marți, 5 ianuarie 2016

Damn Cool Pics

Damn Cool Pics


The Ravishing Women Of The Russian Military

Posted: 05 Jan 2016 05:15 PM PST

These beautiful women know how to defend their country and they also know how to look good while they're doing it.























9 Celebrities That Are Either Vampires Or Time Travelers

Posted: 05 Jan 2016 02:49 PM PST

There's definitely something weird going on here with these celebrities.

The picture of the man looking identical to the infamous actor Nic Cage dates from around 1870.



To the left is a portrait of a man named Paul Mounet, who was born in 1847. He "died" in 1922 under mysterious circumstances, and his body was never found. Mounet worked as a scientist and then became an actor. There's speculation that he left the science field because he didn't want his immortality discovered. He instead faked his death and went into hiding. 



John Travolta, who is a member of the Church of Scientology and believes in reincarnation, "appears" in an antique photo discovered by a collector in Ontario, Canada. The picture was taken 150 years ago, and it is on sale on eBay.



A photo from New York Public Library's Schomberg Center that was taken in Harlem in 1933 shows a man who looks an awful lot like famous rapper Jay-Z.



Matthew McConaughey has the same chiseled features of this Union officer.



Call it a bizarre case of time traveling — John Brown (r.) worked to abolish slavery in the mid-19th century, but Charlie Sheen has merely tried to abolish all forms of sanity. Nevertheless, the two look eerily similar to one another. 



Pope Gregory IX in a fresco by Raphael & Rocky. One famously got bashed around the boxing ring, and the other was more used to having the ring on his finger kissed, but they look like identical twins, or it could it be... 



The Portrait of Sebastián de Morra by Diego Velázquez is a painting of a court dwarf and jester in the court of Philip IV of Spain. It was created around 1645.



Conspiracy theorists are convinced by the evidence above that the Russian president may have been alive for more than a century.

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Twitter search alternatives & tools (now we don’t have Topsy)

Twitter search alternatives & tools (now we don’t have Topsy)

Link to White.net » Blog

Twitter search alternatives & tools (now we don’t have Topsy)

Posted: 18 Dec 2015 03:55 AM PST

search twitter title banner(Editors note: With the sad demise to Topsy on the 15th of December, we thought it a pretty good time to update our list of alternative tools for searching Twitter. The original was written back in April 2010 by Tad Chef, and sadly, it's not just Topsy from our original list of 30 alternatives that has since disappeared or stopped being updated).

Back in 2010, Twitter added a mechanic to it's then creaky search mechanism that added the most popular tweets as well as the latest, but it's fair to say it didn't impress. So, we collated 30 of our favourite Twitter search tools as a handy reference.

Now, Twitter has vastly improved it's internal search tool in the proceeding five years, and also offers some basic analysis tools such as Twitter Analytics (https://analytics.twitter.com). However, most digital marketers still make great use of third-party tools to make the most of searching Twitter.

I personally have been recommending Topsy for several years to clients, colleagues and peers. Topsy's ability to search conversations back to 2006 and it's speed made it the most complete option. It's excellent layout, strong search functionality, granular filtering options and of course the excellent Topsy Analytics to compare different topics all made it my tool of choice.

So much so in fact I even recommended it in my webinar for Kerboo, pretty much only a few hours before it was shut down by Apple. So, as well as looking for a more powerful Twitter search alternative, we now need alternatives to Topsy…

So whether you're doing keyword research, PR or outreach research, looking for articles to aid your learning or any other type of Twitter search, here are some alternatives for you.

SocialBearing

Twitter search alternatives:

