5/31/2007

Webstraction's is First Blogger Classic blog to go DoFollow

If you are using Blogger and hosting your blog with your own Web Hosting solution (aka FTP Classic), then you will now be able to remove the NoFollow attribute from the comment author's links. Blogger Classic blogs hosted at Blogspot.com are still S.O.L. for the time being.

I do believe this blog is the first official FTP Blogger account to go DoFollow. Go ahead and give the comment area to this post a test run.

Past comments will still temporarily be NoFollow until (A.) somebody attaches another comment onto the post or (B.) I republish this entire blog. In the case of the latter, that will not be happening for another couple of days. I am in the process of adding on more functionality scripts which will be detailed at Tips 4 Blogspot in the near future. Fair warning, you may see some unpleasant side-effects while viewing this site during that time period.

UPDATE :: The Remove NoFollow Tutorial is available now. It will require that you enable PHP for your FTP Classic Blogger pages. Adding PHP to your blog will allow you to create server-side includable header, footer and sidebar files, amongst other little goodies.

The scripting package I am working on is called pfBlogger and will open up all sorts of possibilities for FTP Classic blogs that were never before possible -- think trackbacks, personally hosted commenting, spam filters, stat tracking etc. Major features and documentation will be hosted here at WebStractions (accessible via nav menu above) while the Tips 4 Blogspot site will be geared for instruction on it's usage.

I am actually getting pretty psyched over this, and I can officially add it to BUMPzee's DoFollow list as well as, Andy's ultimate list of of DoFollow & NoFollow plugins.


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5/30/2007

Greasemonkey script to pre-fill comments form

Filling in the comment forms for blogs can be tedious. Name, email, website over and over again. Some blogs will remember the information for you if you have submitted at least one comment, but if you like to spread your comments into new territory -- then it becomes laborious.



Greasemonkey scripts are perfect for this type of pain. The Pre-Fill Comments script will auto-complete the fields for author, email and Url and put the focus on the comment textbox itself. While this was designed to work for WordPress blogs, it should work with other blogs that use the same ID's for their fields. Even so, I think a little tweaking under the hood (if you are good with that type of thing) may extend it to other types of blogs.





Via Techie Buzz













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5/29/2007

Speed Painting Rocks!

When I first saw a video of speed painting, I couldn't believe my eyes. The people who put these videos together are talented indeed.

The speed painting of Jessica Alba took the artist, MediaMaster, 7 hours to complete using Adobe Photoshop CS and an Aiptek Tablet.

The video compresses this down to 7 minutes with background music from Ian Van Dahl's "Nights on Java". It fits beautifully.

MediaMaster is a 24 year old Flash Designer from Brazil who also specializes in Vector Art. More of his works are on display via Deviant Art.

YouTube Link for the Jessica Alba speed painting video.

If you are a regular viewer of ABC's Lost, then you may enjoy the Kate, Sawyer, Sayid, Hurley and John Locke speed paintings.

Those are pretty tame compared to MohaFoto's rendering of Evangaline Lilly set to Tom Jone's "She's a Lady. But this speed painting makes a twist half way through, when he undresses her and gives her a bikini ("Bad to the Bone").
This is my first computer drawing to which I tryed to add a little extra ... It took 18hours and 36minutes to draw this video, full resolution is 5750x4650pixel.

This Evangaline Lilly speed drawing is available on YouTube also. But the higher resolution version on his website is much nicer and check out his gallery while you are there.

Special thanx to Free CSS Templates for turning me on to this.



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Online video conversion service - vixy.net

This service allows you to convert Flash Video / FLV file (YouTube's videos,etc) to MPEG4 (AVI/MOV/MP4/MP3/3GP) file online using compressed domain transcoder technology. It converts FLV to MPEG4 faster and less lossy than a typical transcoder.

When you submit an url, it will download and convert to the video format. Then you can download the converted file.

FLV to MPEG4 Conveter engine is also available as OpenSource. You can download the source code via subversion: http://sourceforge.net/svn/?group_id=183657




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5/28/2007

Selective Page Indexing Directives

Following up on the new Yahoo "class" directive for isolating non-content on a web page, I have come to one conclusion -- the Big 3, and others, have their own methods of explaining to them what your page is about. Each method is often-times confusing and hard to implement. Factor in the possibility that the most novice of web page creators, who probably will not have a clue, then you have chaos at it's best.



I came across an obscure page which details directives handed out by various search engines. The page is not totally encompassing, but it sheds a lot of light on how the major and minor search engines are competing for your Html input. This input is always geared for their consumption, and if not used, then you will be at a disadvantage for their indexing abilities.



In-page directives are always geared toward the SE provider that suggests them. Depending on the notoriety of the SE, they will be inserted into pages or not. Web page builders always have to keep up with the additions, which usually does not include minor or startup search sites.



The playing field is not even when it comes to directives. They who are strongest usually prevails, but at the cost of numerous forum and blog posts which generally promote the bigger of the pack. You know who I am talking about.



The robots.txt Summit

Yahoo's indexing directive (ill conceived) was born from a Summit that was supposed to deal with the robots.txt method of directing SE's to the main content of web pages. During the summit, the idea of robots.txt evolving to meet the current Internet needs was discussed. The term "evolve" went off on a tangent that I found hard to believe.



