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  • 03Feb

    Now this is something frivolous, fantastic, and futuristic that I can really get behind. According to CNN, London-based design company, Seymourpowell, has proposed a project for floating hotels, called AirCruise. Essentially, the idea is to travel in the form of a futuristic airship/luxury hotel, designed to float from destination to destination rather than zoom at top speeds.

    Nick Talbot of Seymourpowell explains some of the thinking behind the concept: “A more serene transport experience will appeal to people looking for a more reflective journey, where the experience of travel itself is more important than getting from A to B quickly.”

    These concept luxury pods are part hotel, part ship, and have the capacity to accommodate about 100 guests. Travel would be slow, but enjoyable—a leisurely 100 to 150 km/hr, making the trip from London to New York in about 40 hours.

    While currently only part of a “feasibility study”—and by and large considered a luxury form of flight—it is, nonetheless, quite appealing. I was just talking to someone recently, during one of my steampunk infused rants, how actually seeing the landscape would add tremendously to my in-flight experience. I’m the person who has to have a window seat and gripes about being on the wrong side of the airplane when we cross over the Grand Canyon (which always seems to happen). It used to be that, through train travel, you had a real sense of traveling large distances and watching the landscape change. With much of my family in California, I fly across the country a few times a year and usually find the experience jarring. Not to mention disappointing to miss so much landscape.

    Of course, even though this is totally in the “what if” stage, chances are curious adventure-seekers like myself aren’t the target market. Judging by the language of the article, the company wants to target people with both money and time, neither of which I have to spare.

    … hmm, there’s always the airship pirate route, right?

    Related posts:

    1. The best geek hotels in the world
    2. Is this the geekiest hotel in the world?
    3. Microsoft’s vision on the future of our healthcare system


  • 03Feb

    image of Simple SEO Copywriting

    If there’s any one thing that can be said about SEO with certainty, it’s that it manages to cause a lot of confusion.

    For example, it seems like many people’s idea of SEO was formed 10 years ago, and hasn’t bothered to change with the times. Even an online veteran like Robert Scoble is completely clueless about modern best practices for search engine optimization.

    So, before we go any further, let me answer the question posed by the headline . . .

    Yes, SEO copywriting still matters.

    Here’s why.

    Search is still the biggest game in town

    “Pick your survey, search remains one of the top activities on the Internet and has been for over a decade,” said search industry legend Danny Sullivan when I pinged him on Twitter. Danny pointed me to one such survey that shows search is the most common online activity after email, and that fact cuts across generations.

    “People make billions of unique searches each month,” said SEO guru Aaron Wall via email, “and unlike Facebook flittering, those people are in focus mode.” In other words, compared with most Internet traffic, searchers are the most motivated people that hit your site.

    If they’re looking for a product or service, there’s a good chance they’re looking to buy it. If they’re searching for information and your site provides it, you’ve got a great chance of converting that drive-by traffic into a long-term subscriber.

    And of course if you’re a professional web writer, whether freelance or with an agency, this discussion is purely academic. You try telling the client not to care about Google traffic, and let me know how that goes.

    So, search traffic is clearly important, as long as it’s targeted search traffic. Let’s look at the elements that constitute the modern practice of search engine optimization so we can attract those highly-focused visitors.

    Off-page elements eat the biggest slice of SEO pie

    Take a look at the image below, generously loaned to me by SEOmoz:

    image SEO pie chart

    A quick review of the chart reveals that as far as SEO goes, what happens off your site matters more than what’s on it.

    • 23.87% – The general trust and authority that your domain has is the largest indicator of SEO success. As Authority Rules makes clear, what works for search engines is what works with people as well.
    • 22.33% – The number of links to a specific page matters a lot too… so think twice about link viability when your content is just out of the gate.
    • 20.26% – The anchor text of external links matters because this is Google’s way of finding out what your page is about according to other people, not just you.

    In other words, it’s like my favorite saying goes:

    What people say about you is more important than what you say about yourself.

    In this case, Google wants to know that people are linking to you, and the words they’re using (link anchor text), because that’s a more trusted relevance indicator. So yes . . . compelling content is always rule number one. But just like great content goes unnoticed without promotion, great content doesn’t rank well if you don’t make it clear what it’s supposed to rank for.

    But how do we get people to notice our content so they can link to it? That’s where social media comes in. Blogging, social news sites, Twitter, Facebook – these are organic content distribution systems powered by your audience (and their friends).

    It may come as a surprise that some of the brightest minds in social media are SEOs, and they’re completely on the up-and-up and non-shady. It’s just that they’re too busy getting things done to proclaim themselves social media experts or some other nonsense.

