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  • 04Mar

    Captify - a jQuery plugin to display simple, pretty image captions that appear on rollover.

    Captions can slide in from the bottom or top. New animation options: in addition to ’slide’, there is ‘fade’ and ‘always-on’. The goal of Captify is to be easy to use, small/simple, and completely ready for use in production environments.

    It has been tested on Firefox, Chrome, Safari, and Internet Explorer.


    Copyright © Visual-Blast Media 2007 - 2009 | ARTICLE | Visit the site for more Free web resources, Icons, Scripts, Photoshop Tutorials, Flash, CSS ...
  • 04Mar

    Meetings are marketing in real time with real people. (A conference is not a meeting. A conference is a chance for a circle of people to interact).

    There are only three kinds of classic meetings:

    1. Information. This is a meeting where attendees are informed about what is happening (with or without their blessing). While there may be a facade of conversation, it's primarily designed to inform.
    2. Discussion. This is a meeting where the leader actually wants feedback or direction or connections. You can use this meeting to come up with an action plan, or develop a new idea, for example.
    3. Permission. This is a meeting where the other side is supposed to say yes but has the power to say no.

    PLEASE don't confuse them. Confused meeting types are the number one source of meeting ennui. One source of confusion is that a meeting starts as one sort of meeting and then magically morphs into another kind. The reason this is frightening is that one side or the other might not realize that's actually occurring. If it does, stop and say, "Thanks for the discussion. Let me state what we've just agreed on and then we can go ahead and approve it, okay?"

    While I'm at it, let me remind you that there are two kinds of questions.

    1. Questions designed to honestly elicit more information.
    2. Questions designed to demonstrate how much you know or your position on an issue and to put the answerer on the defensive.

    There's room for both types of questions, particularly in a team preparing for a presentation or a pitch. Again, don't confuse them. I like to be sure that there's time for the first type, then, once everyone acknowledges that they know what's on the table, open it up for the second, more debate-oriented type of question.

  • 04Mar
    After being tested in Google Apps, the offline version of Google Calendar is now available for all Google accounts. To enable it, you should click on "Offline (beta)" in Google Calendar's header, install Gears if you don't already have it, allow Google Gears to store information on your computer and then wait until the data is downloaded.


    In the Offline Settings page, you can select the calendars that are available offline (by default, only the main calendar is enabled). "You'll be able to view events scheduled on these calendars the next time you access Calendar offline. Please note that calendars containing web-content events will not display correctly while offline," explains the help page.

    Unlike the offline version for Gmail, the offline Google Calendar has many limitations: you need to manually go offline/online, you can't add events, edit the existing events, search your events or change the settings. Another limitation is that Google doesn't download all the events - I noticed a warning: "Your offline calendar only contains events from Feb 4, 2009 to Jun 4, 2009".





    The read-only offline version of Google Calendar is only useful to quickly check your agenda when you don't have an Internet connection. For more features, you should check Mozilla Sunbird, a cross-platform tool that can synchronize with Google Calendar using CalDav. Make sure to enable caching if you want to view the events from Google Calendar when you are offline (you still can't edit the events or create new ones).

  • 04Mar

    Catcher in the Rye

    Authenticity.

    It’s the new catch-word in online marketing, whether in corporate circles or among the entrepreneurs who can make the most of it.

    But what does it mean?

    Let’s cut our losses and forget the clueless corporate crowd. It’s much more interesting to focus on the micro-businesses that are cropping up everywhere (with more coming due to the blessing-in-disguise layoffs this recession is fueling).

    Many well-intended souls are all about authenticity. After all, this means you don’t have to care about that phony marketing and sales stuff… you know, like understanding human psychology and engaging human emotion.

    How’s that working out for you?

    My guess is that, like me, a lot of these “anti-marketing” marketers are big fans of “The Catcher in the Rye” by J.D. Salinger. The story’s “anti-hero,” Holden Caulfield, was as authentic as they come, and he railed against all things “phony.”