The simplicity of robots.txt has been an easy concept for virtually every webmaster. Meta declarations in the Head of the document to NOINDEX or NOFOLLOW have been adopted and used by most.



The evolvement of robots.txt into the Body of the page must be equally simple. There has to be a way of relaying "indexing" information to ALL robots. Proprietary tagging should not be allowed by any entity.



One Solution

In the beginning there was robots.txt, then the Meta Robots directive. Following in the simplicity of both, we should have a solution that is par with both concepts.



A new tag should be introduced -- <robots attr="directive">



The attribute can be discussed amongst the SE providers. My options would follow the original concept of robots.txt and the Meta alternative -- Index and Follow.



Adding onto this concept and the prevalent need to identify "actual content", the attribute of "content" would be added. Possible directives could be: Content, NoContent



Surrounding your intent with a <robot> tag will not only make it simpler for us, but make it easier for the SE's to drill down into our pages.



Also, if the original thinking of the SE's was to identify "content". Then why not say so. Why identify non-content through nefarious means?



Top Two Dozen Blogs About Blogging

Daniel Scocco's Top Blog List actually contains 25 blogs, but I dismissed one, thus the "two dozen". It wouldn't take a rocket scientist to determine which of the blogs I dismissed.



The list is based on an Todd And's Power 150 algorithm with a little of Daniel's own flair. He included Alexa data into the mix and tweaked some of the original ranking factors.



Monthly updates will be reported on his site, but I am not sure what the Url will be.









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5/27/2007

Yahoo's Robots-NoContent: Another shade of NoFollow

Have you looked closely at Yahoo's new "robots-nocontent" tag? The tag was born from discussions at a recent Robots.txt Summit in which one topic focus included the adding of support for web pages to identify main content non-relevancy.

So what is considered non-relevant to the main content? Priyank Garg of Yahoo!Search summarizes it as navigation, menus repeated across the entire site, boilerplate text, or even adverting. So, basicly everything outside of your main content area is non-relevant.
This tag is really about our crawler focusing on the main content of your page and targeting the right pages on your site for specific search queries.
Actually the term "tag" is a misnomer. Yahoo's proposal is that you implement this with a class attribute (ie: class="robots-nocontent") for any content that is extraneous to the main unique content of the page. The Slurp help page cites numerous examples of how to apply this class to your Html -- too numerous.

Maybe I am not getting this. Wouldn't it just be simpler to identify what is the main content? Since it is apparent that Slurp cannot distinguish repetitive tendencies across the pages of one domain, then let's spell it out for them with a class="robots-this-is-content-dummie".

It would be a lot simpler to implement also. Just wrap your content with DIV element and you are done. You might have a section on the sidebar for "related" reference purposes, then wrap one around that too.

Give them their own tag <robots>


The usage of the class attribute is all wrong anyway. This is more of a relation than a class, more aptly it is meta-information which can aid the robots in distinguishing relevant content passages from the fluff.

To date, we have two methods of conveying information to robots on what not to index -- the robots.txt file and the meta noindex in the head section of our pages. Why not their own tag element for meta information inside the body of the page?

My suggestion is to use a new tag -- <robot attr></robot>. Inserting an element in your page that the browser does not recognize, will not be displayed to the viewer. For all intents and purposes, it is invisible except to the spiders.

The new robot tag could have an attribute of their own choosing. For instance, the Yahoo attribute would simply be slurp="directive", Google would be googlebot="directive", etc. Directives could be "content", "content-related" and (ugggh) "no-content" -- but there would not be a need for the latter, now would there?

Another possibility is to keep in line with the other methods of communication -- attributes of Index and Follow could be used. The attribute of Rel (relation) could be used also in the form of "main", "related", or "plagiarized". I made that last one up to see if you were awake or not. But when you think about it -- quotations or full passages lifted from other sites should not qualify as content.

There is a need to have this form of control at our disposal. The method that is used needs to be thought out a little better. Yahoo's premature birth of their new baby was not even close, it was slipshod and messy.



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5/25/2007

Delicious Bot is tagging MyBlogLog

I was reading Alpesh's Blogosphere and he noticed that his blogs at MyBlogLog are being tagged from the files over at Delicious. If you hover over the tags, you will see the unmistakable icon doing the handywork.







I haven't noticed any tags coming over yet. So really don't know how long this will all take to transpire. Anybody noticing anything on their end?



The bot, according to the statusbar is called mbl-deliciousbot and has its own member profile. Clicking on it will bring it up. The About Me reads:
del.icio.us is a social bookmarking website -- the primary use of del.icio.us is to store your bookmarks online, which allows you to access the same bookmarks from any computer and add bookmarks from anywhere, too.



http://delicious.com

Welcome to the neighborhood!



I never thought I would ever talk to a bot, but I left him a welcome message anyway.



Update: There is another report that MyBlogLog is also crawling Technorati tags. Bot name is, duh, mbl-technoratibot.

You can opt-out of tagging if you wish. The setting for this can be found on the Edit Profile page.


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5/24/2007

Mandarin Design - For people who make mistakes


How
to make your
Blog look like
a magazine
without hardly
trying.
Plug in examples,
directions
in blogineese!

