joi, 29 noiembrie 2012

Damn Cool Pics

Damn Cool Pics


Overly Attached Girlfriend at the American Music Awards [Video]

Posted: 29 Nov 2012 04:47 PM PST


Subject of meme and Youtube comedian Laina Walker is goofing around on the red carpet at the American Music awards.




Sydney, Australia Beaches Turns Blood Red

Posted: 29 Nov 2012 04:20 PM PST

Due to a bizarre naturally occurring algae, many Australian beaches were closed for a day. Red blooms such as these can be a hazard to swimmers due to high levels of ammonia contained in the algae which can cause rashes and eye irritation. The thick bloom was caused by noctiluca scintillans, a dinoflagellate marine algae that is also called "Sea Sparkle", because it exhibits bioluminescence. But all that is a really technical way of saying that it makes the water look red.






















Amazing Body Transformations - Part 6

Posted: 29 Nov 2012 11:30 AM PST

Check out these incredible before and after pictures of people who have successfully lost a significant amount of weight.

Previous Part:
Amazing Body Transformations - Part 1
Amazing Body Transformations - Part 2
Amazing Body Transformations - Part 3
Amazing Body Transformations - Part 4
Amazing Body Transformations - Part 5




















































































Via: bodybuilding


Hey Internet, Please Fix Our Pisa Photo

Posted: 29 Nov 2012 10:10 AM PST






















































Getting Fit to Lead: Habits of Successful Leaders [Infographic]

Posted: 29 Nov 2012 09:28 AM PST

There are many things that will never change when it comes to human relations and how we react to authority and leadership. Still, in a fast paced world, it's hugely important for companies to keep up with modern leadership styles. It is for this reason that, on average, businesses spend $1,228 per employee on leadership and development training. In fact, U.S. companies spent $12 billion dollars during the 2009 recession to train executives to lead in this new era of business. Check out this infographic from Michigan State University Online for a closer look at the habits of a leader.

Click on Image to Enlarge. Habits of Successful Leaders Via: michiganstateuniversityonline


Ask Your Questions On Extending Middle-Class Tax Cuts

The White House Your Daily Snapshot for
Thursday, November 29, 2012
 
Ask Your Questions On Extending Middle-Class Tax Cuts

Yesterday, President Obama asked you to share what the middle-class tax cuts mean for you and your family - and tens of thousands of you responded. At 1:00 p.m. EST today, Deputy Director of the National Economic Council Brian Deese is taking to Twitter to answer your questions about a balanced approach to reducing the deficit and protecting the middle class.   

Here are the details:
  • Ask your questions now and during the live event on Twitter with the hashtag #WHChat
  • Follow the Q&A live through the @WHLive Twitter account
  • If you miss the live session, the full session will be posted on WhiteHouse.gov and Storify.com/WhiteHouse
Find out more about this special session of Office Hours on the middle-class tax cuts.

Photo of the Day

First Lady Michelle Obama talks with members of the press in the State Dining Room of the White House during the 2012 holiday decorations press preview, Nov. 28, 2012. Mrs. Obama welcomed military families to the White House to view the decorations and joined military children in the State Dining Room to work on holiday crafts and treats. (Official White House Photo by Lawrence Jackson)

First Lady Michelle Obama talks with members of the press in the State Dining Room of the White House during the 2012 holiday decorations press preview, Nov. 28, 2012. Mrs. Obama welcomed military families to the White House to view the decorations and joined military children in the State Dining Room to work on holiday crafts and treats. (Official White House Photo by Lawrence Jackson)

In Case You Missed It

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

Joy to All: First Lady Michelle Obama Previews the 2012 White House Holiday Decor
The theme of the 2012 White House Holiday decorations is "Joy to All". In welcoming military families who were the first of more than 90,000 anticipated visitors, First Lady Michelle Obama explained that this year's theme celebrates the many joys of the holiday seasons.

President Obama Holds a Cabinet Meeting
In yesterday’s meeting, President Obama said the Cabinet would discuss efforts to help communities recover and rebuild after Hurricane Sandy, as well as making sure taxes on the middle class don’t go up.

Moving Towards an AIDS-free Generation
As we celebrated World AIDS Day 2012 yesterday, we took a moment to look back at what’s been achieved and what remains to be done to meet the goal of an AIDS-free generation.

Today's Schedule

All times are Eastern Standard Time (EST).

