vineri, 23 mai 2014

Damn Cool Pics

Damn Cool Pics


This Cat Climbs Mountains Like A Boss

Posted: 23 May 2014 11:59 AM PDT

Would you ever take your cat climbing? Well this guy does. He spent a lot of time training his cat to do this and now she's a pro.























This Burger Will Most Likely Kill You

Posted: 23 May 2014 09:39 AM PDT

Cheeseburgers are awesome and delicious but if you eat this one it will most likely be the last thing you eat.















Yao Ming Making Normal People Look Tiny

Posted: 23 May 2014 09:04 AM PDT

Yao Ming is gigantic. He stands at 7' 6" and makes anyone in his presence look absolutely tiny.
















"Straight A's? Whoa!"

 
Here's what's going on at the White House today.
 
 
 
 
 
  Featured

"Straight A's? Whoa!"

This week, the President spoke on the importance of investing in infrastructure and bringing jobs and tourism to America; invited the Super Bowl Champion Seahawks to the White House; and designated a new National Monument. The First Lady honored Brown v. Board of Education, and the Vice President and Dr. Biden traveled to Romania and Cyprus.

But that's just the tip of the iceberg -- check it all out on West Wing Week.

Watch this week's West Wing Week.


 
 
  Top Stories

The President Talks Tourism at the Baseball Hall of Fame

Yesterday afternoon, President Obama became the first sitting President to visit the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York. After touring the Hall, the President talked about the impact that travel and tourism has on our country.

READ MORE

A Brand-New National Monument: The Organ Mountains-Desert Peaks

President Obama gave a speech at the Department of the Interior to designate the Organ Mountains Desert Peaks as our newest National Monument. The President also stressed the positive economic impact that America's public lands have on local communities. To honor the occasion, the Department of the Interior took over the White House Instagram. #Nofilter necessary.

READ MORE

President Obama Goes for a Walk

If you haven't seen this yet, we promise you won't be disappointed. On Wednesday, the President was heading to the nearby Department of the Interior and decided to break with tradition: he walked over instead. Along the way, he chatted with folks who weren't expecting to run into the President of the United States.

READ MORE


 
 
  Today's Schedule

All times are Eastern Time (ET)

11:35 AM: The President departs Chicago, Illinois

1:15 PM: The President arrives Joint Base Andrews

1:30 PM: The President arrives the White House

3:00 PM: The President signs H.R. 1209 and H.R. 685

3:30 PM: The President makes a personnel announcement


 

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Silly Marketer, Title Tags Are for Robots!

Silly Marketer, Title Tags Are for Robots!


Silly Marketer, Title Tags Are for Robots!

Posted: 22 May 2014 05:15 PM PDT

Posted by jennita

Like all good marketers, we think carefully about our title tags before publishing new content. Then we just take that carefully crafted title and plop it into the OG tags for social shares, right?

Think again!

In today's Whiteboard Friday, Jen Lopez explains why we need to put in a little more effort than that.

Video transcription:

Hey, Moz fans, welcome to yet another edition of Whiteboard Friday. I'm Jen Lopez, the Director of the Community here at Moz, and today I'm going to take you on a tale of two marketers.

We have the SEO, right? We focus on making sure that the robots and that the spiders are crawling through our sites and can get to them. Then when we want things to show up in the SERPs, we make sure that our title tags are keyword rich and our meta descriptions are super enticing, right? We make sure that when somebody clicks from the search engine results page, that they see exactly what we want them to see. And that's smart, right? Those keywords are actually a high ranking factor. All of these things that we focus on, we work very hard to make sure that our keywords are at the beginning of the title and that sort of thing.

But then we have the social media marketer. Yes, I drew that. I'm sorry, all social media marketers. I know you don't actually look at that. We think about the people, right? How are people going to look at it? How are people going to re-share this? And so as a social media marketer, we're thinking like, "How can we change the Open Graph tags so that people on Facebook and people on Google+ and people on LinkedIn are seeing these things exactly the way we want to see them?" We want to see big images. Who cares about keywords? That's what that SEO person does, right?

What about Twitter cards? You want to make sure that when you send something in a tweet or somebody tweets your blog post or your infographic, or whatever it may be, that it's coming across exactly the way you want to see it. You're thinking about rich pins, and you salivate when you're on Pinterest and you see a recipe and it actually shows all of the ingredients in the recipe. That might just be me, but in general that's often what we do.

