joi, 1 decembrie 2011

Damn Cool Pics

Damn Cool Pics


Taekwondo Shuffle in Korea

Posted: 30 Nov 2011 09:28 PM PST



You think America has all the best moves? Think again. In Korea, they can be just as hip and can really put on a show. You can tell the crowd is really get into the performance, especially with the music that really gets everyone pumped up. The people in this show dance, perform Karate moves, and even break some wood with a Karate chop and a kick. Not bad.


Awesome Lunchbox Faces

Posted: 30 Nov 2011 08:56 PM PST

School lunch has never been this, well, creative. Tumblr LunchboxAwesome, looks at the artful designs on the inside of lunchboxes. Muppets, cartoon characters, and animated figures are carefully composed out of food, making a colorful and creative display out of your mealtime endeavors.
















Tips for Ajax for SEO Graywolf's SEO Blog

Tips for Ajax for SEO Graywolf's SEO Blog


Tips for Ajax for SEO

Posted: 01 Dec 2011 10:23 AM PST

Post image for Tips for Ajax for SEO

Whenever Ajax enter the conversation for an SEO or internet marketer, chances are good there will always be a deep sigh or an “ugh” face. While it is true that search engines are getting better at indexing this type of content, we still aren’t at the point that you can realistically rely on them to index it properly or even at all. That doesn’t mean you can’t use it, it just means you need to take some extra steps to make sure that type of content is visible to crawlers and non Ajax users.

The first step you need to do is make sure a static page and URL exists for every end result of content. For example, let’s say you run a local travel website, and you have a location/map page that lets people view restaurants, hotels, attractions, or other information within a specific area. Users can turn filters on or off, look at different locations, and get detailed information about each venue. It would be a very good user experience to have that work via Ajax and JavaScript, similar to Google maps integrating data from Google places. However “hiding” all that information behind Ajax won’t help you with your organic search traffic.

What you need to do is create specific unique URLs for each of those destinations. These URLs need to provide the information in way that ALL the search engine spiders can read and extract, not just the advanced experimental Ajax crawling spider from Google. This insures you will get traffic from Yahoo, Bing, Facebook, Twitter, Stumbleupon, and, heck, even services like Blekko and Wolfram Alpha. Relying on just one search engine or source for your traffic is a dangerous strategy and not defensible in the whims of an algorithm update.

Once you have each of those pages, you want to make sure the URL is as search engine friendly as possible: short with 3-5 keywords in the URL and without parameters. While it’s a bit of overkill, providing the rel=”canonical” tag is a good idea as well.

Where things get a little tricky is inbound linking, email, social media links, and user agent detection. Whether someone is viewing the Ajax version of the content or the static version of the content, you should provide a “link to this page,” “share this page,” or “email this page” functionality, and that should always go to the static URL.

When users request those pages or come from a search engine and ask for the static URL page, you need to make a decision about how to serve that content. If the user agent is capable of working with Ajax/JavaScript, feel free to serve it that way. If it’s a bot or non compatible user agent (ie tablet, iPad, or mobile phone) then serve the HTML version. Lastly, I would always fail gracefully with a noscript tag that, when clicked, assures the users gets the content they really want.

While this may seem like a bit of double work, if you use Ajax properly, it’s probably not. You pull the same information from the same database–it’s only the method of rendering that changes. Flash, on the other hand, will be a bit more problematic, and would probably require a bit of double work. Therefore, it’s not a method I recommend. One of the primary reasons it’s a good idea to pull the data from same DB is it insures you don’t create a “bad cloaking” situation. Technically, cloaking is serving different content to the spiders and to the engines. If the actual content is the same, and it’s just the delivery technology and implementation that is the only difference, you have a low risk, highly defensible position. Especially if you use the canonical tag to nudge the spiders in the direction of the real URL.

Once you have the static URL in place, you need to provide a method for the search engines to see and access that content. You can use HTML sitemaps and XML sitemaps, but ideally you need to set up dedicated crawling paths. Unless your site is very small (less than a few hundred pages), I would suggest a limited test first. You should roll this out in phases on non mission critical sections of pages first. Use text browsers, text viewers, crawlers like Xenu link sleuth, or website auditor. Lastly, I would suggest setting up a monitoring page for use with services like change detection and/or Google alerts. It’s important that you know if something “breaks” or “jumps the rails” within 24 hours, not 30 days later when 70% of your content has dropped out of the index.

