joi, 12 iunie 2014

Damn Cool Pics

Damn Cool Pics


22 Ways to Live Longer [Infographic]

Posted: 12 Jun 2014 04:21 PM PDT

Ever wondered how to change your diet and lifestyle, in order to live longer? We certainly have. Check out these 22 'cheats' on how to be healthy and increase your life expectancy.

Click on Image to Enlarge.
22 ways to live longer


Secret Fast Food Items You Never Knew About

Posted: 12 Jun 2014 09:58 AM PDT

If the regular menu fast food items aren't enough for you, try ordering something off the secret menu.

The Big McChicken
Think of the Double Down only from McDonalds




Long John Silvers Crumbs
Yep, a side of crumbs you can put on your salad or whatever needs crumbs.



Burger King's Suicide Burger
That's 4 patties with cheese, bacon and a clogged artery.



Chicken and Waffles
McDonalds does soul food with some McGriddles.



The McKinley Mac
It's a Big Mac, but with quarter pounder patties.



The 4 x 4
Get as many meat patties as you want at In n Out



Neapolitan Shakes
You can get these at any restaurant that has 3 shake flavors.



The Monster Mac
Just look at it…so much Big Mac in one place at one time.



The Triple Down
It's a double down with a piece of chicken in the middle.



In n Out Protein Style
Who needs carbs? Replace the bun with lettuce.



The Pie McFlurry
Like any McFlurry, only with a pie blended into it.



In n Out's Flying Dutchman
it's just meat and cheese because bread sucks.



The Land, Sea and Air Burger
Fish, chicken and beef, together at McDonalds.



Surf and Turf Slider
Head to White Castle to mix your fish and your beef.



Pizza Sub
They won't put this on the menu at Subway, but it's tomato sauce, cheese, pepperoni and whatever else you want.



The Hypocrite
Fat Burger will sell you this veggie burger with bacon on it.



Loaded Fries
White Castle will put this together if you ask.



Sonic's Frito Pie
Exactly what it sounds like. Frito pie.



Wendy's Barnyard Burger
It's spicy chicken ham, and beef with cheese.



Animal Style Fries
In n Out knows you like it sloppy.



The McGangBang
It's a McChicken with Double Cheeseburgers on either side.



Wendy's Grand Slam
4 patties, 6, 8, whatever works for you.

The Game Of Thrones Cast Out In The Town

Posted: 12 Jun 2014 08:02 AM PDT

See how the Game of Thrones cast spends their free time.


















Using Kimono Labs to Scrape the Web for Free

Using Kimono Labs to Scrape the Web for Free


Using Kimono Labs to Scrape the Web for Free

Posted: 11 Jun 2014 03:38 PM PDT

Posted by CatalystSEM

Historically, I have written and presented about big data—using data to create insights, and how to automate your data ingestion process by connecting to APIs and leveraging advanced database technologies.

Recently I spoke at SMX West about leveraging the rich data in webmaster tools. After the panel, I was approached by the in-house SEO of a small company, who asked me how he could extract and leverage all the rich data out there without having a development team or large budget. I pointed him to the CSV exports and some of the more hidden tools to extract Google data, such as the GA Query Builder and the YouTube Analytics Query Builder

However, what do you do if there is no API? What do you do if you want to look at unstructured data, or use a data source that does not provide an export?

For today's analytics pros, the world of scraping—or content extraction (sounds less black hat)—has evolved a lot, and there are lots of great technologies and tools out there to help solve those problems. To do so, many companies have emerged that specialize in programmatic content extraction such as MozendaScraperWikiImprtIO, and Outwit, but for today's example I will use Kimono Labs. Kimono is simple and easy to use and offers very competitive pricing (including a very functional free version). I should also note that I have no connection to Kimono; it's simply the tool I used for this example.

Before we get into the actual "scraping" I want to briefly discuss how these tools work.

The purpose of a tool like Kimono is to take unstructured data (not organized or exportable) and convert it into a structured format. The prime example of this is any ranking tool. A ranking tool reads Google's results page, extracts the information and, based on certain rules, it creates a visual view of the data which is your ranking report.

Kimono Labs allows you to extract this data either on demand or as a scheduled job. Once you've extracted the data, it then allows you to either download it via a file or extract it via their own API. This is where Kimono really shines—it basically allows you to take any website or data source and turn it into an API or automated export.

For today's exercise I would like to create two scrapers.

A. A ranking tool that will take Google's results and store them in a data set, just like any other ranking tool. (Disclaimer: this is meant only as an example, as scraping Google's results is against Google's Terms of Service).

B. A ranking tool for Slideshare. We will simulate a Slideshare search and then extract all the results including some additional metrics. Once we have collected this data, we will look at the types of insights you are able to generate.

1. Sign up

Signup is simple; just go to http://www.kimonolabs.com/signup and complete the form. You will then be brought to a welcome page where you will be asked to drag their bookmarklet into your bookmarks bar.

The Kimonify Bookmarklet is the trigger that will start the application.