  1. Twitter Advanced Search – Huh? Didn't I say alternatives to Twitter's search? Well, actually Twitter's search has got pretty damn good in the past year, mainly thanks to them now indexing every public tweet since the platform started in 2006. However, it is still just a stream of information. Want to be more of a power user? The easiest alternative is actually Twitter's very own Advanced Search. This lets you search by works, hostage, language, from certain accounts, to certain accounts, mentioning certain accounts, by date and even sentiment. All pretty damn powerful & from the horses mouth. We've started using this as a great way to start finding keyword ideas and outreach targets.
  2. Social Mention – A real time search platform, Social Mention lets you search Twitter and other channels such as blogs into one user-generated content stream. It has a plethora of information, sick as strength, sentiment and reach of the tweets you find, which can be great for research into how popular a brand is, how many power-tweeters are mentioning a topic or basic understanding if people are happy or mad about a topic. It also offers top keywords and you can export sentiment, users, hashtags used and the top keywords as CSV files
  3. Social Bearing – A really simple to use, but powerful real-time search tool for Twitter, Social Bearing is restricted to then past 7 days if you do a search by keyword, but can still get good results. The data you get back has filters for tweet types (such as retweets & replies), sentiment and language and aldo shows most common and influential tweeters on the keyword or hashtag you searched for. It also has options to do user, follower & people searches. Results are shown in a big grid of the latest tweets to give you an instant flavour of the conversation. Possibly one of the best Topsy replacements in our limited play so far
  4. All My Tweets – Ever lost one of your own tweets, or got too many to look through manually? Use this nifty search tool to grab all your own tweets onto one page in text format so you can use the browser search function to find what you are after (also good for realising how much time you waste spend on Twitter
  5. Tweet Volume – Bit of a niche one, this tools records the number of tweets about different health related topics, such as my headache or my dentist. If of interest, you can search by work, phrase or hashtag
  6. Hashtag.org – This tool does what you might expect, let you search for a hashtag. Once you do, you get a handy trend chart of estimated tweets per hour, a list of prolific users and some of the latest tweets using the hashtag
  7. Twazzup – Simple but effective tool for real time monitoring. Search brand names, keywords or hashtags, and mine for info on strongest influencers tweeting on your search topic, the most powerful tweets & an active timeline
  8. Backtweets – Simple tool that has similar idea to Topsy but wit less detail. Good for finding their  archived data on either a URL, domain, username, hashtag or topic
  9. TalkWalker – A name known in SEO circles for their alert service, TalkWalker have expanded recently to also offer some pretty excellent analytics in their social media monitoring tool. Their free option (just sign up for an account) is lightweight version of their main product, described as a bit like a Google search for social mentions. A search on here gives you a sample of their full data, but has excellent filters for blogs, forums & other social media channels as well as Twitter. Interestingly, TalkWalker are an official Twitter partner, so their data (form the last two years) should be comprehensive
  10. Keyhole – If you want to search for the influence or popularity of a hashtag, keyword or URL, Keyhole is a nice solution that fills in some of the gap Topsy has left behind. Keyhole’s simple interface is slick and fast, and offers some clear and interesting insight into your search term, such as the potential reach, top influencers, and top posts by retweets/likes, Klout score or how recent they are. Full data is paid for, but a quick insight can be gained for free

Social Mention

Twitter user search:

  1. Doesfollow – Very simple tool that lets you put in any Twitter username and see if it follows a second username of your choice. Can use it to check if someone follows you, or a competitor to influencer
  2. Friend or Follow – Good for Instagram and Tumblr as well as Twitter, Fried or follow lets you sort and filter your followers, plus find out who not following you, including tracking unfollowers
  3. Filta – Want to search the people you follow, Filta's the tool for you. Bio search your followers for any keyword. Especially useful if you have a large following and want to find content to appeal to your audience

Twitter analytics with search functionality:

  1. Followerwonk – Part of the Moz suite of tools, Followerwonk isn't strictly a search tool, but is a fantastic source of Twitter analytics data. You can find your followers, where they are located, when they actively tweet and so on. You can also compare your users with someone else. More importantly for many marketers though, is you can throw in a competitor or influencer into the Analyse section of Followerwonk to slice up their tweets, their followers or who they follow to start finding much more about them. The search you can do is by bio – so instead of searching for tweets, you can search for users. A really useful tool overall with some search functionality that works well
  2. Trendsmap – Take a look for local Twitter trends. You have to register to be able to take a look at the data, but a free version is available. I took a look this morning, and unsurprisingly Christmas Jumper Day and Star Wars: The Force awakens are dominating things…
  3. Hubspot – Obviously the inbound marketing behemoth does a lot more than Twitter search, but having purchased OneForty from our previous list, pointing out HubSpot's social media chops is rightly deserved
  4. TweetReach – A paid tool, TweetReach lets you dig into your tweets to find how much earned conversation you generated with your efforts. It offers a variety of useful metrics for your keyword or hashtag. The free version only gives you the top 50 results, but that can be enough to search for the top influencers on a topic, making it useful for snapshot research. You can compare to competitor tweets, find new accounts to follow, identify spikes in activity to measure when is effective to tweet and more. From a search perspective, TweetReach helps you find new hashtags, content and users
  5. Tame – Another paid tool, but one we hear good things about, Tame lets you identify influencers, track campaigns, and importantly for searching on Twitter, find relevant hashtags for topics you want to talk about

Trendsmap

Visiting topsy.com now redirects you to an Apple support page on new search functionality within iOS9. This suggest Apple's reported $225 million purchase of Topsy in 2013 was all about it's search architecture rather than interest in it as a service.

But, as you can from the list above, there are plenty of other ways to search Twitter for the data you need.

What are your go-to methods or tools or searching Twitter? Let us know in the comments below or on Twitter and we'll add them to the list!

The post Twitter search alternatives & tools (now we don’t have Topsy) appeared first on White.net.

Seth's Blog : The crowd, your work, and a choice



The crowd, your work, and a choice

The crowd prefers sweets.

The crowd gets on its feet when your band plays the big hit, and sits down for the new songs.

The crowd will pay far more for a steak dinner than a vegetable one, regardless of cost or effort or value.

The crowd will always pick the movie over the book.

The crowd would rather wait in line for the popular attraction.

The crowd likes to be chased.

The crowd likes explosions, resolved plots and ample lighting.

The crowd would prefer a digest.

The crowd never liked Ornette Coleman very much.

The crowd's favorite words include fast, easy, cheap, fun, now and simple.

The crowd needs a deadline.

The crowd is the group of people who don't get what you do, who loom on the horizon as the reward for making your work more popular.

And yet, the crowd continually gets more than it deserves, because people like you make work that matters. Work that you're proud of.

       

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