    The huge influence of “off-page” factors on search optimization is why I wrote the SEO Copywriting 2.0 series 3 years ago. I updated it for 2010, but it is still directly on point, because it deals with fundamental aspects of strategic content development that don’t really change.

    If you haven’t, check out SEO Copywriting 2.0 to get more out of the remainder of this series. An understanding of content development strategies is critical before going the “last mile” with on-page optimization.

    SEO copy is the “last mile” to strong search rankings

    Are you familiar with the “last mile” problem in the broadband industry? You can have thousands of miles of high speed fiber optics carrying loads of data cross country, but if the final connection to the customer’s home is aging copper or pokey coaxial, the benefit of the optical cables is lost.

    Likewise, if you do everything right by building an authority site that Google trusts, but don’t tell Google that your page content matches what people are actually searching for, the targeted traffic benefit is lost. That’s what effective SEO copywriting does – it tells Google which words are the most relevant ones.

    You don’t have to optimize on-page upfront. But you do have to begin with the ending in mind from a keyword standpoint, due to the importance of anchor text when people link. We’ll go more into that in part two of this series.

    And if you ignore this SEO stuff? Sure, you’ll get plenty of untargeted “long tail” traffic otherwise, but what good does that really do you? Even with an advertising business model, irrelevant traffic bounces off your site quickly, leading to disgruntled advertisers who don’t renew. And if you’re selling something, you’re only burning bandwidth.

    The beauty of building a reader-focused online presence based on valuable content is that you can do well even if Google hates you. But the irony is, if you actually follow that path, Google loves you.

    Take advantage of that. It’s the critical last mile of a well-rounded online marketing strategy that makes a huge difference to your overall success.

    Traffic must convert, or why bother?

    Now we come to the big point. Everyone loves traffic – it’s addictive and strangely gratifying in its own right.

    But traffic doesn’t pay the bills. It’s people who take the actions you need them to who do.

    Going back to that confusion, many think that a search-optimized web page is some ugly keyword stuffed mess that sends people running for the hills on sight.

    That’s not true. At least not when done well.

    Danny Sullivan said it well at the close of our discussion:

    “Unfortunately, too many assume that SEO means trying to trick search engines. It doesn’t. It simply means building a site that’s friendly to them.”

    And that’s what we’ve been talking about here at Copyblogger for four years now (and helping at the code level with Thesis). Now let’s further explore on-page optimization specifics in this Simple SEO Copywriting series.

    Coming up next:

    About the Author: Brian Clark is founder of Copyblogger and CEO of Unglued Media. Get more from Brian on Twitter.


    Thesis Theme for WordPress

  • 03Feb

    From the obvious to the subtle to the vandalized, signs that can make a geek giggle aren’t all that uncommon. Here are just a few, but the next time you see one, consider snapping a picture to share!

    The place to be? Geek Drive. – erwin-photography (CC)

    On the other hand, imagine how epic it would be to be at the intersection of Geek and L33t. – glutnix (CC)

    Beware of networked bikers. – stephenliveshere (CC)

    Free geeks? Now that’s a deal. – jmchuff (CC)

    This sign hangs in a building at MIT, so it’s probably saved a fair few pedestrians. – seangraham (CC)

    Fuel for geeks. – kayveeinc (CC)

    404 not found. – raster (CC)

    Danger: Zombie Attack! – underbiteman (CC)

    Related posts:

    1. Wednesday Geeky Pics: Computer Science Buildings
    2. Wednesday Geeky Pics: Geeky Cakes
    3. Wednesday Geeky Pics: A Very Geeky Christmas!


  • 03Feb

    The technique gives an illusion of 3D by showing two images in rapid alternation: one from a left eye, and one from a right-eye perspective. Essentially it is separating the two pictures in time instead of space as is normally the case. You don’t need to wear special glasses to see the effect, and the illusion of dimensionality can be quite striking.

    For those of you interested in trying their hand at making stereoscopic pictures, check out this awesome tutorial that teaches how you can create them using 2 photos and a few lines of Javascript code.

    Related posts:

    1. Easily solve “spot the difference” pictures within seconds
    2. Propellers
    3. Creating a custom brush in Illustrator for line art


  • 03Feb

    So if you spend enough time in the World of Warcraft, you always run on the risk of not having enough stuff going on in the real world to make for interesting Facebook updates. But luckily with the new WoW Armory app, you can have automatic updates sent to your mom, your boss, and all your friends when you pick up those achievements and gear. Because, let’s face it, when the final piece in that epic armor set finally drops, you want everyone to know.

