joi, 28 martie 2013

Damn Cool Pics

Damn Cool Pics


Evil Dead 2013 Official R-Rated Trailer [Video]

Posted: 28 Mar 2013 02:41 PM PDT




Check out the official R-Rated trailer for Evil Dead (2013) starring Jane Levy, Shiloh Fernandez and Jessica Lucas, right here on Fan Reviews.

Swimming Cities of Serenissima

Posted: 28 Mar 2013 02:21 PM PDT

The Swimming Cities of Serenissima is a fleet of handmade boats crafted from junk and a crew of artists traveling around Europe.


















































Via Tod Seelie

Meet Mohawk Ad Man

Posted: 28 Mar 2013 08:15 AM PDT

Got mohawk? Got money! Check out how Mohawk Gaz turned his head into a walking advertising masterpiece.








































































Via mohawkads

These Celebrities Are the Same Age

Posted: 28 Mar 2013 07:45 AM PDT

Some of these celebs are looking really good for their age.

Halle Berry and Robin Wright are both 46


Jim Parsons and Andrew Lincoln are both 40


Paul Rudd and Rory McCann are both 43


Sarah Hyland and Jennifer Lawrence are both 22


Taylor Swift is 23. Adele is 24


Jack McBrayer and Patrick Wilson are both 39


Nikolaj Coster-Waldau and Nick Offerman are both 42


Eddie Murphy and Forest Whitaker are both 51


John Cho and Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson are both 40


Danny Pudi and Rider Strong are both 34


Chuck Norris and Michael Gambon are both 73


Sarah Silverman and Julie Bowen are both 42


Michael J. Fox and George Clooney are both 51


Alison Brie and Elizabeth Moss are both 30


Seth Green and Ed Helms are both 39


Rob Lowe and Russell Crowe are both 49


William Shatner and Robert Duvall are both 82


David Bowie and Edward James Olmos are both 66


James Lipton and Cloris Leachman are both 86


Alyson Hannigan and Elizabeth Banks are both 39


Keanu Reeves and Nicolas Cage are both 48


Carly Rae Jepsen and Keira Knightley are both 27



Why You Should Switch and Save With Your Credit Cards [Infographic]

Posted: 28 Mar 2013 06:53 AM PDT

Credit cards can be a very useful financial tool. They can be great for consolidating debt, handy when travelling, ideal for building up your credit rating and they can offer great rewards if you use them for your everyday spending.

 In fact, credit cards come with a host of benefits and providing they are used correctly, they can offer big advantages over using your debit card.

Many credit cards come with introductory offers that allow you to avoid paying interest for a set period. Some cards offer interest-free periods on balance transfers, making them ideal for debt consolidation. Others offer 0% periods on spending - great for funding a large purchase that you intend to pay off before the promotional rate expires. Some credit cards even allow you to earn cashback or rewards as you spend. But you must pay off your balance in full each month.

Click on Image to Enlarge.

Image source: MoneySupermarket;

SEO Blog

SEO Blog


One of the biggest ever cyber attack on Spamhaus slows down the Internet

Posted: 28 Mar 2013 01:32 AM PDT

One of the biggest ever cyber attack on an antispam group "Spamhaus" has slows down the internet and affected millions of people across the World. The cyber attack, which appeared to have caved in by Wednesday, has established that just how big this problem can be. Spamhaus is a volunteer...
Read more »

The most powerful moment you'll watch all day


The White House, Washington


Hey everybody --

This morning, President Obama talked about the tragedy in Newtown, which happened 104 days ago, and brought a room to silence with a simple point:

"The entire country was shocked," he said. "And the entire country pledged we would do something about it and that this time would be different. Shame on us if we've forgotten. I haven't forgotten those kids. Shame on us if we've forgotten."

He was in the East Room, standing with a group of mothers who have lost children to gun violence. He was pushing Congress to act on common-sense steps to help protect our kids by reducing that kind of violence. Measures like eliminating background check loopholes that an overwhelming majority of Americans support.

"Right now, 90 percent of Americans -- 90 percent -- support background checks that will keep criminals and people who have been found to be a danger to themselves or others from buying a gun. More than 80 percent of Republicans agree. More than 80 percent of gun owners agree. Think about that. How often do 90 percent of Americans agree on anything?"

You've got to watch this video -- and then forward this message along to make sure no one forgets the obligation we all have to act.