2. Building a ranking tool

Simply navigate your browser to Google and perform a search; in this example I am going to use the term "scraping." Once the results pages are displayed, press the kimonify button (in some cases you might need to search again). Once you complete your search you should see a screen like the one below:

It is basically the default results page, but on the top you should see the Kimono Tool Bar. Let's have a close look at that:

The bar is broken down into a few actions:

  • URL – Is the current URL you are analyzing.
  • ITEM NAME – Once you define an item to collect, you should name it.
  • ITEM COUNT – This will show you the number of results in your current collection.
  • NEW ITEM – Once you have completed the first item, you can click this to start to collect the next set.
  • PAGINATION – You use this mode to define the pagination link.
  • UNDO – I hope I don't have to explain this ;)
  • EXTRACTOR VIEW – The mode you see in the screenshot above.
  • MODEL VIEW – Shows you the data model (the items and the type).
  • DATA VIEW – Shows you the actual data the current page would collect.
  • DONE – Saves your newly created API.

After you press the bookmarklet you need to start tagging the individual elements you want to extract. You can do this simply by clicking on the desired elements on the page (if you hover over it, it changes color for collectable elements).

Kimono will then try to identify similar elements on the page; it will highlight some suggested ones and you can confirm a suggestion via the little checkmark:

A great way to make sure you have the correct elements is by looking at the count. For example, we know that Google shows 10 results per page, therefore we want to see "10" in the item count box, which indicates that we have 10 similar items marked. Now go ahead and name your new item group. Each collection of elements should have a unique name. In this page, it would be "Title".

Now it's time to confirm the data; just click on the little Data icon to see a preview of the actual data this page would collect. In the data view you can switch between different formats (JSON, CSV and RSS). If everything went well, it should look like this:

As you can see, it not only extracted the visual title but also the underlying link. Good job!

To collect some more info, click on the Extractor icon again and pick out the next element.

Now click on the Plus icon and then on the description of the first listing. Since the first listing contains site links, it is not clear to Kimono what the structure is, so we need to help it along and click on the next description as well.

As soon as you do this, Kimono will identify some other descriptions; however, our count only shows 8 instead of the 10 items that are actually on that page. As we scroll down, we see some entries with author markup; Kimono is not sure if they are part of the set, so click the little checkbox to confirm. Your count should jump to 10.

Now that you identified all 10 objects, go ahead and name that group; the process is the same as in the Title example. In order to make our Tool better than others, I would like to add one more set— the author info.

Once again, click the Plus icon to start a new collection and scroll down to click on the author name. Because this is totally unstructured, Google will make a few recommendations; in this case, we are working on the exclusion process, so press the X for everything that's not an author name. Since the word "by" is included, highlight only the name and not "by" to exclude that (keep in mind you can always undo if things get odd).

Once you've highlighted both names, results should look like the one below, with the count in the circle being 2 representing the two authors listed on this page.

Out of interest I did the same for the number of people in their Google+ circles. Once you have done that, click on the Model View button, and you should see all the fields. If you click on the Data View you should see the data set with the authors and circles.

As a final step, let's go back to the Extractor view and define the pagination; just click the Pagination button (it looks like a book) and select the next link. Once you have done that, click Done.

You will be presented with a screen similar to this one:

Here you simply name your API, define how often you want this data to be extracted and how many pages you want to crawl. All of these settings can be changed manually; I would leave it with On demand and 10 pages max to not overuse your credits.

Once you've saved your API, there are a ton of options (too many to review here). Kimono has a great learning section you can check out any time.

To collect the listings requires a quick setup. Click on the pagination tab, turn it on and set your schedule to On demand to pull data when you ask it to. Your screen should look like this:

Now press Crawl and Kimono will start collecting your data. If you see any issues, you can always click on Edit API and go back to the extraction screen.

Once the crawl is completed, go to the Test Endpoint tab to view or download your data (I prefer CSV because you can easily open it in Excel, CSV, Spotfire, etc.) A possible next step here would be doing this for multiple keywords and then analyzing the impact of, say, G+ Authority on rankings. Again, many of you might say that a ranking tool can already do this, and that's true, but I wanted to cover the basics before we dive into the next one.

3. Extracting SlideShare data

With Slideshare's recent growth in popularity it has become a document sharing tool of choice for many marketers. But what's really on Slideshare, who are the influencers, what makes it tick? We can utilize a custom scraper to extract that kind data from Slideshare.

To get started, point your browser to Slideshare and pick a keyword to search for.

For our example I want to look at presentations that talk about PPC in English, sorted by popularity, so the URL would be:
http://www.slideshare.net/search/slideshow?ft=presentations&lang=en&page=1&q=ppc&qf=qf1&sort=views&ud=any

Once you are on that page, pick the Kimonify button as you did earlier and tag the elements. In this case I will tag:

  • Title
  • Description
  • Category
  • Author
  • Likes
  • Slides

Once you have tagged those, go ahead and add the pagination as described above.

That will make a nice rich dataset which should look like this:

Hit Done and you're finished. In order to quickly highlight the benefits of this rich data, I am going to load the data into Spotfire to get some interesting statics (I hope).