    But is Holden worth listening to when it comes to online marketing? I’d say we’d have to take a closer look at “Catcher in the Rye” author J.D. Salinger to answer that question.

    J.D. Salinger on Human Psychology and Emotion

    Make no mistake… “The Catcher in the Rye” is an authentic piece of art. It’s so authentic in its examination of teenage sexuality and angst (mixed in with a healthy dose of profanity) that it made 1951 heads swim.

    The first teacher to get the axe for assigning the novel in class got canned in 1960 (she was later reinstated). By 1981, “The Catcher in the Rye” was both the most censored book and the second most taught book in public schools in the United States.

    What in the world caused this divisive uproar?

    Was it the authenticity of Holden Caulfield? Yes, but that’s not the whole story.

    The rest of the story… was the story itself.

    I’m not saying J.D. Salinger wrote “The Catcher in the Rye” for fame and fortune. I think it’s pretty clear at this point the man wanted neither.

    But did J.D. Salinger purposefully craft a story that would connect with the emotions and psychological hot buttons of his audience? Did he strategically tap into the hearts and minds of an entire generation, and every generation since?

    Yes, he did. And that’s what all you “anti-marketers” need to understand.

    The “Great American Novel” tends to make the Great American Author filthy rich.

    Why do you think that is?

    Put Some Art into Your Marketing

    People who think art is sacred and marketing is dirty tend to be terrible marketers and marginal artists.

    People who think art is irrelevant and marketing is about tricking people into buying shit they don’t need tend to be terrible marketers and worse human beings.

    Be authentic.

    Be real.

    But put some art into your marketing.

    Touch people’s emotions and mess with their minds (you know… in a good way).

    It’s what they want.

    About the Author: Brian Clark is Executive Editor of Copyblogger and co-founder of DIY Themes, creator of the innovative Thesis Theme for WordPress. Get more from Brian on Twitter.


    Thesis Theme for WordPress

  • 04Mar
    If you're in the US and you search for "earthquake" using Google, you'll notice an OneBox that shows a list of recent earthquakes. The data is provided by the US Geological Survey.


    Ask.com has a similar direct answer that links to a very nice mashup. There's also a Google Maps mashup that highlights the most recent earthquakes.

    { Thanks, Adam. }

  • 04Mar
    Google Spreadsheets, probably the most impressive application from Google Docs, tests some interesting features that are currently experimental and limited to trusted testers.

    One of the features lets you record macros for common tasks. Instead of repeatedly selecting the formatting for a cell or a group of cells, you can record the sequence of commands that perform the formatting and click on a button to use the macro.

    Another feature, code-named "Sketchy", allows you to insert different drawings. Tony Ruscoe spotted some of the images that will be available in a library that resembles Microsoft Office's Clip Art.

    Google Spreadsheets' code also references an option titled "Solver", which could be a tool for solving optimization problems, and an option to protect sheets and cell ranges.


    Update: Tony points to a post from 2008 with more details about macros in Google Spreadsheets.

  • 04Mar
    Gmail's search lacks many useful features that are available in Google Web Search: the popular "did you mean" query suggestions, using synonyms to expand the query, searching inside PDF files or other documents, sorting the results by relevance.


    It's one of the few areas that didn't evolve since Gmail's launch and I think it's embarrassing to place the "search mail" and "search the Web" buttons next to the same search box.

    As you probably noticed, the web search button is now back in Gmail after a brief disappearance. A small number of vocal users complained and Google restored the button.

    Here's how Gmail describes its search feature:

    "You can use Gmail search the same way you'd use Google Search, by entering a word (or multiple words) that appears anywhere within the message you want to locate. If you're looking for a message that contains the word shopping, simply type shopping in the search field and press Search Mail. Your results will be displayed with your search terms highlighted in yellow. Gmail doesn't recognize special search characters like square brackets, parentheses, currency symbols, the ampersand, the pound sign, and asterisks. It also doesn't recognize partial or similar matches, so a search for travel will find travel, but not travels, traveler, or travle."

    How would you improve Gmail search?