Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Ringlight's New Blog

SO, Brandon Wiley set up a news blog on ringlight.us. I'm excited about it, so I thought maybe you would be too. I love having updates on the emergence of cool things!

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

SXSW Podcasts, Rich Media Optimization

One of the panels I missed at SXSWi, that I really wanted to attend was on the topic of optimizing rich media content - like Flash videos, podcasts, and the like. I searched through a list of podcasts from the conference, but did not find that one (though I haven't finished looking)... and here is the link to those podcasts if anyone's interested: SXSWi 2008 Podcasts

I suppose there are already a few ways I can think of that would help in the optimization process of rich media content, including submission to rich media search engines like hype machine, Google Video, and similar directories/ search sites. Of course tagging your content and adding a relevant description blurb in YouTube, and other video submission sites could also help associate that content with specifically targeted keywords.

I'm very interested in any other methods... so I'll probably write more about this after I've done some research.

Friday, April 25, 2008

Who doesn't love free lectures on new media?

I mentioned before that I attended a New Media Lecture Series hosted by the ACTLab of University of Texas. For anyone interested in learning about new media today, I'd recommend checking out the lectures online. For those who think they already know all about new media today, perhaps this will inspire you to put together your own series of lectures :)

Here is a link to the lectures online: New Media Series Lectures - University of Texas, April 2008

Wednesday, April 23, 2008

Who are the SEO experts?

I was recently asked what kind of certification I had in the field of SEO. This question piqued my curiosity into what kind of certification there could be for SEO... and a few minutes later I discovered a list of sites claiming to provide SEO certification.

But, to me, these sites just felt seedy and strange. I kept asking "who are these people?" wondering who had the authority to decide what were correct/ incorrect SEO strategies, and whether anyone cared about these certifications in the industry itself.

Then, I found this article on SEO Certification and it seemed to answer my question. Basically, I gleaned from the article that reliable SEO Certification is a myth - and that sites claiming to provide it have more chance of being a pyramid sales scheme than a genuine authority on SEO training.

How, then, can we prove we have SEO chops, if we in fact do? In the past I've always let search engine results pages speak for me... if a site you worked on is ranked in the top ten on SERPs - doesn't that prove your SEO expertise? Then again, I can see how maybe it wouldn't...

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Only2Clicks Wins

OK, I love this site: http://www.only2clicks.com

It is my new home page. Why? Because, first, it allows you to create an Opera-like start page with clickable thumbnails to all your most frequently-visited websites. And secondly, it allows you to upload your own CSS skin. Which, as a web developer/designer... is way fab.

Another plus is the fact that you don't have to continually log in over and over again, which is the reason why I never found convenience in iGoogle or My Yahoo. Why have a customizable home page that you have to log in to see? Isn't the whole point of having a customized home page the convenience of not having to type? Or am I just lazy?

Monday, April 21, 2008

Green is the new Blackle

I've got sustainable living on the brain because tomorrow is Earth Day, and also because I spent part of my weekend helping my sister construct a crank-powered flashlight that can be charged by a child using a sit-and-spin for school. Nice. So, here's a hodge-podge list of all things green on the web right now. (See an earlier post for more enviro-friendly sites.)

  • Yahoo! Green: Yahoo's information portal on all things relating to an environmentally-conscious lifestyle. Includes environmental news headlines, blogs, and online tools to calculate your carbon footprint and help you improve the environmental impact of your everyday life.

  • Instructables: Instructables is an online forum for sharing unique, and oftentimes outlandish, DIY projects. Described as a "show-and-tell" of DIY projects, it allows people to view, learn how to build, and collaborate on their own and other people's mix-media projects. The reason I include this site on this green list, is because of the way it allows us to explore new uses for old materials - bringing recycling and re-use to a new level of imagination and interactivity.

  • Lighter Footstep: This site is a web-based magazine showcasing articles and forums on sustainable living. Also check out ecoTumble, sister site to Living Footstep, that serves as an online "scrapbook" of links, trvia, and tidbits to do with living green.

  • Energy Star: Energy Star is a government program sponsored by the US departments of Energy and Environmental Protection to add incentive for US consumers to buy energy-efficient products. Their home on the web is a wealth of information on energy efficiency ratings for consumer products, plans on how to build an energy-efficient home, and a list of rebates and incentives on environmentally-friendly consumer products that you can cash in on.

Friday, April 18, 2008

The Deal with Site Maps

For SEO and usability purposes, it is beneficial for your website to have two kinds of Site Maps. One site map is specifically for the benefit of users on your site, to help them navigate the different pages, and also to help organize and link all pages on your site together.

Ideally, this site map would be in HTML format, divided into sections, and provide clear links with descriptive text to each of the pages or sections of your site.

The second type of site map to upload to your site is specifically used by search engine spiders, to help locate and index the content of your site. This site map is in XML format, and is ideally uploaded to the highest directory possible on your site's server.