10:25 AM: The President and the Vice President receive the Presidential Daily Briefing

10:45 AM: The President meets with senior advisors

12:15 PM: The President meets with the 2012 American Nobel Prize winners

12:30 PM: The President and Governor Romney meet for lunch

12:45 PM: Briefing by Press Secretary Jay Carney WhiteHouse.gov/live

4:30 PM: The Vice President attends a memorial service for Senator Warren Rudman WhiteHouse.gov/live

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

Get Updates


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 | 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
 

Should We Chase The Algorithm?

Should We Chase The Algorithm?


Should We Chase The Algorithm?

Posted: 28 Nov 2012 06:52 PM PST

Posted by Dr. Pete

You might not be surprised to hear that I’ve been a little obsessed with the Google algorithm this past year. While many SEOs and business owners share that obsession, others have asked questions like “Why don’t you stop chasing Google and focus on 'real' marketing?” It’s an honest question, and I think it’s a fair one. I’d like to try to answer it and to explain why I think understanding the algorithm is an essential part of a well-rounded online marketing campaign going forward into 2013.

Panda Pac Man

Businesses Are Still at Risk

In the past two years, the Panda and Penguin updates have hit hard. For some people, they hit in a very real and personal way. I’ve seen small business owners lose everything, including their homes. I’m not here to judge Google – I understand their reasoning and even support some of it. Maybe more than that, I try to be realistic about Google’s goals and motivations. If I have to pick a side, though, I’ve been in the trenches with small businesses too long to abandon them now. If information can save you from losing everything, then I want you to have that information.

Offense + Defense = Victory

There’s been a big push toward content marketing and the broader world of #RCS (“Real Company Sh*t”, as coined by Wil Reynolds). I am 100% in favor of this movement. I believe in content marketing and in building a real brand and a product people want. There’s an implication, though, that we have to pick one or the other – either we’re content marketers or we’re algo chasers. To me, that’s like saying your team can only play offense or defense. You can have the best rushing and passing stats in the league, but you’re going to get crushed if you leave the field empty when the other team has the ball.

I want you to diversify beyond Google – if you’ve got 60%+ of your customers coming from organic search on Google, you’re in real danger of losing everything. You need to think more broadly about marketing, but you also need to protect yourself. If #RCS is your offense, then understanding the algorithm is your defense. You can have both.

People Clearly Want to Know

When we started building the algorithm history, it was honestly out of curiosity more than anything. I knew people would be interested, but I was amazed at the response. Here’s a traffic graph (unique pageviews) for 2012 through the end of October:

Algo History Traffic (1/1/2012 - 10/31/2012)

Keep in mind that the page launched in 2011. That first spike is Penguin, but the interest and traffic not only haven’t let up – they’ve increased. The page passed the 250K unique pageview mark in October, and is still growing strong. We’re chasing the algorithm because every piece of data I have says that you want us to.

The Big Picture Matters

You know how we traditionally measure algorithm updates? We use a metric called Aggregate Panic. If enough webmasters wake up, see their rankings change, and panic, we know there’s probably been an update. Sadly, that’s not really a joke.

I’m learning that probably the toughest question in search is “What’s normal?” – if we can’t understand what a normal day looks like, we’ll never be able to pinpoint an unusual one. On an individual level, I think this question translates to “Was it me, or was it Google?” Search is a highly dynamic environment, and separating out the algorithm from targeted actions (e.g. penalties and filters), competitive changes, our own SEO efforts, and seasonality is incredibly tough.  The more we know about the algorithm, the better we understand how our own data fits into the big picture.

Speculation Runs Rampant

There’s a wrong way to chase the algorithm, and we see it every day. The wrong way is to notice something changed, panic, and start building a bomb shelter while Tweeting about how Google is going to harvest your kidneys while you sleep if you leave a Google+ Hangout open. In all seriousness, we all have our pet theories, but it’s rare that they get put to the test. I’d like to see us evolve from chasing the algorithm to stalking it, and that means being methodical, collecting data, and asking questions that can be answered with that data.

Transparent is The New Black

Transparency is fashionable, and Google has put out a lot more public information in 2012, from Tweets about query impact to their monthly search quality highlights. While I think these public statements take Google real time and effort, and I don’t think they’re deliberately trying to mislead us, I do think we have to be careful how eagerly we accept these “gifts”. The monthly highlights are packed full of information, but it comes in the form of statements like:

#84394. [project “Page Quality”] This launch helped you find more high-quality content from trusted sources.

We know this update is important, because it has an ID number and a code name. Unfortunately, you could basically translate it to this:

#90210 [project “Turkey Giblets”] We made some stuff better.