What tends to happen is people are getting better about using the Open Graph tags and the Twitter cards and that sort of thing. But what we normally do is we take what we have, put in the title tags and meta description, and we make it the default so that it's really simple. So we're doing the basics. We're being lazy. That's exactly what we're doing.

We do it on our own blog. You go to our blog, the title that you see on the page, the title of the post, the title that you see shared on social network, it's always the same. You're going to see it across the board, and it is time for us to stop being lazy because think about if you did this.

Now let me give you first an example -- Huffington Post. I recently wrote a post for Huffington Post, and being a SEO myself, I worked very hard at making sure that the title tag was something that would come across in the SEO world very nicely so that it would show up in SERPs great and it would do all this stuff. What was interesting was, that without my prompting, that something that the Huffington Post editorial team did, is after I submitted my post with all of my information, they told me it took several days. I get this email that says, "Congratulations, your post is on Huffington Post." I did a little happy dance because now I can put in Google+ that I contribute to Huffington Post.

Besides that, the first thing I did is I went to share it on Facebook. What's interesting is when I shared it on Facebook, it was not the image that I'd used. It was not the title that I'd used nor was it the description. It was very specific to social.

So I went back to my page thinking, "What the hell, did they change all of my stuff?" No, my title tag and images and everything are still exactly the same. However, they've set the Open Graph and the Twitter cards to be specific to social. I had this like "Oh my gosh moment," when I realized: Why in the world aren't we all doing this? Why aren't we taking one piece of content and making it so that not only do the robots see it and do we care about the keyword rich title and meta description that looks good in the SERPs and getting all the schema just right so that it looks right there? Why don't we do that plus we make sure that the Open Graph tags are great, that you have an image that's super shareable, that you have a description and the title that can be somewhat up worthy?

I'm not a huge fan of, "This woman wrote on a Whiteboard, and you'll never guess what happened next." I really don't like those, but people click on that stuff. You put a different image, a different image here than a different image you have here, and you make it something. You put a circle around somebody's face in the background. We've all seen those on Facebook, right? They work really well. It's brilliant. You take one piece of content, and you make it work really well for the robots, and you find that happy place. You get the people plus robots equals love. That's because you're making your content that you've worked really hard at, you've put time and effort into this, you're making sure that it's easily consumable by the people who want to share it and re-share it hopefully and make it viral because you want that virality here. But you also want it to be stable, and you want the robots to see it and you want the spiders to be able to get to it and all of that.

So my quest, you have a quest. I am doing this hopefully internally as something that I'm pushing very hard, and I would like to see you step up your game as well. So rather than just keeping those defaults of, "Here is my title tag and I'm going to use it in all of the places," that you're going to take the time to write not only your title tag and meta description for SEO purposes, but that you're going to work hard at taking these and doing really great things with your social meta tags as well.

Below, I'm going to give you some resources to specific posts that talk about how to do this well and how to do this well and then take those and combine them. When you do that, you are going to find that people are going to love the heck out of your stuff. I will be the first one when we get that set up on our site, I will tell you exactly how it's working for us. So stop being lazy, do the hard work, and make your stuff super
shareable all over the Web.

That's it for today. I hope to see you again soon. Have a great weekend.

Additional resources

For more info on title tags: 
New Title Tag Guidelines & Preview Tool

For more info on social meta / open graph (OG) tags:
Must-Have Social Meta Tags for Twitter, Google+, Facebook, and More


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Seth's Blog : Conventions and expectations

 

Conventions and expectations

When you launch something new, you're almost certainly placing it into a section of the world that already has expectations about how things like this are supposed to work. A university gives diplomas. Restaurant waiters take tips. Software ought to have a 'save as' button.

It can be far more subtle than that. An emergency room waiting area looks very different from the waiting area at the chiropractor's office, even though both have the same function (waiting). The sound quality and background noise on a personal phone call sounds subtly different from one that's coming from a call center. A well-published book has chapters that start on the right-hand page.

Challenging conventions is precisely what makes your thing new. Hence unconventional. The difficulty comes when you challenge conventions and defy expectations that you weren't planning on upsetting. The inadvertent skipping of what we expect causes you to frustrate us, or to appear as an uncaring, unprepared amateur, or both.

