joi, 4 noiembrie 2010

Damn Cool Pics

Damn Cool Pics


Charlie Chaplin’s Time Traveler

Posted: 04 Nov 2010 05:56 AM PDT

This short clip is from the DVD which includes behind the scenes in Charlie Chaplin's film 'The Circus'. Attending the premiere at Manns Chinese Theatre in Hollywood, CA - the scene shows a large woman (or man), dressed in black and a hat, talking into something that only be described as a mobile phone device or possibly a walkie-talkie. Remember this is from 1928.


40 Celebrities Who Are Republicans

Posted: 04 Nov 2010 05:22 AM PDT

40 celebrities who are Republicans according to the Federal Election Commission, or known conservatives.

1. Drew Carey


2. Don King


3. Adam Sandler


4. Ben Stein


5. Bo Derek


6. Dean Cain


7. Gloria Estefan


8. Heather Locklear


9. Rick Schroder


10. James Earl Jones


11. Karl Malone


12. LL Cool J


13. Nick Lachey


14. Patricia Heaton


15. Pat Sajak


16. Rachel Hunter


17. Robert Duvall


18. The Rock


19. Sammy Hagar


20. Sarah Michelle Gellar


21. Scott Baio


22. 50 Cent


23. Alice Cooper


24. Mary Lou Retton


25. Jon Voight


26. Jessica Simpson


27. Shannen Doherty


28. Stephen Baldwin


29. Susan Lucci


30. Sylvester Stallone


31. Meat Loaf


32. Tom Selleck


33. Tony Danza


34. Wayne Newton


35. Bruce Willis


36. Johnny Ramone


37. Chuck Norris


38. Kelsey Grammer


39. Clint Eastwood


40. Mel Gibson


Interesting Political Photos of All Time

Posted: 04 Nov 2010 05:07 AM PDT

Politics is one of the most popular topics in our time and there is one thing about politicians to which everybody might agree: sometimes they are really funny!

George Bush


Vladimir Putin


Barack Obama and Nicolas Sarkozy


Queen Elizabeth II


Angela Merkel


George Bush and Nicolas Sarkozy


Boris Yeltsin


Bill Clinton


Putin's comments


Pope John meets Bush


Gordon Brown sleeping


Obama Alter Ego


Ghosts At The Cemetery

Posted: 04 Nov 2010 01:01 AM PDT

Last weekend we celebrated Halloween, so we decided to tell you the following story. This summer two photographers visited the city of Shargorod, where three cemeteries are situated – the orthodox, the catholic and the Judaic one. Of course they felt uncomfortable at the cemeteries, but didn't notice anything strange or abnormal. One night they were taking pictures, and in the morning they skimmed through the photos and this is what was in them.
















Funny Demotivational Posters - Part 12

Posted: 04 Nov 2010 12:43 AM PDT

Dubai and Las Vegas: Then and Now

Posted: 04 Nov 2010 12:39 AM PDT

You'll see comparative pictures of two world's famous cities: Dubai and Las Vegas.It's crazy how time flies and how the two cities aroused from the desert. I love to look at pictures like this.

Dubai in 1990


2003




Now


Las Vegas Strip in 1954


Now


Facts About The Mouth

Posted: 04 Nov 2010 12:29 AM PDT

In addition to it's primary role as the beginings of the degestive system, the human mouth plays a significant role in communication. Another non-digestive function of the mouth it's role in secondary social and/or sexual activity, such as kissing. Butthere are some fascinating facts about our mouths we probably never take the time to think about, so we've compied them for you below:

More Infographics.

Click to Enlarge.


Source: dentalhygienistschools


SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog

SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog


SEOmoz PubCon Happy Hour 2010

Posted: 04 Nov 2010 06:54 AM PDT

Posted by jennita

It's November! Which here at the mozPlex means a few things: It's sunny and beautiful in Seattle [wait.. uhm what??], we're all getting ready for Thanksgiving and most importantly... PubCon is next week! As usual we're sending a big crew down to Vegas to speak, learn, network and of course party.

Both Rand and Joanna will be speaking on several panels, plus you'll find Jamie, Aaron, Miranda, Adam and Gillian on-hand as well. You'll know who they are as they'll be wearing a lovely SEOmoz t-shirt. I really urge you to seek them out and say hi. Really, stalk them... they'll all enjoy it! ;-)

Oh right... you don't care about all that now do you? You care about the party info! Ok fine... Here's the goods:

Happy Hour Details

When: Wednesday, November 10th, 6:00 - 7:30pm

Where: Wynn Hotel in the Alsace 2 room

Who: All PubCon attendees!

Why: We'll have some cool giveaways [including 3 Kindles!] and free drinks of course. It's a party for goodness sake, why wouldn't you come?!

Still not convinced? Check out some of the pictures from last years party (you can see them all here).