…and you’d have learned just as much as you did from the original. I’m not bashing Google’s intent, because I honestly don’t know what their intent is. I’m worried, though. I’m worried that we’re so happy to have this information that we’re going to stop digging for our own data. If you want to listen to the wizard, that’s your business. I’d rather poke the curtain.

Google Controls Far Too Much

This one’s a little out there, and it goes well beyond SEO. Depending on who you ask, Google may control as much as 80% of the search market. Search isn’t just about finding a new pizza place or even customers finding your business.  Search is our portal to the largest archive of human knowledge we’ve ever had – the internet. No social site accesses a full crawl of the web. Only the major search engines do it, and Google may be getting 4 out of every 5 of those searches. Google is shaping how we work, how we play, and even how we think, and they’re making more than $40,000,000,000 a year doing it. I’m not a conspiracy theorist, but I think we need to fight for all the transparency we can get. Too much is at stake if we let the algorithm become a black box.

Let’s Be Careful Out There

There’s a fine line between healthy skepticism and paranoia. I hope that the lessons that a handful of us learn by chasing the algorithm let you sleep a little better at night and do the jobs you need to do. If you see me at a conference and say “I stopped chasing the algorithm and grew my business!”, I’ll say “Congratulations!” and buy you a beer. Until then, keep your eyes open and we’ll keep doing what we do.


Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don't have time to hunt down but want to read!

Another November Index is Live!

Posted: 28 Nov 2012 05:56 AM PST

Posted by carinoverturf

This month we're bringing you a special holiday treat: two Mozscape indices in the month of November! We just released the latest index, and you can now find fresh Mozscape data in Open Site Explorer, the MozbarPRO campaigns, and the Mozscape API.

This index is similar in size to the previous Mozscape index with about 76 billion URLs. The heavy computing AWS machines we moved to in October, detailed in Anthony's blog post, has saved significant amounts of time in our processing schedule thanks to almost no machine failures.

This time saved means more time for the Mozscape engineers to work on exciting projects, like tuning the final configurations in our own private cloud! We've been running a similar sized index in our private cloud located in Virginia alongside the index releasing today. It's running a bit slower as we continue to tune and dial the last pieces, but we hope to be running a hybrid processing solution early next year. Running an index in the cloud and an index in our own private cloud means fresher index data for you and our applications!  

Here are the metrics for this latest index:

  • 76,668,945,929 (76 billion) URLs
  • 664,205,988 (664 million) Subdomains
  • 136,202,352 (136 million) Root Domains
  • 892,544,725,878 (892 billion) Links
  • Followed vs. Nofollowed
    • 2.31% of all links found were nofollowed
    • 56.61% of nofollowed links are internal
    • 43.39% are external
  • Rel Canonical - 13.91% of all pages now employ a rel=canonical tag
  • The average page has 73 links on it
    •  62.28 internal links on average
    •  10.54 external links on average

And the following correlations with Google's US search results:

  • Page Authority - 0.35
  • Domain Authority - 0.19
  • MozRank - 0.24
  • Linking Root Domains - 0.30
  • Total Links - 0.25
  • External Links - 0.29

This histogram shows the crawl date and freshness of results in this index:

Crawl histogram for the late November Mozscape index

As you can see from the histogram, this index has some pretty fresh data mostly coming from October and the first week of November. The freshest data in this index will be from 11/10 when we started processing, and a good percentage was crawled late October and early November.  

As always, we'd love to hear your feedback in the comments - the Big Data team will be reading and responding! And remember, if you're ever curious about when Mozscape is updating, you can check the calendar here. We also maintain a list of previous index updates with metrics here.

Happy data pulling, Mozzers! 


Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don't have time to hunt down but want to read!

Seth's Blog : Anticipation vs. anxiety

 

Anticipation vs. anxiety

If we define anxiety as experiencing failure in advance, we can also understand its antonym, anticipation.

When you work with anticipation, you will highlight the highs. You'll double down on the things that will delight and push yourself even harder to be bold and to create your version of art. If this is going to work, might as well build something that's going to be truly worth building.

If you work with anxiety, on the other hand, you'll be covering the possible lost bets, you'll be insuring against disaster and most of all, building deniability into everything you do. When you work under the cloud of anxiety, the best strategy is to play it safe, because if (when!) it fails, you'll be blameless.

Not only is it more fun to work with anticipation, it's often a self-fulfilling point of view.



More Recent Articles

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

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




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