miercuri, 31 august 2011

Damn Cool Pics

Damn Cool Pics


Happy Lottery Winners

Posted: 31 Aug 2011 03:06 PM PDT

Many people dream about getting a large fortune without any effort. Those who do not rely on themselves, or on inheritance of rich relatives, are often willing to rely on fate. For example, they participate in the lottery. Especially lotteries are popular in the United States. It is interesting to mention that the largest lottery winnings were received in the USA. It is worth noting that the winners will not receive the full amount of the winning.

First of all they have to decide whether they want to receive the winnings in the form of relatively small annual payments, or prefer to take their cash. In the second case the prize amount is greatly reduced. In addition, winners must pay 25 % federal tax on winnings. We will not go deep into the complex process of payments, let's look at the happy faces of people who received fortune in a moment. Judging from the photos, many have not yet realized that they became rich.

















































Having Fun in the Hurricane Irene

Posted: 31 Aug 2011 01:11 PM PDT

Despite the death of 20 people, most were unharmed by Hurricane Irene, and instead had some fun with the storm. From surfing and boogie boarding to dancing in the rain and floating down water filled streets, many took advantage of the plentiful water.























































































Handmade Chinese Submarine

Posted: 31 Aug 2011 01:00 PM PDT

A worker polishes the surface of an unfinished miniature submarine at a workshop of Zhang Wuyi, a local farmer who is interested in scientific inventions, in Qingling village, on the outskirts of Wuhan, capital of central China's Hubei province. Zhang has successfully tested his self-made miniature submarine "Shuguang Hao", which is 12 feet long, 6 feet high, has a maximum diving depth of 65 feet, can travel at a speed of 20 km per hour for 10 hours underwater and is shaped as a dolphin. "I hope to sell my submarine as a civil product with the price of about 100,000 yuan ($15,670) after safety tests, and a merchant has decided to order one in this month", Zhang said. (Jason Lee / Reuters)













The Evolution of the Transaction [Infographic]

Posted: 31 Aug 2011 12:44 PM PDT

The way in which humans have traded and purchased goods has been in constant evolution since before history began. In ancient times, things like furs and shells were traded person-to-person in exchange for goods and services. Today, monetary transactions between humans utilize sophisticated technologies that make the process simple and intuitive. Let's take a walk through history and see how the transaction has morphed over the millennia.

Click on Image to Enlarge.

Source: flowtown


SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog

SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog


eCommerce Syndicated Content: How to Win

Posted: 30 Aug 2011 01:58 PM PDT

Posted by Kate Morris

There is a ton of talk right now about Panda recovery. SEOmoz is no exception to this: questions in Q&A, webmasters cleaning up their content, and so much more. Webmasters are taking control of their sites, building some awesome original content, and ensuring that content can be found by letting users (and bots) know about it.

So it surprised me when a large client asked for help to combat an internal project that would place duplicate content on their site. They are in the ecommerce space and have the issue of selling products that many other companies sell. Duplicated content runs rampant here in the form of product descriptions. The manufacturer creates a description for resellers and that is what everyone uses. It's sanctioned from the source and no writers are needed. Sounds awesome until the product is carried by hundreds of websites and everyone has the same content. Who should rank then?

Like most big companies (as is my client), this decision was made by someone else and the SEO team screamed in defiance. So they asked me for proof that having unique content was as necessary as everyone keeps saying.

Done. And guess what? Google backed me up (in at least 3 examples). So I thought I'd share my best example and my take aways to help other ecommerce sites deal with this situation now and in the future. 

Bodum Fyrkat Nipper

Bodum Fyrkat Nipper

There is no disclaimer needed in this case as I chose this product at total random from Amazon. I had purchased a personal grill recently from the same manufacturer and knew that there were many sellers for that product. I wanted something that was cool but also common place. Therefore, I used the grill tongs and went searching for examples of other sellers. My point here was to show that duplicated content in the form of product descriptions doesn't help rank the product page, so the first step was to find multiple sellers of the product. 

Find Seller Information

To identify the sellers, I used searches for the product name, product number, a snippet of the product description from the seller (and once identified, the manufacturer supplied description), and some reviews that kept popping up. I noticed that many of the pages that had the standard product description had the same two reviews as well. Easy way to identify a page with no unique content. The identified product pages (check for the canonical URL) were then checked for page and domain authority. 

When the pages are checked, you'll see a trend in descriptions and be able to identify the manufacturer's feed for the description. Note which sites write their own and which use the same as everyone else. Below is a list of our competitors and their domain (DA) and page authority (PA) in order of strength, grouped by content type. From this, we would assume based on strength that Amazon, Zappos, Cooking.com, or Epicurious would have a strong shot at ranking.

Original Content

  • Amazon.com – 97 DA, 1 PA
  • Zappos – 90 DA, 46 PA
  • Bodum – 62 DA, 35 PA
  • Maple Run Emporiums – 18 DA, 20 PA

Duplicated Content

  • Epicurious – 89 DA, 1 PA
  • Cooking.com – 78 DA, 42 PA
  • Betty Crocker – 72 DA, 1 PA
  • CSNStore.com – 70 DA, 1 PA
  • Food Network Stores – 64 DA, 1 PA
  • Buzzillions – 61 DA, 1 PA

Find the Key Phrase and Rankings

But what are we ranking? Typically I would use a variation of the product name, but Amazon threw me a curve ball: they renamed the product to help with internal search. Instead of Fyrkat Grill Nipper, they use the name Fyrkat Grill Tongs. This decision makes more sense to me, and I'm assuming it helps with searching internally as well. But I didn't want to take Amazon's word for it. Always check for which term is better according to actual searches. 