HTML and CSS Examples
Popular Blog Code
TIPS and TRICKS

Magazine style is easy with simple copy and paste code for styled drop caps, small pullquotes, new orange pull quotes,
...this will look like some of the pullquotes and styles we see in magazinelayout...

opacity pullquotes, and
easy pull quotes. A magazine cover and highlights are served cut and paste style in Text Tricks. Add Polaroid borders, triple borders,
and float pictures left and right
the easy way with tips and tricks in the
Box Tips and FAQ sections.






Did that get your attention?






Quick CSS Tricks Roundup

Here are some unusual and ingenious CSS tricks, all meant to be quick reads and get your mind thinking in a different direction. They will also show you that sometimes simpler is better.



Remove dotted outline from links - This one was news to me. Works on text and image links. (Deziner Folio)



Center DIV - Horizontally & Vertically - Apply a little math for this neat trick, pure simplicity. (Deziner Folio)





Prevent content from shifting with AdBlockers - If you have ad content in the flow of your design, ad blocking could cause it to shift. Here is a fix for that. (5ThirtyOne)



Custom underlines - Okay, this is not too quick. But it is unusual. (A List Apart)



Fluid dot leaders - This is a freaky thing to watch when you adjust screen width. Great for pages that have a table of contents. (David Lenef)













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Search Qoogle for video content on YouTube

Qoogle Video offers an improved search for video clips on YouTube. Result pages display 20 clips in four columns of five rows. No ads, quick display, no distractive banners. Clean pages.



Each clip result includes 3 snapshots and a link to view the clip without having to visit YouTube. My only disatisfaction with the display is that the columns are too close together, outside of that, this is a pretty fast search utility.



Returned results were very satisfactory in my opinion. And with more results to a page, I don't think that I could use YouTube search ever again.



Extras at Qoogle

They also have a Firefox plugin for Quoogle, supposedly. I think it is only good for versions prior to Firefox 2.0 -- have not checked it out yet. If anyone does, drop me a line to confirm.



The neatest feature, as if the search wasn't enough, is that they have a download utility page where you can snag the videos with. But there is also a Firefox extension called the VideoDownloader that will handle YouTube, as well as 60 plus other sites including Google, Metacafe, iFilm, Google and many, many others. This extension actually works by extracting the information from the embedded Html code -- normally you could do this by viewing the source and hand-typing the source file into your browser.



Video presentation ideas

The YouTube format is .FLV (flash video), but if you change the extension to .AVI then you can edit, take snapshots, or whatever with most video editing software. I have not tried this, but that is what I have read in a few spots.



Ideally, if you prep your videos and grab screenshots, then run them through something like Slide -- you could present your video content a little more different than the same old boring YouTube fashion. Slide has many options for displaying image clips (blinds, fades, turning pages, and those irritating MySpace slideshows too).





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5/23/2007

New Google Translate Search

Breaking down language barriers in search is a goal for Google, and they just launched a new translation search page to take, hopefully, a giant step in that direction. The page allows you to enter your search phrase, the language you speak and the language that you want to find results in.



As you know, I am a big Serebro fan and they are 100% homegrown Russian girls. So let's put this baby to the test. Now I know that Google's Russian translation machine is in Beta, but hey, they have it listed in the drop down menu. Right.



My first crack at this was to see if it can find the MTV Russia page where I saw some kind of online chat session between MTV and the girl trio. So I enter in "serebro MTV chat", enter. Ah, results -- two columns of them. One for the original language and the other for the translated page.



Well MTV is at the top, but it lands on the home page at MTV Russia and it does not look any different from the original. Sigh. I can see the link for Serebro though. Don't need to understand Russian if it is written in images! And if there is one language I can read, that is Serebro.



Interestingly enough, some of the other results were about unclothed celebs and live internet, something or other. And here I thought the US was the pRoN capital of the world. Boy was I mistaken, Russia has some goods on us there. And some mighty fine goods indeed.



Something seems to be broken on the new search page. If you were to use the ol' tried and true Translate Text box on the original Google Translate page, the translation is not too bad. Even for Russian. I was able to piece together parts of the conversation between the participants. Albeit, it is a tedious one. I just don't understand why this is not wired into the new page correctly.



Anyways, I just broke the tip on the end of my scissors and almost out of school paste. Probably should get up to Walmart before the storm rolls in tonight.







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5/22/2007

Serebro (Серебро) Song No. 1? Try almost page number one.

I was trying to run down an error on my server today and in the middle of that, my eye came across a hit from Google in my logs for one word -- Serebro. Curious one that. I check it out and find that I am placing 14th out of 698k for a one page post, 31st in Russia. Kewl.



Serebro in Russian, means silver.But they are more like gold right now. I am still going thru videos on YouTube, even the interviews that they have given after their EuroVision appearance. Of course they are all speaking Russian, but I don't care. I can't understand a single word they are saying and I am kewl with that. Sigh.



Serebro (Серебро) Eurovision TV Photo
Serebro may look like runway fashion models -- they are all but. All have had prior dance training in their backgrounds and can really "kick the flow".



<---- Who is my favorite Serebro babe?

Tough question. Do I really have to pick?



