total return for the S&P 500 in the low 5% area, it is clear that investors have priced in a much more robust recovery than we are likely to observe. Our long-term total return estimates are consistent the historical norms based on Shiller P/Es - since 1940, Shiller P/E values above 21 have been associated with annual total returns for the S&P 500 averaging 5.3% over the following 7 years and 4.9% annually over the following decade.

Dividend payout ratios and operating earnings growth

A note on valuation. A number of observers have suggested that the low level of dividend payouts as a fraction of operating earnings is indicative of strong prospects for reinvestment, which is then extrapolated into assumptions for high rates of future earnings growth. Unfortunately, this argument is problematic on two counts.

First, forward operating earnings are not realized cash flows. As I've noted frequently over the years, forward operating earnings represent analyst estimates of the next year's earnings excluding a whole range of chargeoffs and "extraordinary expenses" as if they do not exist. While operating earnings provide a smoother measure of business performance, they don't provide a good measure of the cash flows that are actually deliverable to shareholders.

Losses that are booked as "extraordinary" are still losses, and represent the results of bad investments and a consumption of amounts that were previously reported as earnings. Similarly, the portion of earnings used for share buybacks is often expended simply to offset dilution from grants of stock to employees and corporate insiders, and again do not reflect cash that is deliverable to shareholders. In recent years, based on the widening gap between reported operating earnings on one hand, and the sum of dividends and increments to book value on the other, a great deal of what is reported as earnings ends up evaporating as extraordinary losses and share compensation.

The second problem with the low level of dividend payouts, relative to forward operating earnings, is that there is no historical evidence whatsoever that low payouts are accompanied by higher growth in future operating earnings. To the contrary, when dividends are low relative to forward operating earnings, it is a signal that operating earnings are temporarily elevated - typically because of transitory profit margins. As a result, subsequent growth in forward earnings is actually slower than normal over the following decade.

On the latitude for a constructive investment stance

Based on the data that we've observed in recent months, my view remains that a fresh downturn in the economy remains a not only a possibility but a likelihood. Little of the economic improvement we've observed since 2009 appears intrinsic, but instead appears driven by enormous government interventions that are now trailing off. Still, while I believe that there is a second shoe that has not dropped, I recognize that the full force of government policy is to obscure, stimulate, intervene and borrow in every effort to kick that can down the road. I believe that the unaddressed and unresolved problems relating to debt service, employment conditions and housing are too large for this to be successful, but as we move through the remainder of this year - as I've said throughout 2010 - we are gradually assigning greater probability to the "post-1940" dataset. Accordingly, there are developments that could potentially move us to a more constructive position. We don't observe those at present, but an improvement in economic evidence and a clearing of overbought conditions, leaving market internals intact, would be one configuration that might warrant less defensiveness.

To some extent, I view current market conditions as something of a "Ponzi game" in that valuations appear neither sustainable nor likely to produce acceptably high long-term returns, and speculators increasingly rely on finding a greater fool. As the mathematician John Allen Paulos has observed, "people generally worry only about what happens one or two steps ahead and anticipate being able to get out before a collapse... In countless situations people prepare exclusively for near-term outcomes and don't look very far ahead. They myopically discount the future at an absurdly steep rate." Undoubtedly, we have periodically missed returns due to our aversion to risks that rely on the ability to find a "greater fool" in order to get out safely. But it is important to recognize that speculative risks are not a source of durable long-term returns. At a Shiller P/E of 21 and a historical peak-to-peak S&P 500 earnings growth rate of 6%, a simple reversion to the historical (non-bubble) Shiller norm of 14 would require seven years of earnings growth and yet zero growth in prices. Stocks are not cheap here.
Stocks Not Cheap

I wholeheartedly endorse Hussman's analysis that suggests stocks are not cheap. I have said the same thing repeatedly all year long, most recently in Analysts Cut S&P 500 Profits Forecast; Earnings Estimates Still Overly Optimistic; Stocks Not Cheap
Earnings Estimates A Mirage

It's important to understand why earnings have gone up: Trillions of dollars of stimulus worldwide that is not sustainable. Bank earnings estimates have been inflated by massive extend-and-pretend games encouraged by the Fed with a blind eye from the FASB.

Moreover, the FASB has delayed mark-to-market accounting rules and has still not forced banks to bring SIVs and off-balance-sheet assets back on the books. Those assets are held at inflated values.

Equities only look cheap if you use absurd forward earnings estimates, and ignore future writeoffs and other "one-time" items that seem to have a way of recurring with remarkable regularity.
No Sure Things

Although most are plowing hand-over-fist into the "QE-Trade", it is a mistake to assume that quantitative easing is a guaranteed play for equities. It's not. Please see Sure Thing?! for a discussion.

Moreover, QE is not a guaranteed play for the economy either, as noted in Bernanke says Lawmakers Should Consider Rules on Fiscal Limits; Expect Hissy Fit from Krugman; Bernanke Pisses in the Wind

Yet everyday I get emails calling me a "chicken little" or other unprintable names for not recommending everyone plow into equities. I heard the exact same thing in 2006-2007.

However, I have recommended gold continuously since it was $300. I have also recommended treasuries with many attempting to short the things and getting their heads blown off.

Superior Returns Come From Reducing Risk

I see no reason to like equities here, but that does not mean they won't go up. Indeed they did. However, investors need to understand why equities are rising, the likelihood it continues, and what the risks are, even if short-term traders don't.

When this rally ends, it is as likely as not to be a steep descent with dip buyers fully conditioned to "buy the dip" all the way down.

Day traders and swing traders seem to think that everyone ought to be hopping in and out of stocks every hour or every week. However, not everyone wants to, or can - for many reasons, trade that way. Money managers in particular are unlikely to trade that way.

It is important to honor your timeframe and trading style, not someone else's.

Most of those fully invested here were also fully invested in 2008, with disastrous consequences.

In the long haul, superior returns are made by reducing risk, patiently waiting for favorable opportunities to invest. In the meantime, (and although this opinion can change at any time without warning) I am comfortable owning gold and treasuries, and being hedged in equities.

It is far easier to make up for lost opportunities than it is to make up for losses, especially losses that happen while chasing the latest sure thing.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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