The last issue you want to consider is internal duplicate content. It’s not entirely unlikely that if the “Ajax crawling bot” finds its way to your pages, you don’t want them to be interested in it and index the content in that format. Using the rel=”canonical” tag that points to a static non-ajax URL will help, but I’ d also suggest the noindex, follow meta tags on the Ajax pages, just to be safe. Leaving things open to search engines to decide is where problems come from … sometimes BIG and EXPENSIVE problems …

So what are the takeaways from this post:

  • Ajax isn’t evil, but the implementation is going to be more difficult and complex, so be smart about how you do it
  • Province distinct static unique URLs that are accessible from the Ajax pages
  • Use user detection to serve the best version OF THE SAME content
  • Use spider simulators to insure you are calling the right version
  • Use change detection and monitoring to detect problems with indexing quickly and correct them before your website falls off the map.

photo credit: Shutterstock/Serg Zastavkin

tla starter kit

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Tips for Ajax for SEO

5 Ways to Prime the Social Pump

5 Ways to Prime the Social Pump


5 Ways to Prime the Social Pump

Posted: 30 Nov 2011 11:56 AM PST

Posted by Dr. Pete

Old water pumpYou’ve finally finished that epic blog post [infographic, LOLCat, Thundercats remix…] and tomorrow morning you’ll unleash it on the world. So, what should you do between now and then? You could take a nap, sure, or you could start priming the social pump early. Here are 5 tips for how to put your network to work before you need it…

i. Be Genuine

This is the pre-tip that makes all the other tips work. I honestly hate giving social media advice, because I find that just about every “Always do…” or “NEVER do…” has an exception. There are people who can Tweet out the same link 10 times a day and see great returns. There are others who can talk about nothing but what they eat for breakfast and get 10,000 happy followers.

What’s the difference? Sincerity, and a little moderation. If you’re genuine, believe in what you’re doing, and aren’t just trying to game the system, people will forgive the occasional over-indulgence. Just like we all deserve to eat a bit too much for the holidays, we’re all allowed to get carried away when we’re passionate about something we’ve created. Just do it because you mean it, and try not to overdo it.

1. Participate

It’s sad that I have to say this one out loud, but priming the pump starts long before the eve of your launch. The first word in social media is “social” – if you just create an account on every platform, broadcast your own links, and never participate, you’ll get no results. The only exception is if you’re already famous. The rules that apply to Kim Kardashian don’t apply to you. Life isn’t fair.  If you’re already famous, congratulations – you can go read another post now.

The usual argument is “I don’t have time.” If that’s true, fair enough – focus your efforts. Better to spend quality time on one social network than just throw links at ten. Even one solid network you actively participate in can create amazing returns.

2. Pre-Announce

You’ve got a post scheduled, and you’re itching to click [Publish]. Why not share that excitement? Even if you don’t have a link yet, let people know you’ve got something great in the works. I don’t think there’s anything wrong with a Tweet like this:

Sample Tweet

Of course, please see Section (i) – for this to work, you have to mean it. If you’ve never been psyched about anything, or you send out this message twice a day, you’re going to sound like an ass. The best way not to sound like an ass is not to be an ass.

3. Be A Tease

This is the advanced form of pre-announcing. Did you ever watch a movie preview and it was so awesome you stopped caring about the movie you actually paid to see? Studios are great at turning short versions of their work into teasers – take the best minute or two, put it to dramatic music with a booming voiceover, and Bam – magic!

So, why not take a couple of the best bits of your post and pre-release them? It could be a bit of a copy, a piece of data, or even an illustration. For my recent dupe content mega-post, I posted this on Google+ just for fun:

Sample Google+ Post

I’ll admit it – this was a tease. I wanted people to think “Wow, I wonder what that post is about?” The trick, and the art, is to give people something of value (no matter how small). I honestly thought the quote was funny, and I wanted to share it. Of course, the other trick is to make sure that you don’t waste all the good bits in the previews, like almost all romantic comedies of the past 5 years.