Kristy Bolsinger, Kate Morris, Matt Cutts at SEOmoz PubCon party 2009
Kristy Bolsinger, Kate Morris and Matt Cutts

Chris Winfield, Shirly Tan, Brent Csutoras, Dana Lookadoo, Tim Ash
Chris Winfield, Shirley Tan, Brent Csutoras, Dana Lookadoo, Tim Ash

So be sure to head on over to the Wynn right after Matt Cutt's Super Session on Wednesday evening. We'll be tweeting reminders and any updates. We look forward to seeing everyone there!

<3 - The mozzers


Do you like this post? Yes No

Google's Unspoken Failures Are Limiting Your Potential

Posted: 03 Nov 2010 02:15 PM PDT

Posted by Danny Dover

 As people in relationships spend time with each other they start to leverage each others natural strengths to efficiently store information about the world around them. "Honey, what is the name of my Aunt's employer?" "Babe, what do you call that thing that heats bread?" They rely on each other to store information that is mutually beneficial.  Some believe this process is one of the reasons breakups are so hard. “I feel like when s/he left, s/he took a part of me.” It is common to hear statements similar to this because when it comes to memory, it is more true than many may realize.

Sharing Information

While this phenomenon has historically happened between two people offline, it is now happening online between people and technology. How many times have you checked Google for a fact that you once knew? How many times have you Googled for a resource that you have already read? Like it or not, Google is quickly becoming a second brain in much the same way loved ones have done in the past. While this search engine has benefits that humans don’t (ubiquity), it does have some severe limitations that should be examined.

The self declared mission of the people who run Google is to “organize the world’s information...”. While they have done a remarkable job of this online, they have failed to do this offline in the tangible world. To understand these unspoken failures, all you need to do is examine the five major senses humans use to organize the world’s information.

Limitations

 

Sight

“Who is that guy?” “I recognize that place, where was that scene filmed?” “What is the name of that color?” For most people, sight is the primary sense for experiencing the world. While technology does exist for identifying objects within images (facial recognition algorithms, OCR, color detection, etc...) you can’t utilize these tools directly through Google. This may possibly be the biggest limitation of Google. Be it remembering the name of a person after a date or an entire government agency trying to identify a suspect, identifying someone or something by sight is critical for organizing the world’s information.

Smell

Smell is the closest sense tied to memory. Have you ever walked by a stranger and instantly been flooded with memories of a significant other who happened to wear the same perfume or cologne? It can be a jarring experience. Want to identify that scent? Google can’t help you. While the technology exists for detecting smells and there are databases for identifying smells, a method to easily cross reference and identify a smell online is not available.

Hearing

You are watching How I Met Your Mother and you recognize the voice in the opening sequence. Whose voice is that? You hear an obscure tune as a car blaring loud music drives by your home. What is the name of that song? Like the situation with sight, the technology for identifying sounds exists (Shazam, SoundHound, etc...) but it is not available through Google.  While you can search via verticals for text, video and images, you can’t search for sounds. This is almost certainly a legal limitation rather than a technology one. (After all, Google can identify audio clips in YouTube videos.)

Taste

You are traveling in Greece and you order the most interesting looking item on the menu. When it arrives, it looks like nothing you have ever seen. You bite into it and instantly recognize the flavors but can’t remember the name of the meal as it is hidden by an “unique” texture. Again, Google won’t help you (although a napkin might). The same problem happens more frequently with allergies. Want to make sure a meal a friend made for you doesn’t have an ingredient you are allergic to? Some technology can help but Google isn’t one of them.

Touch

BEEP BEEP BEEP! It is 6:00 AM and your alarm clock is screaming. Eyes still closed and crusty, you reach across your bed and use touch to identify the snooze button on your alarm clock. Later that same day, you reach into your bag and navigate its contents by touch to pull out your cell phone. Although more subtlely tied to memory than the other senses, touch can also help you identify objects.

But why would you need to search for something by touch if the object is already at arms length? Good question... unless you are blind. Many blind people use their sense of touch to catalogue the world. Imagine you are not able to see and you find something new and want to know what it is. A friend might be able to help but Google won’t.

And these major limitations are only the beginning:

 

Where are you?

In the United States, the most common text message is “where are you”. While other websites (Twitter, Facebook, Foursquare) have been getting better at answering this question, Google has largely remained stagnant.

Where did I put that?

You are getting ready for work but can’t for the life of you remember where you put your favorite shirt. This type of situation happens daily. Be it car keys, shoes or your little sister, countless man hours have been spent looking for things. When it comes to finding the location of personal items, again Google can’t help.

So Google has some major limitations, why is that a big deal?

These limits are worth writing a blog post about for two reasons; context and awareness.