    You can choose up to 5 characters to show up on your friends’ feeds, and the categories of updates are achievements, boss kills, and loot (and you can set a threshold for how awesome something has to be to warrant an update). There’s also a ticky box that lets you decide whether you want these updates to show up in your normal Facebook friends feed or to just in the WoW app. So if you don’t play WoW, you might want to encourage your friends who do to untick that little box. Just when you thought all those Farmville updates were starting to die down!

    Of course, if you’re into WoW and a lot of your friends are too, this is kind of cool; you might even find out about friends who you didn’t even know played, and the app includes all of the armory information, including a rendering of the character decked out in their gear. This seems to be all part of Blizzard’s plan to extend WoW out of the virtual world and into your daily life – the next step being auction house access from your iPhone.

    Related posts:

    1. Epic Fail: Call center worker’s fake sickie caught on Facebook
    2. Epic Mountain Dew WOW-Themed Ad
    3. Facebook tweaks policies to deal with member deaths


  • 03Feb

    image of sign saying Private

    Those of you who subscribe to the Internet Marketing for Smart People email newsletter found out on Monday what Brian and I have been up to for the past few months.

    We knew it would be cool, because, well, we designed it to be cool.

    We wanted to build something people would really get value from.

    But still, when we saw what people were doing inside after the first day, we all looked around at one another and pulled a Keanu.

    Whoa.

    Third Tribe Marketing has been active for just under two days now. What’s been happening so far?

    • Artists and SEOs and copywriters and entrepreneurs of every stripe are all giving each other business advice, feedback, encouragement, and ideas.
    • Nitty gritty conversations are springing up about promotional tactics, how to manage entrepreneurial stress, getting past roadblocks, finding our niches, and dozens of other topics.
    • Chris Brogan and Laura Roeder have been helping a Triber see how he can measure social media ROI in the real world.
    • A Triber mentioned frustration in putting the final graphic touches on his blog — and within a matter of minutes, another Triber stepped forward to lend her own resources and expertise. For free. Just because it felt like the right thing to do.
    • One passionate Triber decided to pull together groups of “Niche Tribers,” who are already working to form cooperative bands to support and grow each other’s blogs and businesses.
    • Tribers are arranging to meet up in Austin, London, Toronto . . . and more to come.

    Here’s the coolest part for me:

    We didn’t make this stuff happen

    We provided a comfortable, user-friendly space. We’re providing educational seminars. We’re hosting Q&A sessions. And the four of us who founded the Third Tribe — Darren Rowse, Chris Brogan, Brian and I — are part of the conversation, answering questions and sharing our perspective. But that’s the key . . . we’re simply part of it.

    The other part is the collection of entrepreneurs at all levels. Some of them are names you recognize, some are new to the game. But all of them are energized by the Third Tribe model of kumbaya respect and community combined with razor-sharp marketing strategy.

    If you want to know more about how the tribe works and how you can get access for a very attractive price, here’s where you can find the details. (If nothing else, you’d be smart to go check out Brian’s copy approach — it’s prompted a huge discussion among members on its own).

    About the Author: Sonia Simone is Senior Editor of Copyblogger and a co-founder of Inside the Third Tribe.


    Thesis Theme for WordPress

  • 03Feb
    Hot on the heels of the Apple iPad announcement, Google released some mockups for Chrome OS tablets.

    "On tablets, the UI would be adjusted to handle larger touch targets. Initial explorations have maintained the same basic chrome layout, but enlarged the controls. Icons could be placed above tabs to provide larger, square targets. Panels would be placed along the bottom edge and could be opened with upward dragging motions," explains Google.



    Even if Chrome OS was initially designed for netbooks, Google hopes to create an operating system that works on tablets, laptops and desktop computers. "Each would have vastly different input methods, available screen space, and processing power".


    Chrome OS has the advantage of a simple interface optimized for web applications. This may seem too restrictive, but Chrome, Safari, Firefox and other browsers are quickly evolving and many popular apps are migrating to the web.

    { via TechCrunch }


  • 03Feb
    One of the few great Hotmail features is the web search integration. When you compose a message, Hotmail lets you add maps, movie listings, local search results, images from the web without opening a new page.

    Google's AJAX Search API lets you add similar features to any application, so it was surprising to see that Gmail didn't include a gadget that integrates with Google search. Last year, Gmail Labs added a Google Search gadget, but it only displayed web search results.

    The Gmail Labs feature has been improved and you can now find images, maps, news articles, simple facts, weather information, definitions and even use Google Calculator from Gmail. Depending on your query, the gadget shows web search results or results from specialized search engines. Sometimes you'll see information that's usually displayed in an OneBox.