To test, I looked at the SEOmoz Keyword Difficulty Tool and ran three keywords. None of them had traffic numbers from Google, but the difficulty of Fyrkat Grill Nipper was higher. That made sense as more sites used that name for the product, so the competition is more fierce. The impact this has is that the Amazon page is most likely going to show lower than normal because they name the product differently. 

Working in the Keyword Difficulty Tool also give you a look at the ranking sites for the keyword, which is the next step. 

Results

Results

The top three results are Zappos, Bodum, and Maple Run Emporium; the rest are videos or aggregators. These three are the sites with original content, taking out Amazon due to their shifted targeting. The product manufacturer is third and my theory is that is due to the fact that their content is duplicated across the Internet, but they are the original and should be up there. 

All other major brands and their product pages didn't show on the first page, with CSN being the only one to show on the second page. Search engines want to show users the best content for their time, so it makes sense that aggregators (who show where the product is sold across the web) and video content is intermixed with the sellers who took time to describe the product on their own. 

Winning in eCommerce

What I want you to take away from this post is this: Even a tiny original bit of content can set the page apart from competitors.

Maple Run Emporium, check out their domain and page strength. They are paltry next to bigger sites like Betty Crocker and Epicurious. Yet with a small hand written description of the product that is a sentence long, they are ranking above all the other major sellers! Their page, below, is simple and direct. 

Fyrkat Grill Nipper

Winning Tips

  1. Feel free to use syndicated content to enhance your own content and reviews.
    1. Make it know that it is from the manufacturer.
    2. Place it at the end of the text on your page.
  2. Write your own descriptions of the products. We aren't talking a novel, but something unique. 
    1. Give the product to someone in the office and have them write what they think.
    2. Use the words from a customer's review (ask them if they are cool with that via email).
    3. Don't just rewrite the content you are given from the manufacturer, really write what you think about the product.
    4. Have fun with it. See examples at Amazon and Zappos.  
  3. Entice users to review your products. Email them a week after they receive the product and give them a link to the product page with a request to review it. See the example from Modcloth below:

 


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An Extraordinary Decade of Military Service by the 9/11 Generation

The White House Your Daily Snapshot for
Wednesday, August 31, 2011
 

An Extraordinary Decade of Military Service by the 9/11 Generation

Speaking at the American Legion's National Convention in Minnesota, President Barack Obama praised the extraordinary decade of service rendered by the 9/11 Generation of our military, the more than five million men and women – all of whom voluntarily joined the armed forces over the past ten years. He also paid special tribute to the more than 6,200 Americans who have given their lives in this hard decade of war.

Watch the President's full remarks and see highlights from the events

President Obama delivers remarks to the American Legion 93rd Annual Conference at the Minneapolis Convention Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota, Aug. 30, 2011. (Official White House Photo by Chuck Kennedy)

In Case You Missed It

Vice President Joe Biden's trip to China, Mongolia and Japan this month was part of the administration's dedicated effort to renew and intensify the U.S. role in Asia.

From establishing new channels of communication with Chinese leaders, to praising Mongolia's 22 years of democracy, to expressing continued support for the recovery of longtime ally, and friend, Japan, the trip was a reflection of our belief that the U.S. is a Pacific power whose interests are inextricably linked with Asia’s economic security and political order.

Check out some of the highlighted photos from Japan, Mongolia, and China in the White House photo galleries.

Today's Schedule

All times are Eastern Daylight Time (EDT).

9:30 AM: The President receives the Presidential Daily Briefing

10:00 AM: The President meets with senior advisors

10:35 AM: The President holds an event to call on Congress to move forward in a bipartisan way to pass a clean extension of the Surface Transportation Bill WhiteHouse.gov/live

12:00 PM: Press Briefing by Press Secretary Jay Carney WhiteHouse.gov/live

6:45 PM: The Vice President and Dr. Jill Biden host a reception with leaders of labor organizations

WhiteHouse.gov/live  Indicates events that will be live streamed on WhiteHouse.gov/Live

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Seth's Blog : The web leaders hate typography (but not for long)

The web leaders hate typography (but not for long)

It probably started with HTML, and then Yahoo, of course. But eBay escalated the hatred and Google and Facebook have institutionalized it.

To have lame typography, to avoid opportunities to speak not just with what you say, but how the letters look—this is part of the web's engineering-first ethos.

Sergey Brin famously said that marketing is the cost you pay for lousy products, and apparently, typography is a variety of marketing.

Sergey's wrong about marketing, of course (great products are marketing), but doubly wrong about the benefits of typography.

Typography is what sets Apple, at first glance, apart from just about everyone at the mall. Typography is what makes a self-published book often look pale in comparison to a 'real' one. Typography (or the lack thereof) is a safety hazard on airplanes (who decided that all the safety labels should be in ALL CAPS)?

The choice of a typeface, the care given to kerning and to readability—it all sends a powerful signal. When your business card is nothing but Arial on a piece of cardboard, you've just told people how they ought to think about you… precisely the opposite of what you were trying to do when you made the card in the first place.

The irony here is clear. It was computer technology (particularly Apple) that put typography into the hands of all of us. And it's computer technology that is relentlessly picking it apart, devaluing expression in a misguided attempt to demonstrate that you're too busy coding to make anything look trustworthy or delightful. Typekit and other web solutions are trying to address this problem, and it's pretty clear that the next generation of sophisticated organizations online is going to look a lot better than this one does.

Great typography isn't as easy as lazy type, but it's worth way more than it costs—in fact, it's a world-class bargain. (some typography resources). And a neat tool via Swiss-Miss.

 

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