Elena Temnikova, the lead singer, is spicy hot. I am a man and would not turn it away, that goes without saying. She has been on Russian TV with "Star Factory" and I am thinking that she may be a little more than I can handle. Just a little mind you, but a little of Elena could probably kill a man.



Marina Lizokina, is a seasoned veteran singer and has those, oh so, plump pouty lips - yikes. She also reminds me of one of the Olsen twins -- the pudgier one (as opposed to skinny as a rail). Forgot her name, but Marina is a sultry vamp. Yeppers, she is a honey bunny.



But if I did have to pick, I would have to go with Olga Seryabkina -- the shy one. She has been studying ballet since the age of 7. Olga has legs that just don't quit and hasn't been a singer all that long before joining Serebro . She is pretty much unknown, but that is kewl. There is a quality about her that is hard to put my finger on, she is just very pleasing on the eyes.



And now the burning question that is on everybody's minds. What is the meaning of the line "I'll be your funny bunny" in Song #1? Here is an interview sequence in which Marina answers that question. Of course they are all speaking Russian, again, but my interpretation (you will have to see it) is that Funny Bunny was one her imaginary childhood friends -- boy to be young again, or a bunny.





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Firefox Bloat

Firefox is experiencing growing pains in more ways than one and two of the bloating problems they have encountered appear to be intertwined -- browser code and Google money. The browser war may be pushing the Firefox project too fast and down the wrong path.



Recent estimates place Firefox with a little over 15 percent of the market and Internet Explorer around 78 percent. Most of the market share that Firefox has gained on Internet Explorer came with the royalty deal that Google struck with the now for-profit Mozilla Foundation, who has 90 employees and revenue of more than $100 million in the last couple of years.
Mozilla plans to make enough money to keep growing ... Google, which, like the other search companies, is always competing for better placement on browsers. Under the agreement, the Google search page is the default home page when a user first installs Firefox, and is the default in the search bar. (Google has a similar placement with Apple’s Safari.)
The transparency of Mozilla is coming into question by many critics, mostly because of the level of secrecy that has to be maintained in its arrangements with Google. That issue caused tension around getting the deal done and disclosure.



Other critics claim that Mozilla is percieved as an extension of Google:
... they note that one of Google’s growth areas, Web-based software applications, would have a better chance of success with a browser not controlled by its biggest rival, Microsoft.
With money comes change. Firefox is evolving in directions that nobody would have imagined a couple of years ago.



The surge in popularity of Firefox has caused a backlash effect from Microsoft who is shelling more money into the advancement of Internet Explorer. The release of IE 7 shown remarkable improvements over previous versions and demonstrated to the Google/Mozilla camp exactly what they are capable of accomplishing.



When Firefox launched over five years ago, "it burst on the open-source browser scene like a young Elvis Presley -- slim, sexy and dangerous.", says Scot Gilbertson of Wired. But now he fears that with the "IE killing" release of Firefox 3.0 later this year will be in danger of becoming

the later version of Elvis -- fat.

Anecdotal reports of problems, from sluggishness to slow page loads and frequent crashes, have begun circulating in web forums, along with increasingly loud calls for Firefox to return to its roots. The alleged culprit: bloat, the same problem that once plagued Mozilla, the slow, overstuffed open-source browser spawned by Netscape that Firefox was originally meant to replace.

The "roots" was Firefox's small memory footprint, fast load time and extensibility thru plugins. It was a roll-your-own bare bones browser. It was this root that became one of Firefox's major selling points to non-geeky computer users. But now that is coming under more scrutiny as reports from reader polls cite that Firefox's mysterious habit of gobbling up huge chunks of memory as their number one complaint.

Actual data is hard to come by, but Mike Schroepfer (Mozilla's vice president of engineering) opines that memory problems can be blamed on the users environment which is influenced by other software, add-ons, and extensions. To keep the bulk down, Schroepfer's team sets a high threshold for the addition of features. New features aren't built in unless they are useful to at least 90 percent of Firefox's users.

Despite those safeguards, some now-standard features could be adversely affecting performance.

Firefox's page-cache mechanism, for example, introduced in version 1.5, stores the last eight visited pages in the computer's memory. Caching pages in memory allows faster back browsing, but it can also leave a lot less memory for other applications to use. Less available RAM equals a less-responsive computer.

It is a fine line that Firefox has to walk when trying to find a balance between what is perceived to be a "needed" feature and one that is not. What is too much? And does Firefox have a choice in that matter?

Slowly but surely, Internet Explorer is catching up to Firefox. In IE7, Microsoft added tabbed browsing and integrated RSS support to its browser. If Firefox is going to continue to compete, it will need to up the ante, but it must do so without making users add extensions .. and possibly introduce compatibility problems.

With the emerging technologies appearing on the web today, it will certainly push the limits of the new breed of browsers, Firefox and Internet Explorer. The change is inevitable and I do believe that neither will be going back to their roots and will continue to grow with the web.



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5/21/2007

Test Blogger .. and get paid for it

You can make a little coin ($75 and hour) just by using Blogger!
From time to time, Blogger will run usability studies to make sure that they are on the right track with all the new features that are being worked on.



If playing with Blogger for an hour or so and making up to $100 sounds like something you’d like to do, sign up here.



You don’t even have to live near Mountain View, CA to participate. Some field surveys are handled over the phone and sometimes they will come to you.