Watch: President Obama speaks on gun violence

SHARE ON FACEBOOK | SHARE ON TWITTER

http://www.whitehouse.gov/we-have-not-forgotten

Thanks,

David

David Simas
Deputy Senior Advisor
The White House 




 
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Notification of action taken on your YouTube video

Regarding your account:Mihai T

The YouTube Community has flagged one or more of your videos as inappropriate. Once a video is flagged, it is reviewed by the YouTube Team against our Community Guidelines. Upon review, we have determined that the following video(s) contain content that may not be suitable for all viewers:

"Fucked" by the washing machine

As a result, we have age-restricted this content.

For more information on YouTube's Community Guidelines and how they are enforced, please visit the help center http://www.google.com/support/youtube/bin/answer.py?answer=92486.

Sincerely,
The YouTube Team

©2013 YouTube, LLC 901 Cherry Ave, San Bruno, CA 94066

How to Live Tweet Like a Pro

How to Live Tweet Like a Pro


How to Live Tweet Like a Pro

Posted: 27 Mar 2013 07:19 PM PDT

Posted by RuthBurr

Those of you who follow me on Twitter have probably noticed that I live-tweet the conferences I go to. Extensively. Some people love it, some people hate it - but if you want to start live-tweeting for yourself, here are some things to keep in mind.

Why I Live Tweet

I started live tweeting events a couple of years ago, when I realized that I was spending as much time and effort tweeting out the most relevant points of the session I was in as I spent taking notes – plus, the notes I took were less relevant than my tweets, since I was only tweeting out the best parts!

Once I committed to live tweeting conferences, I got a lot of great, positive feedback about it from other attendees, so I kept on going. I’ve also gotten the bulk of my followers through live tweeting; it can be a great way to build your personal brand at conferences and get increased visibility with attendees and speakers alike. Live tweeting doesn’t just build your brand among attendees of the conference, either. People who are trying to follow along at home via the conference hash tag are often even bigger fans of quality live tweets.

There's a noticeable uptick in people who read my name badge and say “oh, you’re Ruth Burr!” at the end of a conference compared to the beginning (when they usually just say "nice to meet you").

So that's nice.

Why You Might Not Want to Live Tweet

A few caveats before we get in to the nitty-gritty of quality live Twitter coverage:

You will lose followers. When I’m covering a conference, I’m tweeting multiple times per minute, all day. That can really blow up someone’s Twitter feed. I usually encourage my followers to mute me or the conference hash tag  if they don’t want to be inundated, but some people just choose to unfollow – and some of those people don’t re-follow after the conference is over.

Here are my daily follow/unfollow numbers from the last 60 days, courtesy of Followerwonk:

Live tweeting impact on followers

As you can see, I get the most new followers on days I’m live tweeting, but I get the most unfollows on those days as well. With the 31 followers I lost during SearchFest, my 54 new followers starts to look a lot more like 23. I'm still at a net gain of followers, but if you’re not prepared to (permanently) lose some followers (especially those who aren't in the search industry), live tweeting may not be for you.

It takes a ton of energy. Conferences can already be really draining, between the late nights, the "always on" networking conversations and the stress of trying to still get some work done while you’re there. Live tweeting takes a surprising amount of energy: the bulk of your focus needs to be on the session, not on the session + your work email + your slides for later in the day + Facebook. Tweeting live also means that even if a session is really boring or not at all useful to you, you can’t take a nice relaxing mental break and zone out or work on something more important.

You're reporting the news, not making it. That's something that can get lost in translation through retweets and replies. You’re going to get clarifying questions and dissenting opinions about things you didn’t even say (or necessarily agree with). No matter how many times you say “I didn’t say it, Duane Forrester did. I’d suggest asking him if you need more information,” some people are still going to get hung up on the idea that you’re the one advocating a particular position. It can get sticky.

You'll probably get rate limited. I usually end up unable to tweet for at least an hour per conference, because the Twitter API has blocked me for tweeting too many times in too short a period.

So! Caveats firmly in place, let's talk about:

How to Provide Value via Live Tweets

  • Provide as much context as you can. Take this tweet from SearchFest:

    Just adding the word “Agility” to the beginning of the tweet puts the entire factoid into the context in which Mel was using it. This increases the ability for the tweet to be read and understood outside of the context of other conference tweets. Which brings me to:
  • Think about the retweet. Each piece of information you tweet needs to be able to survive on its own, independent of the tweets that preceded or followed it. When you get retweeted, the new audience viewing that tweet may not have seen your other tweets on the topic: make sure that tweet will make sense to them, too.
  • Numbers are gold. When someone cites a statistic in their talk, tweeting the specific numbers they mention really increases the relevance of your tweet.
  • Don’t try to live tweet anecdotes. Speakers will often use illustrative examples in their talks, whether they’re passing anecdotes or full-on case studies. These can be extremely hard to live tweet. Remember to stick to the rules above. It’s OK to sum up a two-minute anecdote or case study into one or two tweets that are focused on the point.
  • Capture as many URLs as you can. If someone includes a link on a slide, I’ll usually type that out first and then write the tweet context around it, in case they change the slide before I can write it down (this is especially important with bit.ly links). Want to go above and beyond? If someone mentions a great article but doesn’t include the link, Google the piece and provide the link yourself. That way you’re adding extra value with your tweets.
  • Give shout-outs. Any time someone mentions a tool, tweet that out. If you know that company’s Twitter handle, include them with an @ mention. Do the same for people. People love hearing about new tools to use, and businesses and individuals alike love hearing they got a shout-out in a presentation. Doing this also gets you on the radar of people who might not even be following the conference.
  • Watch the conference hash tag. In addition to tweeting out the session you’re attending, keep an eye on the tweets coming out of other sessions. When you see a juicy, highly-retweetable tweet come out, retweet it! Now you’re providing information on other sessions, too. Speaking of which:
  • Use the conference hash tag and speaker handles. I usually end each conference tweet with the speaker’s twitter handle and the conference hash tag. It helps mitigate the “I don’t make the news, I just report it” factor I mentioned earlier, plus it’s important to give credit to where credit’s due. Most of the time I’ll just copy the speaker handle and hash tag from my first tweet and then paste them at the end of each tweet (be careful there aren’t any typos when you copy, though – I spent half of Marty Weintraub’s MozCon session accidentally tweeting him as @aimcear instead of @aimclear).

One tool I’ll often use for live-tweeting conferences is TweetChat. It allows you to track just the tweets coming from one hash tag, and will automatically add the tag to the end of every tweet you post from the tool.

Other than that, I don’t use many tools for live tweeting – I’m usually just using the Twitter app for Mac. I use keyboard shortcuts for “new tweet” and “post tweet” to save a bit of time.

The last thing you’ll really need to be able to live tweet a full conference is the ability to type very fast, with few mistakes, and without looking at your hands or, necessarily, the screen. I don’t have any good recommendations for tools/programs to use to learn to type faster; I learned to type really fast by getting in a lot of arguments with people over instant messenger in high school and college, so you could try that. If anybody has any suggestions for programs to hone your typing skills, I’d love to see them in the comments!

Happy live tweeting everybody!


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Nominate a Hero in Your Community

The White House Your Daily Snapshot for
Thursday, March 28, 2013
 

Nominate a Hero in Your Community

Each year President Obama honors a handful of extraordinary Americans with the Citizens Medal, one of our nation's highest civilian honors. The Citizens Medal recognizes Americans for exemplary deeds of service outside of their regular jobs -- people who feed the needy, who take care of our veterans, or who support our children.

Do you know someone who deserves to be recognized by President Obama?

Nominate a hero in your community on WhiteHouse.gov/CitizensMedal.

Submit a nomination

In Case You Missed It

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

White House Hangout: The Maker Movement
On Thursday, March 28th
 at 3:00 pm ET, White House innovation advisor Tom Kalil will join a Google+ Hangout to discuss the Maker Movement with leading innovators and Makers from around the country.

Julia Pierson Is Sworn In As First-Ever Female Director of the US Secret Service
During a ceremony in the Oval Office, President Obama praised the veteran agent for her dedication, professionalism and commitment to her work.

Photo Gallery: President Obama's Middle East Trip
Check out some behind the scenes images from the first foreign trip of President Obama's second term, a visit to Israel, the West Bank, and Jordan.

Today's Schedule

All times are Eastern Daylight Time (EDT).

10:00 AM: The President and the Vice President receive the Presidential Daily Briefing

10:45 AM: The President meets with senior advisors

11:40 AM: The President delivers remarks on common-sense measures to protect children from gun violence WhiteHouse.gov/live

12:30 PM: Press Briefing by Principal Deputy Press Secretary Josh Earnest WhiteHouse.gov/live

2:10 PM: welcomes President Ernest Bai Koroma of Sierra Leone, President Macky Sall of Senegal, President Joyce Banda of Malawi, and Prime Minister José Maria Pereira Neves of Cape Verde to the White House

3:45 PM: The President and the Vice President meet with Secretary of State Kerry

4:15 PM: The President and the Vice President meet with Treasury Secretary Lew

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

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