The great thing about being alive is that everyone is constantly at the forefront of human progress. Right now we are the most evolved we have ever been. And right now, we are even more evolved than when you read that last sentence. It is very likely that while you have read this post, someone, somewhere has invented something that will make your life better moving forward. Google is a great example of that. The limitations I listed above could be fixed with the creation of new features. That is not the point. The point is that while we are currently living in the most technologically advanced time that has ever existed, we still have a long way to go. The Google of today is not the end-all-be-all, it is only a milepost on a much longer stretch of highway.

The second reason I am writing this post is to promote awareness. Whether you like it or not, Google is becoming an important factor in how you experience the world. Just like a person wearing glasses literally sees the world through predefined frames, humans are seeing the Internet through the limits of Google.

Think about that.

If you were a fish living in a fish bowl, would you know the bowl existed? You would certainly know there was an edge to your environment (the glass) but having been enclosed in a bowl throughout your entire existence, you wouldn’t be able to “organize your world’s information” beyond what you could sense. Google is not sensing the world like we do. It can’t see, smell, hear, taste or touch. Yet at the same time, it is largely defining how we experience the Internet. As the Internet becomes an increasingly essential part of our world, the search engine’s limitations become our limitations. These limitations whether noticed or not are limiting your potential to experience the world.


Update 11/4/10 - 9:20AM:

Hey everyone! I want to address some of the comments below. I stick by my argument that Google's limitations are limiting our potential to view the world but judging by the comments, it looks like I didn't explain my word choice well enough.

I hold Google to the standard they set for themselves. The company's mission is to "to organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful." When I refer to limits as failures I am doing so in the context of their self declared mission. Google does amazing things with technology but it has failed to do what it set out to do. In this way, these major limitations are failures of their mission.

Although no one brought this up (yet!), I want to note that this post could have easily been about Microsoft. I chose to single out Google simply because they are the dominate market leader. Sitting at my desk right now, I have three devices that have Google set as the default search engine. In my life at least, Google is almost ubiquitous.

Below grasshopper commented: "But as with any utility - and Google is just that, a utility - it's important to remember to switch it off. "

I like that comment as it illustrates a point I was touching on but didn't fully hit. (Forgive me as I am taking your comment slightly out of context ;-p) Just like a utility, you can't actually turn it off. Like gas in your house, you can "turn if off" but this just restricts your access. It doesn't actually remove the gas from the lines under and around your house. Grasshopper continued "Go for a walk outside, talk with your friends and family face-to-face, etc." This is where the problem of ubiquity comes into play. Odds are you will be going on a walk but taking your Internet-enabled cell phone with you. As the drastic growth of mobile searches shows, even on a walk you are not experiencing the world without Google. (This is not meant to be an attack on your comment grasshopper, rather your word choice got me thinking and I was inspired to make another point ;-p)


Danny Dover Twitter

If you have any other related limitations that you think are worth sharing, feel free to post it in the comments. This post is very much a work in progress. As always, feel free to e-mail me if you have any suggestions on how I can make my posts more useful. All of my contact information is available on my profile: Danny Thanks!


Do you like this post? Yes No

Michael Gray - Graywolf's SEO Blog

Michael Gray - Graywolf's SEO Blog


Is Flash Bad for SEO

Posted: 04 Nov 2010 07:45 AM PDT

Post image for Is Flash Bad for SEO

Perhaps it’s related to Apple not installing flash on the newest air macs, but there’s been more talk than usual about flash & SEO in the past few weeks.

My position on flash and SEO is as follows:

  • I’d prefer to not use it, but I do understand that there are some circumstances in which flash makes a better user experience
  • If you do use flash, putting it anywhere along the mission critical path or main navigation is dangerous
  • If you do put put it in the mission critical path, you are going to have to maintain a separate HTML version for bots and the 20 million+ iphone and iPad users

Personally, I’m lazy. I like low maintenance websites (see how I manage a wordpress website). But if you’re a big corporation and have the manpower and other resources to support two websites, that’s fine. Just make sure you configure it properly so you don’t get flagged as cloaking. I would stay away from user agent detection and instead use JavaScript to detect the shockwave plugin. Are there some people with JavaScript disabled but flash enabled? Sure, but they are an outlier condition. Using JavaScript will cover the users and the bots.

Another thing to be mindful of is doing redirects. Since you will be creating an HTML version, that’s what will show in the SERPs. So, when a user clicks through, you’ll want to redirect to the flash version in the appropriate place. It can really get tricky, so be careful if you go this route.