After signing up, there is a five page questionnaire you will need to fill out. It doesn't take too much of your time.



Need more info,&nbsp; read the FAQ.











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Did you know these basic Firefox Tips?

From the desk of CyberCapital comes three sets of Firefox tips. Some you probably already know, others not. All worth a look at.



There are a couple other quirky entries (warning, memory intensive) Firefox Inside Firefox and Dancing Firefox. Use at your own risk !!!





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John Chow offers "paid" DoFollow links

John Chow has developed a DoFollow plugin to selectively remove the rel="nofollow" extension from comment links, in which he is offering for your comments at $10 a month. He also has a plan to sell the plugin and/or set up an affiliate program to peddle the gimmick.



Yes, I said gimmick and you will also notice that I emphasized the term "paid" in this post title too.



There are quite a few reasons why you should not buy into this scheme. Anyone who does will just be throwing their money away. This is no more beneficial to the subscriber than tits on a boar.



Let's say you "rent" your comment link for a few months. And remember, it is rent. If you don't pay it, you get evicted and NoFollow is taking up residence on your sofa.



Links will not pick up any juice right out of the gate either. Once they "stick" for any duration, then they may give you some benefit. But looking at a page with close to 200 hardcoded links without any comments, how much value will that be? And once it does stick, it will be buried in the archives and off of page one.



Comment links are not the same as site-wide links. Site-wide links will overpower your comment link without even lifting a finger. Chow's site has approximately 3,140 pages indexed by Google. By his admission, a site-wide link costs $240 a month -- do the math, that is only 7.6 cents per link. How many comments will you have to make to bring your margin down.



If you look at this gimmick in the right light, John Chow is not really selling you the NoFollow removal. You are paying him to comment. John is fully aware that you will be commenting (or not) on a daily basis just to get your link in there. This is reverse pay-to-comment mentality.



Lets talk about that plugin a little bit. This would be a first wouldn't it -- a WP plugin you would have to actually buy? This goes against the grain of WP itself doesn't it?



The selling of the plugin is far more evil than duping some of John's more ignorant readers into the link renting. And I wouldn't doubt if some pissed off blogger hacks the plugin and offers it up on one of the more popular download sites.



But John better revise that plugin to include the microformat rel="paid". After all, they are paid links and Google's Matt Cutts is looking very closely at them. That goes for the site-wide links too.



There is a mechanism in place via the Google webmaster console to report paid links. Albeit, it is not an official one and is being run through their spam reporting system. Currently the main purpose of reporting is so that Google can augment their existing algorithms.



And what does Matt think about paid links?

&nbsp;

... link sellers can lose trust, such as their ability to flow PageRank/anchortext. Also, we’re open to semi-automatic approaches to ignorepaid links, which could include the best of algorithmic and manual approaches.



I even mentioned earlier this year that paid articles/reviews/posts should be done in a way that doesn’t affect search engines.



As someone working on quality and relevance at Google, my bottom-line concern is clean and relevant search results on Google. As such, I care about paid links that flow PageRank and attempt to game Google’s rankings.


I think I will just end this with by agreeing with Matt. 'nuf said.

PhpBB3 Release Candidate 1 (RC1) Released

For the last 5 years, phpBB 2.0 has gained a huge following worldwide and has played an important role in defining the success of Open Source software.

Acyd Burn, phpBB Development Team Leader, announced the first release candidate for the overly anticipated phpBB3 has just been released. PhpBB3, code named “Olympus”, has been in the making since 2002.

Support will only be offered on clean installations of RC1 and conversions from phpBB 2.0.x to phpBB3 RC1. Any other conversions/updates involving phpBB3 Beta will not be supported.

Conversions from 2.0.x to phpBB3 RC1 may be problematic at this time, depending on your setup and the amount of mods you installed. To be on the safe side, it is suggested to wait for later releases before you fully convert your phpBB 2.0.x installation.

What is new in phpBB3?


Features already available in 2.0.x but improved and/or enhanced for Olympus include Private Messaging, Registration and Search.

New features include the rolling in, and improvement of the Attachment Mod, unlimited subforums, custom BBCodes, custom Profile fields, enhanced User Control Panel, new moderating tools, caching and performance enhancements, warning reports, bookmarking, Jabber/XMPP support notifications ... and much more. In some ways this goes to, and beyond, VB3.

The Admin Control Panel has been made more flexible with a tabbed layout format. The ACP has been completely restructured and allows for easier extensibility. More improvements for Admins include global announcements, pruning of inactive users, error logs, language pack editing, user notes and search spider detection.

phpBB's creator resigns, group will go on


With the recent resignation of phpBB's creator James Atkinson (aka "theFinn"), a transfer of majority share in phpBB.com has gone to the now newly independent phpBB Development Team. This transfer will not affect the development of phpBB 3.0.x and support will still continue for the stable phpBB 2.0.x

The group of contributors behind phpBB all share a passion for Open Source software. The phpBB Group has maintained its ambitions since its formation in 2000; to continue developing and supporting a stable bulletin board system.

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5/20/2007

Google Adsense Preview Tool

Digital Inspiration has just launched a new online tool for Adsense publishers. The Adsense Sandbox 1.0 will show the latest ads available in the Google inventory for particular keyword(s) or webpage URLs.