I also did a bit of a post-post teaser, using the opening illustration:

Sample Google+ Post

I could’ve just as easily made that a pre-post teaser, but I was a bit afraid to waste it. I sometimes get a little too attached to my mediocre drawings. It’s all part of my charm, I imagine.

4. Create Buy-in

Have you ever seen someone post a survey asking for data or topics for a post? The magic of that tactic isn’t just that other people are helping create your content – it’s that each one of those people has just bought into your post. As soon as they provide data or feedback, they’ll want to know what you’ll do with it.

The trick to this one is that you have be specific and create something interesting enough that people want to participate. I’m not a big fan of Tweets like this:

Sample Tweet

Don’t get me wrong – it’s a perfectly valid thing to say, and it lets people know you’re human. Just don’t expect your boredom to result in someone else’s interest. If you want participation, you need to structure it – create a survey or even a simple poll, ask people for data, and generally get them invested in your idea.

It doesn’t have to be complicated. While working on a recent slide deck, I Tweeted this:

Sample Tweet

Looking back, it’s a combination of teaser + participation – by asking people’s opinions, I was trying to get them both interested and invested. Ultimately, participation is just another facet of social influence and a way to impact people in your network.

By the way, if you want to know which caption won, tune into my free webinar on Tuesday – “Future-Proofing Your SEO: 2012 Edition” (see what I did there?)

5. Pre-Reciprocate

If you’re good at social media, you’ll thank the people who help you and try to help them back. If you’re great at social media, you’ll help them before they help you. Be active the day(s) before you put out an important link – talk to people, re-tweet/Like/+1 their URLs, and generally make yourself seen. Social media is all about perception. You don’t have to be online every waking minute, but it never hurts to look like you are.

Now You Know

Those are all my dirty little secrets, and my social media life is now ruined forever. Seriously, I fall back on Tip (i) – I can say this out loud, because I’m sincere. Yes, there’s method to my madness, and I probably scheme more than most people realize, but I also love what I do.

You can game social media to a point, but real success in the social world is ultimately a reflection of you. If you don’t care, neither will anyone else. If you’re excited about what you create, why not let your excitement be contagious?


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New Adwords Social Extension Displays Google +1's In PPC Ads

Posted: 30 Nov 2011 04:11 AM PST

Posted by Justin_Vanning

Hey there Mozzers! Today I'm going to talk about how to link your new Google+ Business Page to your Google AdWords account so you can start utilizing the new social extension feature.

As we all know, Google+ has been hard at work lately trying to increase their user base and trying to close the gap between them and Facebook. Over the past few weeks they have moved one step closer by rolling out their Google+ business pages - basically the equivalent to Facebook business profiles.

Now, before I go any further, I want to state a quick disclaimer; social extensions are brand new within AdWords and the folks over at Google are still ironing out the kinks. There are still many questions around how they will evolve over the next several months, but for now I will do my best to explain what social extensions are, how to set them up, and what they can do for your PPC performance.

What Are AdWords Social Extensions?

Social extensions within AdWords are Google's way of annotating your Google+ follower count to your PPC ads. Here's what it looks like in action:

Pretty cool, eh?

Now there's 2 types of Social Extensions that Google rolled out with, Personal and Basic. The example above is a Personal social extension. It shows you how many people within your Circles who have +1'd either the landing page or the Google+ Business Page. When the Basic social extension is shown, it will show you how many people across the web have +1'd the landing page or the Google+ Business Page. For example, if Roger Mozbot does a search on robot wheels he might see an ad that has the Basic social extension, "300 people have +1'd this". That means that 300 people across the web have either +1'd the landing page or the Google+ Business Page.

How Do You Set Up Social Extensions?

1. Setup your Google+ Business Page

The first thing you need to do is setup your Google+ Business Page, if you haven't done so already. Our Chief Community Wrangler, Jen Lopez, set ours up and told me it was quick and painless. But, if you need some help on how to set up your business page, check out this article by Search Engine Land.

2. Verify your site

In order for Google to verify that you are the owner of the Business Page, you need to do two things.

3. Activate social extensions in your AdWords account

After completing the first two steps, go in to your Google AdWords account and click on the "ad extensions" button, then make sure you are viewing "social extensions" and click "new extension".

