Archive for September, 2007

Happy Birthday, Google!

Wednesday, September 26th, 2007

Google is 9 years old today. Happy birthday, Google!

Google turns 9

Spy Tool: World’s Smallest Camcorder

Monday, September 24th, 2007

Gadgets these days, it seems, just keep getting smaller and smaller. If you’re in the spy game, the world’s smallest camcorder looks like the ideal gadget.

worlds smallest camcorder

This Micro Camcorder records Hi-Resolution (3gp) real time (15fps) video via its internal pin hole camera at the touch of a button. Recordings are stored on a tiny removable Micro SD card. Up to 33 hours of video can be recorded on a 1Gb Micro SD card. Internal rechargeable battery is recharged via USB connection. At $295, you can definitely do better in quality if you just want a camcorder, but this is a must have if you’re a private detective or just want to catch discreet videos of your friends for YouTube.

[via The Raw Feed via The Red Ferret]

5 Reasons BlogRush Has Already Failed and Why Bla.st Will Take Over

Monday, September 24th, 2007

What’s Bla.st? I’ll get to that, but first, let’s talk about why BlogRush has failed.

BlogRush Clicks

1. BlogRush has a horrible CTR.
BlogRush has a horrible click through ratio. It may come up with tweaking or it may not, but it certainly doesn’t help that they’ve made a few other mistakes below. Look at my stats above. I might not win the Blogger of the Year award, but it’s not just me, either. Everyone has been complaining about the low click through ratio. Even though John Chow has 400+ people sign up under him (at a couple levels), earning more credits in the system, his own stats indicated a very low return on the investment made with that amount of screen real estate. This was problem enough for John that he wrote an article about how to control the headlines BlogRush displays for your site.

2. Too easy to game
These days, any new start-up or unique site needs to plan for explosive growth from the beginning. BlogRush seems to have missed a couple steps here. First, their site did not launch with safe guards against people trying to game the system. This was seen pretty early on, when a blog called A Blackhat’s Diary posted an article detailing how to exploit BlogRush, and soon enough, a lot of people were gaining credits they never earned. BlogRush found themselves scrambling to block cheaters, ultimately deciding to move to manual account approval, which is a nice bandaid, but it won’t stop the bleeding.

3. Where’s the revenue stream? Sustainability?
It seems the business model here might simply be to get lots of users and be Internet Famous. That’s all well and good, but nobody can expect to last without some means of paying the bills. I don’t know if they’re planning a “pro” upgrade model like Flickr or if they plan on selling the excess credits in the system, but I can’t see either making them rich. Maybe Yahoo will buy them and it won’t be their problem anymore.

4. It looks like an ad.
OK… I know they’ve now got their new “flavors“, but it may just be too little, too late. The original design was OK and all, but why not throw a javascript color picker in the “Get Your Code” page and let us pick out the colors that work for our sites? Even the resulting new color choices could have been available at launch with a couple extra hours of work.

5. Loss of loyalty and faith.
I know I’m not the only one who feels this way. BlogRush got a lot of great buzz and sucked us in. Whether they orchestrated the initial push or just got lucky, it worked brilliantly. The loss of faith came with the problems mentioned above happening so quickly. The fixes have been rushed and I, personally, worry about how well stuff is tested and over all stability of the system. The more you rush code, not to mention changing the was it is intended to work after launch, the more room there is for mistakes.

For me, it’s just not worth it to roll the dice and see what happens. I have removed the widget from my blogs, but you’ll notice that I’ve added something new. I’m talking about Bla.st, the free advertising directory. Just look to the right (under the Alexa ranking box) to see Bla.st in action. Below is an example of previewing a card on the site.

Bla.st

Bla.st is a system of “cards” displayed in a grid and categorized. A card is simply an image that should give a visitor a good idea of what to expect from your site or otherwise entice them to visit. Cards are free to add, but if you want to get noticed, you can bid to be the highest placed card. A single bid (per day amount) will position your card above all free cards and cards with lower bids in not only the main page, but up to 10 allowed categories to which you’ve added your card.