This tool supports all Google ad formats including Adlinks and Rich Media Google Ads (Images, Video or Flash) and can be used to help you determine what kind of Google Ads are being served on your web pages for visitors who are coming from other countries like China, Brazil or Japan.



You can watch a short video (via YouTube) for a quick tour of Adsense Sandbox.





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Online Tool: Stripe Generator 2.0

A pretty cool online tool that will generate striped tiles that can be used as a background. I am not into stripes, but somebody else may.



Click on some of the latest stripes that were generated to see how to take full advantage of the tool. There are also some shared stripes to view also. Some are actually pretty impressive.



But, I was more impressed with the design of the site. Pretty slick looking.



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ScribeFire: Blogging Client for Firefox

ScribeFire blog editor for FirefoxLet's face it. I am not ready for the online world of data entry -- including blogging. Tiny little boxes, delayed keystrokes and the editor inputting garbage code such as &lt;span style="font-weight: bold;"&gt; when all I wanted was a damn &lt;b&gt; had really started to get on my bad side. But I have put up with it ... until now.



After searching for a desktop client to publish my blogs with, I discovered ScribeFire for Firefox. I am posting from it right now. And my first feelings about it are --- awesome.



Setup was a breeze. ScribeFire will interface with several popular blogging platforms and according to the website, more will be added. The Blogger API is also supported and it has a built-in FTP for uploading images to your own server.



Right out of the gate you notice something different about it, the split-screen. You enter your post into the ScribeFire interface on the bottom of your Firefox window and up above you can browse multiple tabs -- think compilation of multiple blog posts on one subject. The split is adjustable to your taste.



ScribeFire is feature packed. You can drag and drop formatted text from pages you are browsing into your post. You can even drag images (I discovered this by accident). The image for this post was dragged off of the main ScribeFire page.



You can start a post by clicking on the ScribeFire icon which sits in your status bar. The editor will open up and have the Title of the page and the Url link already to go for you. If you had selected text on the page, that is transferred as well. This is just like a "blog this" button in many ways.



There are three views for the interface: posting view, html view and the pre-view. Even in the posting view, if you have inserted an image, it will display on the screen where you have placed it. If it is in a bad place, just drag it somewhere else.



Have a long post? You can either publish it as a draft or save your work locally. I like the save locally option. This is known as Saving a Note -- but I use it to save drafts.



You can add Technorati tags to the end of your post and send those tags on to del.icio.us as well.



Does your blogging software NOT support trackback Urls? BlogSpot comes to mind. No problem with Scribefire you can enter in the trackback Url and it will send it on.



Do you want more? Okay, the Page Tools panel will show you how popular a post is via Technorati and how many backlinks the post has. Chances are if this screen shows oodles of links, then you are not the first one to know about it. Just put in your quick two cents and move on.



There is a bookmark feature. Not quite sure what that is for yet. And I am sure there are some other features or quirks that I have missed.



All in all, I am a very happy camper. I highly recommend that you try it out.











Technorati Tags: , , , , , ,

BUMPzee! Search Plugins for Firefox

Firefox search plugin for BUMPzee!After seeing Carsten Cumbrowski's search goodies for BUMPzee and they only supported Internet Explorer, I took it upon myself to write a search plugin for Firefox.

Go to my BUMPzee search plugin page which has a one-click installation regardless of what version of Firefox you are using.

Firefox 2.0 and beyond supports the new OpenSearch format, while previous versions used Sherlock. The script will detect which version you are using and install the corresponding plugin for you.

5/19/2007

BUMPzee! Blogging Goodies

For all of you in the BUMPzee community, Carsten Cumbrowski of Online Revenue News has provided three tiny goodies for your blogging pleasure. Two of them involve enhanced search capabilities for BUMPzee affiliated blogs.

The other goodie, and one that I think is more important, is a bookmarklet to Bump the post of a fellow member who does not have the Bump widget included for their posts. Some bloggers do not have the expertise to install the widget on their blogs, and this is an easy & great way to help show your love.

5/18/2007

Blogger Tips and Tutorials

I just opened a new blog for anyone who uses Blogger. It is called Tips 4 Blogspot and will feature posts about wading thru widgets, layouts and other features of both the New Blogger and Classic style.

My first tutorial is up -- How to add pseudo-Categories to the sidebar. It has the basic building blocks of how the category list was set up on blog itself.

I wrote the article because of my loathing of labels on the sidebar in general. Found them to be ridiculously long. Tag clouds were out of the question. I wanted a neat uncluttered look.

5/17/2007

Serebro (Серебро) - Case study in marketing without thought

Serebro, unexpected surpriseJapan sends us a fox, but from Russia (with love) comes Serebro. Only placing third in Eurovision 2007, the long-legged Russian trio is racking up lots of views over at YouTube -- well of course they would.

With a high climbing single Song #1 (Red Version) on the pop charts, they followed up with an extended music video (Red2 Version) that sizzles. Watch for the quick blowing of the hair during the dance break. Perfect.

The Producer, Max Fadeev, was not trying to invent anything on purpose. It just happened.
"I just wanted to make it for my pleasure, the music, that I'm missing so much. I just wanted to compose songs without doing marketing research, not thinking about radio, TV format and so on...

