sâmbătă, 7 iulie 2012

Damn Cool Pics

Damn Cool Pics


Cute Pandas Playing on the Slide [Video]

Posted: 06 Jul 2012 09:15 PM PDT



What's more entertaining than watching a panda playing on a slide? Watching 4 pandas playing on a slide!


2012 San Diego Big Bay Boom Fireworks Epic Fail

Posted: 06 Jul 2012 09:08 PM PDT



A technical malfunction condensed the entire 23 minute long fireworks show into one large explosion when all the devices went off at the same time. Instagram user Ben Baller captured a photo of the 15 second long blast that has racked up more than 10,000 likes.


Via The Atlantic Wire


Stairway Cinema in Auckland, New Zealand

Posted: 06 Jul 2012 08:48 PM PDT

Design collective OH.NO.SUMO created this stairway cinema in Auckland (New Zealand), which turns a busy street corner into an outdoor pop-up cinema. The micro-theater offers space for seven people. The movies can be chosen in advance through social media channels via smartphones and other gadgets.


















July Mozscape Update

July Mozscape Update


July Mozscape Update

Posted: 06 Jul 2012 11:44 AM PDT

Posted by randfish

It's time for another Mozscape index update. New data is now available in Open Site Explorer, the Mozbar, our tools and through the API. July's update comes with some good news, and potentially some bad news, too. As you're likely aware, the previous two indices, while huge in size (150B+ URLs each) suffered from a lack of freshness due to the additional processing time required to calculate our link graph and metrics over such phenomenally big numbers of links & pages. Today's index is relatively large by prior standards (~72B URLs, larger than most anything we launched before April 2012). And it's slightly fresher - the link data in the index today was crawled almost entirely in May.

This index was originally scheduled to launch earlier, but ran into troubles, including Amazon's AWS outage and plenty of hardware failures, too. As we've mentioned in the past, SEOmoz is in the process of building a new private hybrid cloud datacenter that will replace AWS for Mozscape and should provide us with much greater reliability. We know how important it is to have regular data updates you can count on, and we're putting people and money to work as fast as possible to get off the unreliability that Amazon's systems have created.

Let's take a look at the full metrics for this index:

  • 78,813,641,094 (78 billion) URLs
  • 674,286,481 (674 million) Subdomains
  • 165,476,769 (165 million) Root Domains
  • 778,554,162,687 (778 billion) Links
  • Followed vs. Nofollowed
    • 2.33% of all links found were nofollowed
    • 57.62% of nofollowed links are internal
    • 42.38% are external
  • Rel Canonical - 12.5% of all pages now employ a rel=canonical tag
  • The average page has 74 links on it
    • 63.28 internal links on average
    • 10.72 external links on average

And here are the latest correlations between Mozscape metrics and Google's search results:

  • Page Authority - 0.34
  • Domain Authority - 0.23
  • MozRank - 0.19
  • Linking Root Domains - 0.24
  • Total Links - 0.2
  • External Links - 0.24

Because this update is much smaller in total URL size (~50% of the prior, 165 billion URL index), your link count totals will likely be much smaller, even if you've grown your link building efforts. Below is an example of the numbers for various Seattle startups across May's larger index and July's smaller one:

Mozscape Data for Seattle Startups from the May Index Update

Above: May's 165 Billion URL index data

July Mozscape Data

Above: July's smaller, 78 Billion URL index data

Note that, as one might expect, link counts are between 50-75% of their former value. This percentage will be lower for sites that get many links from the far corners of the less-traversed, less-popular pages and sites on the web, and higher for sites with links from more popular/well-linked-to sites and pages.

We're working hard to grow index size in the future back up to 100Billion+ URLs. Our crawlers can already handle vastly more, and it's just the unreliability of Amazon's hardware that holds us back. Our engineers and sysops folks are working around the clock to get there as soon as we can.

We've also done some work recently to update the scoring systems for the Keyword Difficulty/SERPs Analysis Tool. You'll now see a more accurate and usable algorithm applied to results where very fresh pages are ranking, e.g. news, sports, trending topics, etc. Here's an example query that previously would have produced a keyword difficulty score of 1:

Libor Rate Scandal

Libor Rate Scandal was a SERP that until a few days ago, had virtually no traffic and very different results. All of these pages are ones that have been produced in the last day or two, and thus don't have Page Authority scores. However, the Domain Authority is now being used to help calculate KW difficulty, which should seriously help those of you who analyze fresh results.

The next 2-4 Mozscape index updates will continue to be on AWS, but we're now running 3-4 indices in parallel (which costs a fortune, but gives us fallback options if/when Amazon's failures lose an index or massively delay it). In the next 3-4 months, we hope to be operating indices off our new hybrid cloud environment and see much greater reliability, which will enable us to produce larger, fresher and more consistent updates.


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Weekly Address: Pushing Congress to Create Jobs, Keep College in Reach for Middle Class

The White House

Your Daily Snapshot for
Saturday, July 7, 2012

 

Weekly Address: Pushing Congress to Create Jobs, Keep College in Reach for Middle Class

President Obama discusses legislation he signed on Friday that does two important things: It keeps thousands of construction works on the job rebuilding our crumbling infrastructure, and it stops interest rates on federal loans from doubling this year for more than seven million students.

Watch the President's weekly address:

President Barack Obama tapes the Weekly Address at the Summer Garden Food Manufacturing plant in Boardman, Ohio, July 6, 2012. (Official White House Photo by Pete Souza)

Weekly Wrap Up

Your quick look at this week on Whitehouse.gov:

A Nation of Immigrants: On July 4, the President started the day with a naturalization ceremony for a group of active duty service members. At the ceremony the President reflected on the importance of immigrants in U.S. history, “Immigrants signed their names to our Declaration and helped win our independence.  Immigrants helped lay the railroads and build our cities, calloused hand by calloused hand. Immigrants took up arms to preserve our union, to defeat fascism, and to win a Cold War. Immigrants and their descendants helped pioneer new industries and fuel our Information Age, from Google to the iPhone." 

Celebrating America: Later that day, the President addressed a gathering of military families on the South Lawn as they enjoyed festivities for every age. The Fourth of July picnic was also joined by country music star Brad Paisley -- who played until the fireworks began over the National Mall.

Your Voice, Heard: Today, we saw the impact of your voices on another debate in Washington. President Obama signed legislation keeping the interest rate on federal Stafford loans from doubling for 7.4 million students.

West Wing Week: This week, the President traveled to Colorado Springs to survey fire damage and honor responders. He also celebrated Independence Day with a naturalization ceremony at the White House and a picnic for military families on the South Lawn. Watch the video now.

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Seth's Blog : Thinking about your shoes

Thinking about your shoes

I woke up early to give a speech a few weeks ago and got dressed in the dark. Bad idea. I ended up wearing two slightly different brown shoes on stage, and I was sure that it was the first and only thing that anyone in the audience would notice. I was wrong.

People spend almost no time thinking about what you wear on your feet. A few hours after the meeting, we have no recollection at all about what tie you wore or how your hair was done.

On the other hand, we'll long be impacted by your big idea, the project you didn't launch and the gift you didn't give.

It's easy to obsess about trivia, mostly because the stakes are so small. What happens if we wonder about what we could to that might change everything instead?



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