I set up 2 cards the other day as a test. It’s too early to make a good guess at how well it’ll do, but already, they’re performing better than expected. Here’s the free one, which I have pointing to my Win My Motorola Q Smartphone contest:

Bla.st free stats

Only one click, but it’s still free traffic, right, and it’s only been a day. The second card is one linking directly to JoeTech.com. It’s a paid link, so ovbiously, the higher rank (and more categories) has produced better results so far:

Bla.st paid stats

The important thing to note is that you don’t have to have the highest placement bid to be on top (and I’m on top of the main page for $1.37 a day). The key is to create an enticing image that draws the visitor to your card on the page. I spent about 12 seconds creating mine, but you should spend a few minutes if you want the ideal results.

The site, itself is still growing, but the bulk of the traffic, as seen in my stats above, comes from the widgets. They’ve done a nice job of making it easy for a website owner to create a widget that fits nicely into nearly any layout. You can choose how many cards to display, a number of columns, card size (small or big), a category and sub-category, and colors. I went pretty simple with mine.

You may wonder, as I did at first, why people would put a widget on their site if there’s no “view credits” to earn. It’s quite simply a referral program, but it’s one of the best I’ve come across. You get 50% of any sale made within 30 days of a click on your referral link. While you’re removing BlogRush from your site, you might as well replace it with the Bla.st widget and make a few bucks.

Bla.st has some pretty impressive numbers for a site that I think is lacking the buzz it deserves. At the time of this writing, they have 1,507 cards in 7,283 categories, which have been viewed over 27 million times.

I really encourage everyone to check it out, even if just for a free card. It’s definitely worth a look.

After redefining the globalization, W3 is now venturing at further shortening the telecommunication gaps via internet phones. The Internet which has been in use for surfing and e-commerce is now being subscribed to for making voip calls over the high speed connection using voip software. The endeavor of getting this break-through technology out to the consumers was taken up by skype phone that now holds the biggest share of the market because of having equipped with the sound enough tools to cope with any voip buster.

76 Web Ranked Candidates For President

Saturday, September 22nd, 2007

The U.S. Presidential election has been heating up well before we vote in 2008 and a lot more of the ~235 candidates (includes potential, announced, running, and withdrawn) listed at http://www.vote-smart.org are taking web campaigning seriously, as they should.

Because we’re talking about web campaigning, I divided the candidate’s web site’s Alexa rank by its Google Page Rank (using 10,000,000 for the Alexa rank when none was available) to come up with a simple “web score”.

Here’s the top 5:

# Candidate Google PR Alexa Rank Web Score
1 Barack Hussein Obama Jr. ******* 22,551 3,222
2 Hillary Rodham Clinton ****** 24,093 4,016
3 Ronald Ernest Paul ** 20,222 10,111
4 John Reid Edwards ****** 66,688 11,115
5 Willard Mitt Romney ****** 78,938 13,156

Obviously, Barack Obama is the web’s next SEO guru, or he’s hired a capable web marketing firm to put him on top. Will it make a difference in the upcoming election? I think so. Will it make enough of a difference? Only time will tell, but there’s still plenty of time for other candidates to take a cue from the only PR7 candidate on this list.

…and here’s the rest:

6 Candidate Google PR Alexa Rank Web Score
7 Rudolph W. Giuliani ****** 125,055 20,843
8 Maurice Robert Gravel ****** 169,985 28,331
9 John Sidney McCain III ***** 144,333 28,867
10 Fred Dalton Thompson **** 139,887 34,972
11 Joseph R. Biden Jr. ****** 222,965 37,161
12 Bill Richardson ****** 237,610 39,602
13 Samuel D. Brownback ****** 328,365 54,728
14 Michael D. Huckabee **** 219,294 54,824
15 Duncan L. Hunter ****** 397,286 66,214
16 Tom Gerald Tancredo ****** 410,933 68,489
17 Dennis J. Kucinich 159,181 159,181
18 John H. Cox ***** 1,003,772 200,754
19 Steve W. Cubby ***** 1,239,136 247,827
20 John Taylor Bowles **** 1,039,165 259,791
21 Christopher J. Dodd 293,475 293,475
22 Alan L. Keyes **** 1,291,836 322,959
23 George David Joseph Phillies **** 1,363,135 340,784
24 Terry Lee Barkdull **** 1,400,865 350,216
25 Frank Edward McEnulty ***** 2,665,986 533,197
26 Robert G. Jackson **** 4,252,435 1,063,109
27 Randolph Wilson Crow **** 4,993,909 1,248,477
28 Joseph Charles Schriner ***** 6,258,456 1,251,691
29 Joseph Martyniuk Jr. ** 2,552,083 1,276,042
30 Dal Anthony LaMagna 1,506,062 1,506,062
31 Michael Paul Jingozian *** 4,608,857 1,536,286
32 Kat Swift **** 6,353,556 1,588,389
33 Orion Karl Daley **** 6,621,919 1,655,480
34 Lee L. Mercer Jr. 1,739,470 1,739,470
35 Jeffrey Charles Petkevicius *** 5,848,018 1,949,339
36 Michael Charles Smith ***** 10,000,000 2,000,000
37 Donald Kenneth Allen *** 6,429,490 2,143,163
38 Raymond Louis McKinney 2,241,639 2,241,639
38 David Allen Koch **** 9,856,825 2,464,206
39 Robert Milnes **** 10,000,000 2,500,000
40 Peter Samuel Grasso Jr. **** 10,000,000 2,500,000
41 Hugh Cort III **** 10,000,000 2,500,000
42 Mildred T. Howard **** 10,000,000 2,500,000
43 Daniel J. Imperato **** 10,000,000 2,500,000
44 Richard Michael Smith **** 10,000,000 2,500,000
45 Alden Link **** 10,000,000 2,500,000
46 Keith Robert Sprankle 2,652,136 2,652,136
47 James Hatton McCall ** 5,865,403 2,932,702
48 Frank D. Zilaitis 3,024,158 3,024,158
49 Mark Irwin Klein *** 10,000,000 3,333,333
50 Michael Keith Forrester *** 10,000,000 3,333,333
51 Kent Philip Mesplay *** 10,000,000 3,333,333
52 Ruth Bryant White *** 10,000,000 3,333,333
53 Susan Gail Ducey *** 10,000,000 3,333,333
54 Edward Allan Buck *** 10,000,000 3,333,333
55 Karl Everett Krueger *** 10,000,000 3,333,333
56 John Joseph Kennedy *** 10,000,000 3,333,333
57 Warren R. Ashe *** 10,000,000 3,333,333
58 Jack Shepard 3,428,953 3,428,953
59 James Creighton Mitchell Jr. ** 10,000,000 5,000,000
60 Michael Moriarty ** 10,000,000 5,000,000
61 Sal Mohamed ** 10,000,000 5,000,000
62 Blake Ashby ** 10,000,000 5,000,000
63 John Douglas Blyth 5,864,685 5,864,685
64 Vernon Edgar Wuensche 10,000,000 10,000,000
65 James Wellington Wright 10,000,000 10,000,000
66 Kelcey Brian Wilson 10,000,000 10,000,000
67 Virginia Algar 10,000,000 10,000,000
68 George Brent Baily Jr. 10,000,000 10,000,000
69 Willie Felix Carter 10,000,000 10,000,000
70 Dory Frank 10,000,000 10,000,000
71 Danny M. Francis 10,000,000 10,000,000
72 Daniel A. Gilbert 10,000,000 10,000,000
73 Wrendo Johnson P. Godwin 10,000,000 10,000,000
74 Jon A. Greenspon 10,000,000 10,000,000
75 Albert Howard * 10,000,000 10,000,000
76 Bradley K. Lord-Leutwyler 10,000,000 10,000,000

Don’t forget to Digg this and link back here. I need a good page rank when I run in Election ’12.

A recent web hosting service review showed an interesting listing of web-ranked presidential candidates. The review also depicted a variety of well-round web hosting services that have achieved higher rankings in the latest ratings. Among them, lunarpages had good points for its high up time while startlogic earned more credit for its diverse service packages. The web hosting jobs were also advertised to hunt for the human capital.