...The music material, appearance of the band, girls' behavior on stage should be developed to the state when I am completely satisfied with it. We have been choosing the members of the band for quite a long time. They should have had perfect vocal abilities, expressive appearance and of course charisma."
While promotion was not their mind when going into Eurovision, the explosion in the aftermath was phenomenal. There are scores of videos running rampant on YouTube, all hitting high.

What mood of Serebro are you in? Mine is Violet.

Microsoft will not sue Linux

If you have been follow the news, last Monday Microsoft hit a nerve when it announced in Fortune magazine on that Linux and other open-source software infringed on 235 of the company's patents. Microsoft cut a licensing deal with Novell last November to resolve intellectual property claims. Monday's announcement has made other members of the Open Source community a little on edge -- or even hostile.

Bill Hilf, general manager of platform strategy and director of Microsoft's work with open-source projects, spoke with the IDG News Service on the effects of the declaration on the open-source community. In the interview Hilf stated that the Fortune magazine article was blown a little out of proportion.
I said again, "Don't look at Fortune magazine as the manifestation of the Microsoft strategy." It's the same strategy we've had. I think [the effects of the story] will be short term as people realize that it looks like Microsoft is on the attack. I think longer term it will be fine and the work will continue on.

... What we heard back after the Novell deal was "Give us more transparency. You say that there is IP involved, give us an understanding of what that is." So the attempt was that if we give a number and category of where these things fall, maybe that will help people get an idea of the scope. We are very much calling out to commercial companies to license this stuff and resolve these issues. This isn't like a trivial invention. There are a couple hundred significant patents here.


An edited transcript of the interview can be found at Computerworld.

5/16/2007

Google Blogger SPAM Flagged Me

After trying to save a draft to my Blogger account, I was presented with a word verification test. My first thoughts were -- did I change something in my settings while prudently sipping beer last night or is there a new publish setting that I am not aware of. It was neither.

Apparantly the word verification on the posting form is meant to be a spam reduction mechanism for BlogSpot in general and there are two potential causes. One is that my blog has been flagged as potential:
...word verification is applied to certain potential spam blogs by an automated system. Because this is automated there will necessarily be some false positives, though we're continually working on improving our algorithms to avoid these. If your blog is one of the false positives, we apologize. Having the word verification on your posting form does not prevent you from publishing and does not mean that your blog will be deleted or otherwise punished if it is not actually in violation of our policies.
Just great. First I am errantly flagged at Technorati which leaves your feed un-updated for days at a time; and now this. Then there is the pounding in my head from that last sip of beer last night -- isn't always that last sip that you should not have partook?

I can click on the orange question mark to take me to page where I can request a review of my blog. Funny thing is I got that little help tidbit by clicking on it the first time. Clicking on it again just takes right back there. This time, on the form at the bottom of the page where it asks "Was this information helpful?", I answered f*** no it wasn't helpful.

Another possible reason that I need word verification is if I have a high post rate.
If you make a large number of posts in a single day, you will be required to complete a word verification for each one, independent of whether your blog has been cleared as a potential spam or not. If this happens to you, simply complete the word verification for each post, or wait 24 hours, at which point it will be removed automatically.
This restriction can also be in place to control the load on BlogSpot servers as to prevent explicit spam. In this case, there is not a whitelisting review process to exempt individual blogs from it. Okay, this is the lesser of all the evils -- and hopefully that is the case.

One other thing this may be caused from was the labeling of tons of old posts from 2004, basically the same thing as tagging. In 2004, they did not have labels and I wanted to update some of these old posts. On my first run, I labeled around 80 or so posts with a "repub" tag -- my thoughts were that they are still useful enough to compile into categories and rereference them in a new post for each.

If the action of labeling/relabeling posts constitutes a publication to be issued on those posts, I did not see it take place. The only pages I would no of being actually published would be the page for the links to the labeled posts themselves. I only applied three or four labeling processes though.

Anywise, I am off to find this so called review request page. Maybe it will take me a day to find it and I will be dropped from the blacklist.

5/15/2007

Foxkeh: The Japanese Firefox Mascot

Foxkeh, the Firefox MascotA newly opened English version promotion of Firefox in Japan features a very popular little character named Foxkeh. The site was developed out of a response to public demand.

The website features a Foxkeh blog, wallpapers, and graphic images. The time charts of Firefox history are pretty interesting to look at, and you just have to see the Firefox videos (dubbed into English ... badly very).

All in all, it is smartly done site and apparently doing quite well in Japan.

Internet Explorer does not infect PC's -- People do

Drive-by Download AdIn a recent experiment, security researcher Didier Stevens bought a Google ad to test user awareness of what they were clicking on. The ad was designed to be somewhat blatantly suspect and said "Is your PC virus-free? Get it infected here!" and 409 people clicked on the ad.

In the six month experiment, the ad was displayed 259,723 times and clicked on 409 times -- a click-through-rate of 0.16%. The Google ad campaign cost €17 ($23), or succinctly put, €0.04 ($0.06) per click to potentially compromise a machine.

Had Stevens been a real-world hacker bent on installing malware on computers thru Google AdWords, instead of a security researcher -- then the results are pretty alarming.