Polish comes from domain knowledge, from having an intimate understanding of what people like your customers expect when they encounter something like the thing you just built. Sure, violate those expectations when they serve your needs. The rest of the time, though, it's smart to play along.

       

 

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Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis

Mish's Global Economic Trend Analysis


Co-Signing a Loan is Risky Business For You, Your Family, Your Heirs, Even the Borrower: More Student Loan Debt Slave Nightmares

Posted: 22 May 2014 04:16 PM PDT

Thinking of co-signing a loan for your son or daughter to go to college? I have a single word of advice: don't.

The Huffington Post notes numerous horror stories related to co-signing student loans. Please consider Sallie Mae Torments Faithful Student Borrowers After Co-Signers Die
Seven borrowers who had been paying their Sallie Mae student loans on time for years were unexpectedly threatened with asset seizures after a Sallie Mae contractor demanded they immediately repay tens of thousands of dollars simply because a family member had died.

Regina Kibler, a retiree who lives off payments from her late husband's life insurance policy, spent days agonizing over how to help her son, Christopher, pay back nearly $22,000 neither had. Samantha Flora hired a lawyer to fight attempts to recoup some $20,000 from her dead grandmother's estate that have turned members of her family against one another.

Tony Muzzatti, a 31-year-old Washington, D.C., resident who works in television and who owed Sallie Mae about $60,000, was asked to make a $10,000 down payment in January following the 2012 death of his grandmother, despite six years of on-time payments to Sallie Mae.
HuffPo has numerous other horror stories, all involving co-signing loans. What it did not have was the degrees the borrowers have and where they are working now. These cases all involved people generally paying debts on time.

What about those with no job? What about those with low-pay jobs who cannot possibly pay the loan back before the co-signer dies?

The former will be an immediate headache, the latter a delayed headache.

Education is way overpriced and student loans are part of the reason. Co-signing compounds the problem, while making the student and the co-signer indefinite debt slaves.

The moral of the story is simple: don't co-sign.

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

Existing Home Sales "Rebound": Headline Hype vs. Reality

Posted: 22 May 2014 09:29 AM PDT

This morning, headline news stories talk of a "rebound" in existing home sales and why rising inventory is good for the market.

Let's separate the hype from reality starting with the hype. Please consider Existing Home Sales Rebound, Inventory Increases.
U.S. home resales rose in April and the supply of properties on the market increased, suggesting the housing market was regaining its footing.

The National Association of Realtors said on Thursday existing home sales increased 1.3 percent to an annual rate of 4.65 million units, marking the second increase in sales in nine months.

Though an usually [Mish note - They meant unusually] cold winter depressed activity, a dearth of homes for sale also stymied demand. Sales are expected to gradually trend higher for the rest of 2014 as job growth and the overall economy accelerate.

And there is reason to be optimistic. The inventory of unsold homes on the market increased 6.5 percent from a year-ago and the median home price increased at its slowest pace since March 2012.

The months' supply increased to 5.9 months, the highest since August 2012, from 5.1 months in March. Six months' supply is normally considered as a healthy balance between supply and demand.
Headline Hype vs. Reality

Let's now compare the hype with the reality, starting with a pair of seasonally adjusted existing home sales graphs.

"Rebound" in Home Sales



Second Rise in Nine Months



Fundamental Reality

There is absolutely nothing in the above charts that remotely suggests a reason to be optimistic or that housing is "regaining its footing".

Moreover, the author failed to discuss interest rates, student debt, investor demand, or household formation.

Here's the reality: Interest rates are up, prices are up, and affordability is down. Investor demand was a huge portion of the market, and rising inventory suggests investors are more discriminating.

Sales may increase in spite of those fundamentals, but virtually nothing suggests that outcome. 

The author describes the increase in supply as "healthy". In context, it's not. While six month's supply may be normal, the more important fact is supply is outpacing demand by quite a bit.

The expected result should be for prices to drop. While I consider that a good thing, most don't. And if the supply trend continues, it will provide evidence of pent-up-demand, not to buy, but to sell.

Finally, given all the emphasis on the "usually cold winter", one might wonder why the rebound was as small as it was, and also why the rebound was "less than expected".

The above article is about as slanted as it gets, including this line: "Sales are expected to gradually trend higher for the rest of 2014 as job growth and the overall economy accelerate."

Did someone from the NAR write that article?

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