4. Insights

Rather than do a step-by-step walktrough of how to build dashboards, which you can find here, I just want to show you some insights you can glean from this data:

  • Most Popular Authors by Category. This shows you the top contributors and the categories they are in for PPC (squares sized by Likes)

  • Correlations. Is there a correlation between the numbers of slides vs. the number of likes? Why not find out?

  • Category with the most PPC content. Discover where your content works best (most likes).

5. Output

One of the great things about Kimono we have not really covered is that it actually converts websites into APIs. That means you build them once, and each time you need the data you can call it up. As an example, if I call up the Slideshare API again tomorrow, the data will be different. So you basically appified Slisdeshare. The interesting part here is the flexibility that Kimono offers. If you go to the How to Use slide, you will see the way Kimono treats the Source URL In this case it looks like this:

The way you can pull data from Kimono aside from the export is their own API; in this case you call the default URL,
http://www.kimonolabs.com/api/YOURPAIID?apikey=YO...

You would get the default data from the original URL; however, as illustrated in the table above, you can dynamically adjust elements of the source URL.

For example, if you append "&q=SEO"
(http://www.kimonolabs.com/api/YOURPAIID?apikey=YOURAPIKEY&q=SEO)
you would get the top slides for SEO instead of PPC. You can change any of the URL options easily.

I know this was a lot of information, but believe me when I tell you, we just scratched the surface. Tools like Kimono offer a variety of advanced functions that really open up the possibilities. Once you start to realize the potential, you will come up with some amazing, innovative ideas. I would love to see some of them here shared in the comments. So get out there and start scraping … and please feel free to tweet at me or reply below with any questions or comments!


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Today: Talk Healthy Lunches with @FLOTUS

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

Today: Talk Healthy Lunches with @FLOTUS

As part of her Let's Move! initiative, First Lady Michelle Obama is raising awareness around the importance of our kids eating healthy and getting the nutrition they need -- and today she's taking to Twitter to answer your questions.

At 2:30 p.m. ET, join the First Lady for a Twitter Q&A on school nutrition and healthy school lunches on her Twitter handle, @FLOTUS.

Ask FLOTUS your questions now, and find out more about the Twitter chat here.

Join FLOTUS for a Twitter Q&A


 
 
  Top Stories

President Obama Gives the Commencement Address at Worcester Tech in Massachusetts

Yesterday, President Obama traveled to Worcester, Massachusetts to deliver the commencement address at Worcester Technical High School. The President congratulated the graduates on their accomplishments, letting them know that they stand out among other high schools across the country.

READ MORE

In Case You Missed It: President Obama's Very First Tumblr Q&A

On Tuesday, the President took to Tumblr to to answer questions from Americans across the country about student loans, college access, and all things education.

READ MORE

The President Talks About Gun Violence At Tumblr Event

During the Q&A, the President addressed the epidemic of gun violence in America. "The country has to do some soul-searching about this," he said. "This is becoming the norm, and we take it for granted in ways that, as a parent, are terrifying to me."

READ MORE


 
 
  Today's Schedule

All times are Eastern Time (ET)

10:55 AM: The President holds a bilateral meeting with Prime Minister Tony Abbott of Australia; the Vice President also attends

12:30 PM: The President and the Vice President meet for lunch

12:30 PM: Press Briefing by Press Secretary Jay Carney

2:05 PM: The President honors the WNBA Champion Minnesota Lynx WATCH LIVE

3:00 PM: The Vice President meets with Members of Congress to discuss the Administration's approach to the Western Hemisphere including the Vice President's upcoming trip to Brazil, Columbia and the Dominican Republic

7:00 PM: The Vice President attends an event for the Democratic National Committee


 

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Seth's Blog : Are you solving a problem or creating a problem?

 

Are you solving a problem or creating a problem?

Uber solves a problem. You always needed a reliable way to get from a to b, and Uber does that, in many ways better than a cab.

Lady Gaga solves a problem. You have neophilia when it comes to music, and she'll bring you new music to satisfy your curiousity.

Same thing goes for Zara. They solve the 'what's new in fashion' problem for a lot of early adopters.

On the other hand, Uggs created a problem for people who aren't necessarily fashion forward but want to wear what everyone else is wearing. Once "everyone" was wearing Uggs, these fashion-laggards had a problem—if they wanted to keep up, they had to go buy a new pair of boots.

In most successful business-to-business selling, the big wins come from creating problems. Once the competition is busy using your new innovation, the other companies have to buy it to keep competitive. Once other brands are using your social medium, the laggard brands do too—not because you've solved their problem, but because you've created one. The people in a traditional bureaucracy buy something new when they have to, not when they want to.

(It's interesting how we recoil from the idea of creating problems. Of course, progress is about creating opportunities, and opportunities always bring along their close colleague, problems.)

Or consider the case of a non-profit seeking to raise funds or gain government support. Without a doubt, they have to create a problem in the mind of the donor, or there will be no funds or no support to solve that problem.

It is clearly more fun (at first) to solve problems because everyone is happy to see you and the discussion is simple indeed, "You know that problem you used to have? We just solved it." The innovations that change the world, though, often create (or highlight) problems before they solve them.

[HT to Mo for the title]

       

 

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