    The main problem is that the gadget displays a small number of images, news articles or local search results, but there's no option to see more results from the same category. Another issue is that the specialized results are displayed only if Google finds that they're appropriate for your query.

    { via Gmail Blog }


  • 03Feb

    10,000 years ago, civilization forked. Farming was invented and the way many people spent their time was changed forever.

    Clearly, farming is a very different activity from hunting. Farmers spend time sweating the details, worrying about the weather, making smart choices about seeds and breeding and working hard to avoid a bad crop. Hunters, on the other hand, have long periods of distracted noticing interrupted by brief moments of frenzied panic.

    It's not crazy to imagine that some people are better at one activity than another. There might even be a gulf between people who are good at each of the two skills. Thom Hartmann has written extensively on this. He points out that medicating kids who might be better at hunting so that they can sit quietly in a school designed to teach farming doesn't make a lot of sense. 

    A kid who has innate hunting skills is easily distracted, because noticing small movements in the brush is exactly what you'd need to do if you were hunting. Scan and scan and pounce. That same kid is able to drop everything and focus like a laser--for a while--if it's urgent. The farming kid, on the other hand, is particularly good at tilling the fields of endless homework problems, each a bit like the other. Just don't ask him to change gears instantly.

    Marketers confuse the two groups. Are you selling a product that helps farmers... and hoping that hunters will buy it? How do you expect that people will discover your product, or believe that it will help them? The woman who reads each issue of Vogue, hurrying through the pages then clicking over to Zappos to overnight order the latest styles--she's hunting. Contrast this to the CTO who spends six months issuing RFPs to buy a PBX that was last updated three years ago... she's farming.

    Both groups are worthy, both groups are profitable. But each group is very different from the other, and I think we need to consider teaching, hiring and marketing to these groups in completely different ways. I'm not sure if there's a genetic component or if this is merely a convenient grouping of people's personas. All I know is that it often explains a lot about behavior (including mine).

    Some ways to think about this:

    • George Clooney (in  Up in the Air) and James Bond are both fictional hunters. Give them a desk job and they freak out.
    • Farmers don't dislike technology. They dislike failure. Technology that works is a boon.
    • Hunters are in sync with Google, a hunting site, farmers like Facebook.
    • When you promote a first-rate hunting salesperson to internal sales management, be prepared for failure.
    • Farmers prefer productive meetings, hunters want to simply try stuff and see what happens.
    • Warren Buffet is a farmer. So is Bill Gates. Mark Cuban is a hunter.
    • Hunters want a high-stakes mission, farmers want to avoid epic failure.
    • Trade shows are designed to entrance hunters, yet all too often, the booths are staffed with farmers.
    • The last hundred years of our economy favored smart farmers. It seems as though the next hundred are going to belong to the persistent hunters able to stick with it for the long haul.
    • A hunter will often buy something merely because it is difficult to acquire.
    • One of the paradoxes of venture capital is that it takes a hunter to get the investment and a farmer to patiently make the business work.
    • A farmer often relies on other farmers in her peer group to be sure a purchase is riskless.
    Who are you hiring? Competing against? Teaching?
  • 03Feb

    FeedBurner's popular chicklet FeedCount is the most-used way to display the number of subscribers for a feed.

    Also, a similar design is used by TwitterCounter to display your Twitter followers.

    We'll be creating a dynamic FeedCount-like interface that can display your website's statistics like pageviews, visits, etc. (one or all of them) using PHP.

    Google Analytics Counter

    At the end of this tutorial, we'll have 2 different counters:

    • a counter that can display only one metric – basic version
    • a counter that can display multiple metrics (some jQuery fun here) – advanced version

    Google Analytics Counter DemoGoogle Analytics Counter Download

     

    Basic Counter


    Let's start with the PHP part:

    How To Fetch Google Analytics Data With PHP?

    We'll be using a PHP class named GAPI that makes using Google Analytics API so easy.

    There are 3 variables we need to start using GAPI:

    • Google Analytics user that has access to the website stats to be displayed (I suggest creating a new Google Account specifically for this purpose and provide only read access to that website's data. This will prevent using your real Google account in your code which is a good step for security).
    • Google Analytics user password.
    • Profile ID of the website (it is not the one that starts with UA, rather, it is the ID that appears on browser's address bar when a report of that website is clicked).
    • GAPI offers a simple usage to access Google Analytics data:

      <?php
      define('ga_email','yourGoogleEmail');
      define('ga_password','yourGooglePass');
      define('ga_profile_id','yourProfileID');
      
      require 'gapi.class.php';
      $ga = new gapi(ga_email,ga_password);
      $ga->requestReportData(ga_profile_id,array('browser','browserVersion'),array('pageviews'));
      ?>
      

      Now we have the pageviews data of the last 30 days (it is possible to define custom dates, check the GAPI docs.)