 

Now you'll have to paste your Google+ Business Page URL in to the box:

After saving the new social extension, it may take a few days for Google to approve it. It will say "pending review" until it has been approved and then the status will change to "eligible". Now your ads should start showing social extensions. W00t!

What Are The Benefits Of Setting Up Social Extensions?

So now that you have everything set up properly, you're probably wondering what type of impact the social extensions will have on your ad performance. I can tell you that I have seen a nice bump in CTR on all of my ads that have been shown with the social extensions. The data is pretty preliminary since Google is only showing social extensions on a limited basis, but so far, the results look very good.

After setting up everything correctly in your AdWords account, if you want to see how the social extensions are performing, follow these simple steps:

  • Click in to one of your campaigns that has enabled social extensions
  • Click on the "ads" tab
  • Click on the "segment" drop down and select "+1 Annotations"

In the above screenshot you can see that while we only had a handful of impressions showing with the basic social extension, it has a much higher CTR then our standard ad. I reviewed some other ads within our campaign and am seeing a significant bump in CTR on all ads that were shown with either the personal or basic social extensions!

We know that these social extensions are still in their infant stages at Google, and I'm sure Google will be making some tweaks to them as they gather more data. But for now, there are several unique advantages you will have by turning on social extensions in your AdWords account.

  • Most advertisers still aren't utilizing social extensions so you can roll out with them before your competitors do
  • It only takes a few minutes to set up, it is free, and it will instantly give your ads more credibility and trust by having the social annotations appear within them
  • While the results are still very preliminary, it appears that ads with social annotations are generating higher CTRs
  • Increase the number of +1's you have on your Business Page since users who +1 your ad will count as a +1 to your Business Page

I hope you find this post helpful and can get some value out of turning on social extensions within your AdWords account. If you have already turned them on and are seeing results, please feel free to share them with me. Also, if you have questions, please let me know and I'll do my best to answer them. 


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The Beginning of the End of AIDS

The White House Your Daily Snapshot for
Thursday, December 1, 2011
 

The Beginning of the End of AIDS

Today is World AIDS Day, and President Obama is marking the occasion by speaking at "The Beginning of the End of AIDS," an event hosted by the ONE Campaign and (RED) at George Washington University.

Find out more and watch live.

Have questions about the global AIDS epidemic and what the Administration is doing to bring it to an end? Today at 2:30 p.m. EST, Gayle Smith, Senior Director for Development and Democracy at the White House, and Ambassador Eric Goosby, U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator will answer your questions on WhiteHouse.gov/Live. Find out how to submit your questions.

A red ribbon is hung from the North Portico of the White House on Nov. 30, 2011 to mark World AIDS Day, December 1, 2011. (Official White House Photo by Chuck Kennedy)

In Case You Missed It

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

By the Numbers: $1,500
The President's payroll tax cut would put an extra $1,500 in the pockets of a typical family earning $50,000 a year.

President Obama at Scranton High
If Congress doesn't extend the payroll tax cut, 6.7 million people in Pennsylvania will see their taxes go up. That's the message that President Obama took to Scranton.

White House Holiday Decoration Preview with the First Lady
First Lady Michelle Obama hosts military families to explore holiday decorations at the White House.

Today's Schedule

All times are Eastern Standard Time (EST).

10:05 AM: The President delivers remarks at a World AIDS Day Event

10:45 AM: The President receives the Presidential Daily Briefing

1:30 PM: Press Briefing by Press Secretary Jay Carney

5:00 PM: The First Family attends the National Christmas Tree Lighting; the President delivers remarks

WhiteHouse.gov/live
Indicates that the event will be live-streamed on WhiteHouse.gov/Live

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Seth's Blog : Four stages of the game

Four stages of the game

  • You don't even realize there's a game. (And any contest, market, project or engagement is at some level a game).
  • You start getting involved and it feels like a matter of life or death. Every slight cuts deeply, every win feels permanent. "This is the most important meeting of my life..."
  • You realize that it's a game and you play it with strategy. There's enough remove for you to realize that winning is important but that continuing to play is more important than that. And playing well is most important.
  • You get bored with the game, because you've seen it before. Sometimes people at this stage quit, other times they sabotage their work merely to make the game feel the way it used to.
  • And then a new, different game begins.
 

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