Google provides more information on site maps here: http://www.google.com/support/webmasters/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=40318

In a previous post I mentioned a helpful XML site map generator online at XMLsitemaps.com, but I have found that this tool limits you to 500 pages if you don't want the paid upgrade. In search of a more useful site map generating tool, I discovered the Audit My PC Free Google Sitemap Generator.

For free, this tool will thoroughly analyze the pages of your site and generate a comprehensive site map following rules you set up if you so choose (rules including "ignore images," "respect no-follow links," "respect links disallowed in robots.txt," etc.), and will allow you to export both the site map XML file itself, as well as a report on all site links. This will allow you to identify broken links and URLs on your site, as well as pages that time-out when loading. I highly recommend this tool for generating and analyzing your own sitemap.xml.

By the way, once you've created and uploaded your XML sitemap file, don't forget to make full use of it by uploading it to Google Webmaster Tools and Yahoo! Site Explorer. ;)

Thursday, April 17, 2008

Pirate Blog

Swedish law and Web 2.0. What do the two have to do with each other? Meet The Pirate Bay - everything you ever wanted in and feared about online peer to peer services. I was introduced to this Sweden-based "torrent-tracker" by my friend and blogger Brandon Wiley during a ACTLab New Media Talk Series as the ultimate online piracy paradise.

According to Wired magazine, a Pirate Bay operator stated "All of us who run the TPB are against the copyright laws and want them to change."

Backed by lax Swedish copyright laws, The Pirate Bay utilizes peer to peer technology to provide a searchable directory of downloadable music, movies, games and software via torrents. Today's Top 100 torrents on The Pirate Bay include episodes from South Park and Battlestar Galactica, the movies No Country For Old Men and Cloverfield, and the game Assassin's Creed.

But The Pirate Bay's philosophies on the freedom of information exchange are not limited to peer to peer file sharing. This month TPB unveiled it's own uncensored blogging service, Baywords.

According to the site itself, TPB will defend any blog posts a user decides to make, even using content usually barred from US-based blog services... "As long as you don’t break any Swedish laws in your blog."

OK, I'm not sure how awesome that actually is. I guess it would depend on what Sweden’s “hate speech” legislation bars...

Keyword Research for SEO/ SEM

Here are some nifty tools for keyword and competitor research for Search Engine Optimization/ Marketing:

  • WordTracker: Find related keywords, synonyms, or specific keyword phrases in a database containing all searched-for terms for the past 100 days. This tool also allows you to compare KEI scores, to find keywords with a good ratio of number of searches for that keyword made, vs. the number of competitive sites returned for that search query.


  • AdGooroo: Compare your PPC campaigns with your competitors'.


  • KeywordSpy: Find what paid, organic, and affiliate keywords are being used by any URL on the web. You can also learn what position they are ranked for each keyword, as well as the amount of competition for that KW.


  • SpyFu: Get the scoop on your competitor's PPC ad budget, clicks per day, cpc, organic and paid keywords targeted, and top competitors. You can also drill down to get more info on how much they are spending on each keyword, what they rank for that keyword on SERPs, the text in the title and body for those pages, and more.

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Social Bookmarking: Saving Sites of Interest

You've seen this button on mine, and other blogs or websites:

But what the heck does it mean? If you click it, you'll be asked to select a social bookmarking service with which to save, or bookmark, the website you are currently visiting. The concept of website bookmarking (also called "favorites" on some browsers) has been around for a long time, but social bookmarking is a whole new spin on storing and sharing your favorite web destinations.

Social bookmarking is a way of saving interesting online articles, videos, and other web pages in a personal account online. This means that you can access them from any computer connected to the internet at any time. On top of that, social bookmarking sites like Del.icio.us, Digg, Reddit, StumbleUpon, Yahoo! Bookmarks, and Technorati allow you to register a personal or shared account, save bookmarks, organize and tag them however you want, and share them with others on the web.

Here are some other cool things you can do with social bookmarking:

  • Find and rate new online favorites by visiting sites that other people have bookmarked.

  • Suggest sites to your friends by tagging a link with your friend's username.

  • Doing a research paper or group project on monkeys? Bookmark resources online and tag them with "monkeys" or "research" and share the links with your whole team.

  • If you are particularly interested in a certain subject, there are social bookmarking sites geared around specific topics of interest too! For example, if you're a tech junkie, you can get your fix of popular technology articles, blogs, and sites on Technorati.

  • For most social bookmarking services, you can download a bookmarking button for your web browser, allowing you to bookmark sites with just one click.