      (If you want to read more on GAPI, code-diesel has a great article on this class.)

      Here is the HTML:

      <div id="statsWrap">
      	<div id="statsDetailsWrap">
      		<div id="statsCount">
      			<?php echo $ga->getPageviews() ?>
      		</div>
      		<div id="statsMetric">
      			pageviews
      		</div>
      	</div>
      	<div id="byGoogle">By Google Analytics</div>
      </div>
      

      And CSS

      #statsWrap {
      	font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;
      	font-size: 10px;
      }
      #statsDetailsWrap {
      	background: #333333;
      	float: left;
      	padding: 1px 3px 1px 1px;
      	border: #666666 1px inset;
      }
      #statsCount {
      	float: left;
      	padding: 1px 3px;
      	background: #999999;
      	color: #FFFFFF;
      	border: #666666 1px inset;
      }
      #statsMetric {
      	float: left;
      	padding: 3px;
      	color: #FFFFFF;
      }
      #byGoogle {
      	clear: both;
      	color: #666666;
      	font-size: 10px;
      }
      

       

      Advanced Counter (With jQuery)


      It is possible to fetch multiple data with GAPI & we'll be creating an auto-rotating counter that can display multiple metrics (visits & pageviews).

      Let's use a little improved version of the PHP code:

      <?php
      define('ga_email','yourGoogleEmail');
      define('ga_password','yourGooglePass');
      define('ga_profile_id','yourProfileID');
      
      require 'gapi.class.php';
      $ga = new gapi(ga_email,ga_password);
      $ga->requestReportData(ga_profile_id,array('browser','browserVersion'),array('pageviews','visits'));
      ?>
      

      And a tiny update to the HTML by adding few spans to wrap every metric so we can show/hide them.

      <div id="statsWrap">
      	<div id="statsDetailsWrap">
      		<div id="statsCount">
      			<span id="statsPageviews"><?php echo $ga->getPageviews() ?></span>
      			<span id="statsVisits"><?php echo $ga->getVisits() ?></span>
      		</div>
      		<div id="statsMetric">
      			<span id="statsPageviewsText">pageviews</span>
      			<span id="statsVisitsText">visits</span>
      		</div>
      	</div>
      	<div id="byGoogle">By Google Analytics</div>
      </div>
      

      I have also updated the CSS a little bit by adding hard-coded width-heights to elements to make sure they will look ok when rotating:

      #statsWrap {
      	font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;
      	font-size: 10px;
      }
      #statsDetailsWrap {
      	background: #333333;
      	float: left;
      	padding: 1px 3px 1px 1px;
      	border: #666666 1px inset;
      }
      #statsCount {
      	float: left;
      	padding: 1px 3px;
      	background: #999999;
      	color: #FFFFFF;
      	border: #666666 1px inset;
      	width: 40px;
      	height: 12px;
      }
      #statsMetric {
      	float: left;
      	padding: 3px;
      	color: #FFFFFF;
      	width: 50px;
      	height: 12px;
      }
      #byGoogle {
      	clear: both;
      	color: #666666;
      	font-size: 10px;
      }
      

      And here is the jQuery part which rotates metrics:

      <script type="text/javascript">
      $(document).ready(function() {   
      
      	$("#statsPageviews").hide();
      	$("#statsVisits").hide();
      	$("#statsPageviewsText").hide();
      	$("#statsVisitsText").hide();
      	rotateMetrics(); 
      
      	function rotateMetrics() {
      		$("#statsPageviewsText").slideDown("slow");
      		$("#statsPageviews").slideDown("slow", function() {
      			setTimeout(function() {
      				$("#statsPageviewsText").slideUp("slow");
      				$("#statsPageviews").slideUp("slow", function() {
      					$("#statsVisitsText").slideDown("slow");
      					$("#statsVisits").slideDown("slow", function() {
      						setTimeout(function() {
      							$("#statsVisitsText").slideUp("slow");
      							$("#statsVisits").slideUp("slow", function() {
      								rotateMetrics();
      							});
      						}, 3000);
      					});
      				});
      			}, 3000);
      		});
      
      	}
      });
      </script>
      

      In the jQuery part, although it may look complicated, it is definitely not. We used callbacks for the slideUp/slideDown functions & added a little delay between transitions.

      That’s all.

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      Free Admin Template For Web Applications
      jQuery Dynamic Drag’n Drop
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