Let’s recap:

  • Unless using flash adds to the user experience in a meaningful way, avoid it
  • If you do use flash, try to avoid using it in mission critical paths like main navigation and checkout
  • If you insist on using it in mission critical areas, you’ll have to create multiple versions of the same website. Make sure you have the resources to support it
  • Use javascript to detect for the the flash plugin instead of user agent detection to help you avoid the appearance of cloaking for nefarious reasons

Creative Commons License photo credit: law_keven

tla starter kit

Related posts:

  1. Is WordPress Good or Bad for SEO Earlier this week there was a post on SEOBullsh*t that...
  2. Why Advertisers Love Flash and Ajax, and Why it’s Really Stupid Steve Rubel has a smashingly good bit of conversation bait...
  3. How To Shoot Yourself in The Foot With Bad Plan and a Bad CMS Implementation One of the biggest mistakes really large publishers make today...
  4. WordPress SEO: WordPress Security Why it Matters to SEO In recent weeks wordpress security, or more correctly the lack...
  5. Jason Calacanis Please Stop Bad Mouthing SEO’s Because You Won’t Take the Time to Work With Good One’s Ok so Jason Calacanis is talking smack about bad SEO’s...

Advertisers:

  1. Text Link Ads - New customers can get $100 in free text links.
  2. BOTW.org - Get a premier listing in the internet's oldest directory.
  3. Ezilon.com Regional Directory - Check to see if your website is listed!
  4. Page1Hosting - Class C IP Hosting starting at $2.99.
  5. Directory Journal - List your website in our growing web directory today.
  6. Content Customs - Unique and high quality SEO writing services, providing webmasters with hundreds of SEO articles per week
  7. Majestic SEO - Competitive back link intellegence for SEO Analysis
  8. Glass Whiteboards - For a professional durable white board with no ghosting, streaking or marker stains, see my Glass Whiteboard Review
  9. Need an SEO Audit for your website, look at my SEO Consulting Services
  10. KnowEm - Protect your brand, product or company name with a continually growing list of social media sites.
  11. Scribe SEO Review find out how to better optimize your wordpress posts.
  12. TigerTech - Great Web Hosting service at a great price.

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

Is Flash Bad for SEO

"Let's Find Those Areas Where We Can Agree"

The White House Your Daily Snapshot for
Thursday, Nov. 4,  2010
 

Photo of the Day

President Barack Obama holds a news conference in the East Room of the White House, November 3, 2010. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza).

Today's Schedule

All times are Eastern Daylight Time 

9:20 AM: The President and the Vice President attend a Cabinet meeting

10:00 AM: Press Secretary Robert Gibbs will convene an off-camera gaggle in the Brady Press Briefing Room

12:00 PM: The President and the Vice President have lunch

2:15 PM: Briefing by Press Secretary Robert Gibbs WhiteHouse.gov/live

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.

President Obama’s Press Conference: "Let's Find Those Areas Where We Can Agree"
In a news conference in the East Room this afternoon, the President spoke openly about the lessons of the previous night’s elections, and his hope for working with the new Congress going forward on the economy and other issues.

Life-Saving Treatments: Made in the U.S.A.
Learn more about tax credits made possible by the Affordable Care Act that will help save lives and create jobs.

What You Missed: Tuesday Talk on the President’s Trip to Asia
Jeff Bader, Senior Director for Asian Affairs, and Ben Rhodes, Deputy National Security Advisor for Strategic Communications, answer your questions about the President’s trip to India, Indonesia, South Korea and Japan in a live video chat on WhiteHouse.gov and Facebook.

Get Updates

Sign Up for the Daily Snapshot 

Stay Connected

 

 
 
This email was sent to e0nstar1.blog@gmail.com
Manage Subscriptions for e0nstar1.blog@gmail.com
Sign Up for Updates from the White House

Unsubscribe e0nstar1.blog@gmail.com | Privacy Policy

Please do not reply to this email. Contact the White House

The White House • 1600 Pennsylvania Ave NW • Washington, DC 20500 • 202-456-1111 
 
 
  

 

 

Seth's Blog : Laziness

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

Laziness

I think laziness has changed.

It used to be about avoiding physical labor. The lazy person could nap or have a cup of tea while others got hot and sweaty and exhausted. Part of the reason society frowns on the lazy is that this behavior means more work for the rest of us.

When it came time to carry the canoe over the portage, I was always hard to find. The effort and the pain gave me two good reasons to be lazy.

But the new laziness has nothing to do with physical labor and everything to do with fear. If you're not going to make those sales calls or invent that innovation or push that insight, you're not avoiding it because you need physical rest. You're hiding out because you're afraid of expending emotional labor.

This is great news, because it's much easier to become brave about extending yourself than it is to become strong enough to haul an eighty pound canoe.

  • Email to a friend

More Recent Articles

Don't want to get this email anymore? Click the link below to unsubscribe.


Click here to safely unsubscribe now from "Seth's Blog" or change your subscription, view mailing archives or subscribe

Your requested content delivery powered by FeedBlitz, LLC, 9 Thoreau Way, Sudbury, MA 01776, USA. +1.978.776.9498