Tuesday, April 15, 2008

Corporations on Wikipedia

I was recently asked for advice for a company wanting to know if they should start a corporate Wikipedia profile and how that can be done. Here is my reply, I hope it's helpful to others as well:

I’d have to do more research to confirm this, but to my knowledge Wikipedia discourages corporations and individuals from creating their own Wikipedia pages unless they are “noteworthy” (i.e. worth talking about in an encyclopedia). You also have to be careful if you are going to edit any information on Wikipedia while on a corporation’s network because Wikipedia can track this and your corporation can get a bad reputation from it. (You can track changes made on Wikipedia by corporations here: http://wikiscanner.virgil.gr/)

To discourage link-building using Wikipedia, the site recently made all links on the site no-follow links, so they actually no longer contribute to Page Rank . That being said, you might still get a lot of traffic from a link on Wikipedia if you manage to get a link up there. A good way to try and do this is if you have educational information on your site somewhere that you can link to as a reference. For example, an air-filter site that has a lot of information on allergies might put a link to reference the info on their site at the bottom of the Wikipedia entry about allergies.

I would say, go ahead and try to create a Wikipedia page, because there’s no harm in trying – and if it gets left there, then it could drive traffic to your site. But chances are, Wikipedia is going to take the page down quickly and it will be difficult to keep your links up there.

I would try creating a corporate profile on places that would allow it, without the “no-follow” problem – like Facebook, MySpace, Squidoo, etc. and linking to the site in directories with high Page Rank, like Yahoo! Submit Basic.

Twitter Account for Sale on eBay

As a member of the "web industry" it's hard not to feel immense pressure to own a Twitter account. Why - is not certain. In fact, I wade through hundreds of articles pondering the point of Twitter a day. And yet, I own one. I have yet to determine the value of Twitter, though I find that I appreciate it most when I want to update the world on a social event in which I am taking part.

For example, I used Twitter the most I ever have at SXSW Interactive - where I could follow and tweet updates on events hundreds of like-minded individuals were attending, including the Zuckerberg fiasco. I must admit, too, that my fingers were itching for a keyboard or cell phone when I stage managed the 2008 Austin Poetry Slam Finals - eager to be the first one to announce the Finals Team members' names for Nationals.

But can Twitter aid in online marketing initiatives?And does its use have monetary value? Andrew Baron thinks so, and has put his Twitter account with 1,400 followers up for sale on eBay:

http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=160229562828

The verdict? Well, so far it's worth US $1,550.00 to someone.

Monday, April 14, 2008

Del.icio.us Tools Galore

Here's a whole long list of tools you can use with, on, and around everyone's favorite social bookmarking site del.icio.us.

Using Google's Webmaster Tools

Google offers free webmaster tools to help you check for technical issues that may be barring your website from high natural rankings. Here's the skinny on what's available in Google's Webmaster Tools, and what you can do with them.

Note: To use all the webmaster tools available, you must have FTP/back-end access to your website. This is so you can verify your site on Google and utilize automatic diagnostic features that help you improve the indexing of your site by search robots.

1. Log into Google's Webmaster Tools with your Google Account info.

2. Type in the URL of the site you want to optimize in the Dashboard.

3. You will now see an Overview page, where you can follow instructions to verify your site by uploading a file to your server via FTP, or adding a meta-tag to the site's HTML. Verification will unlock diagnostics tools, statistics on your site, link information, and various other tools.

4. Now it's time to upload a sitemap in xml format to Google. It's easy to create your own site map online, or learn how to make one yourself using Sitemap Protocol. Once your sitemap.xml file has been created, upload it via FTP to the highest directory on your site's server. Now go to the Sitemaps section of WM Tools and click on the link to "Add a Sitemap."

5. After submitting your sitemap, go to Diagnostics > Web Crawl. This is where information is listed about errors or issues impeding Google's searchbot from crawling any page on your site. This includes any broken links, pages that time out before loading, and any restricted URLs. Using this tool to identify erroneous pages on your site will allow to pinpoint the problem to go in and repair site content.

6. I will skip Mobile Crawl as that is for websites designed for mobile devices - and since this is a fairly new invention, I'm sure this is not applicable to most of you.

7. Now go to Diagnostics > Content Analysis. This page deals with issues to do with the actual content on your site, including meta-tags and title tags. You can drill down and identify pages on your site with duplicate, long, or short meta-descriptions, or missing title tags, and any non-indexable content.

8. I'm honestly not so convinced of the value offered by the Webmaster Tools' "Statistics" section, but go ahead and poke around if you are interested in general Page Ranking on your site, what search queries are leading to your site on Google, and general info about subscribers (if you have any - though I would recommend FeedBurner for gathering those stats if you're serious about subscribers), or a list of indexed pages.

9. Ever wonder what pages on your site are being linked to externally? Check out the Links section of Webmaster Tools. You can also find out what Sitelinks appear for your site on Google's search results pages. For more information on how to get sitelinks up for your site, or what the heck sitelinks are, you can read some theories on how to get sitelinks to appear.

10. Upload a robots.txt file to your site's server if you want to prohibit Googlebots from crawling specific pages of your site. For example, block the bots from certain secure pages. Don't know what a robots.txt file is? Learn more about them here. Remember also to include a reference to the location of your sitemap in the robots.txt file.

11. You can generate and analyze your robots.txt file in the WM Tools "Tools" section.

And that about wraps up Webmaster Tools.