Equally interesting however was the relationship of browser types when the click-thru rate is compared to the market share.

According to Net Applications, Firefox now holds 15.4 percent of the browser market, while Internet Explorer has 78 percent.

Having 80.5% of the click-thrus(335) in the experiment coming from IE users is very comparable to Net Applications market share estimates.

Firefox represented 12.5% (52 click-thrus). The difference in click-thrus vs. market share for Firefox tells me that for the normal public at large, discounting the large savvy base of geeks, designers and techies who use Firefox -- the stats are saying that people are just as oblivious regardless what browser they use.

Another SEO Contest is Typhooning Our Way

Here we go again, shades of Nigritude Ultramarine. If you all remember the SEO contest from the past, which is probably one of the major reasons for the adoption of the Nofollow microformat -- it looks like there is another one on the horizon. Actually it is coming from another horizon, Indonesia, and it is called Ngadutrafik 2007 and there close to 95,000 results in Google right now.

I just spotted it in the Technorati WTF not more than a few minutes ago, and it is hitting the Hot List. Preliminary checking shows others are setting up profiles there, and looking at the SERPS a number of blogs are being set up as I speak.

There is also an entry in the Wikipedia announcing the contest, which started last April.

Ngadutrafik 2007

* Dates: 22 April 2007 – 30 July 2007
* Keyword: "Ngadutrafik 2007"
* Sponsor: www.masterseo.web.id
* Target Ending:Ngadutrafik 2007 is the topic of an SEO contest held by Adsense-Id Forum members. Ngadutrafik 2007 is a non-prized activity that challenges the members and Indonesia SEO professionals and amateurs to rank themselves among the major search engines such as Google, Yahoo, and MSN using certain keyword(s)
* SEO Ngadutrafik 2007 Championship SEO professionals and amateurs to rank themselves among the major search engines such as Google, Yahoo, and MSN using certain keyword(s).


One blogger with a hosted WP.com account has been suspended by Matt. Evidently a gal named Nenda ratted him out, citing abuse of the service. The controversy between the two and the aid of another blogger calling attention to it, did not hurt Nenda in the least -- her blog took a steep hike in visitors during that period

What gets me, is if these people are SEO's -- don't they know about Nofollow? Or will Nofollow really matter. They are hitting Technorati, which is nofollow. Some of the blogs they are setting up, they are actually commenting in. All of which have nofollow links. At any rate, this contest may just show us how effective (or ineffective) it is for combatting spam and whether it will curtail it or not. This will be a great opportunity to see them all out in the open like this.

In the meantime, I suggest you keep an eye on your commenting areas, forums too. It may be time to batten down the hatches before the main force blows ashore.

5/14/2007

Cheat Sheets for the Developer

Web developer cheat sheets still have their place even with the newer editors with auto-completion built into it. Print these bad-boys out and tack them to that cork board next to your workspace, or stack them on your reading material in the loo.
Cheat sheets ready for print

Most of the sheets come from Jack Daniel's cheatsheet area. There are a few more in there for RGB colors and Html entities, but felt that was going a little overboard.

BlogCatalog - Social Networking for Bloggers

What do you get when you cross a blog directory with a forum discussion area? Throw in some social gizmos along the lines of adding a blogger as a 'friend' and joining 'neighborhoods' -- you get BlogCatalog.

Before I get into BlogCatalog too much, I just have to say that I found out about it on my way over to apologize to Chris for referring to he as a she -- and hopefully I can get back over to add him as friend really quick before I get a bad name in my neighborhood.

Why you should be in the BlogCatalog
Outside of the obvious reasons for getting your blog listed in a directory, there are perks to go along with BlogCatalog. You can truly hook up with like minded blogs very easily, and there are a lot to choose from. Also the discussion area is quite active and a great place to go for information on wide range of blogging subjects -- or just to shoot the breeze.

This place is great way to build your network of blogging buddies with. That in itself, is probably worth the price of admission -- did I mention that it is free.

Signing up was a breeze. Even though they say it would take 24-48 hours, I was in under 15 minutes. And within minutes of being approved, I had visitors and comments coming in. How cool is that?

So if you decide to check out Blogcatalog, stop by my place and say hello.

Is Technorati missing your post?

In a follow up to Ping-less in Technorati there was a post from Ian Kallen that may have foretold the indexing problems they are experiencing right now. This post coincides with a lot of the Support forum queries that I observed concerning the glitches.

Even after a month, Ian still has his hands full. Only hope it lessens in the days to come.

UPDATE: Seems that I am not being indexed again. Going to bump this post and see if it may trigger it.

5/11/2007

Calculator takes Text Links in new direction

Want to know what you can charge for a simple text link? It is all dependant upon many factors and there is a simple tool that can let you visualize (and explain) how all the pieces fit into place.

Text Link CalculatorThe Text Link Ad Calculator is a slickly packaged Web 2.0 device that will open up many of the secrets behind selling or buying links. The creators of the tool provide a descriptive essay on how this tool actually operates. Pretty unusual for a tool of this magnitude.

In light (or wake) of Matt Cutts announcement that Google will be taking a closer look at paid links, this is a bold and provocative move from TextLinksAds. I am sure they have done their homework on this subject and they may reap some benefit from it. The intricate work to develop and implement the tool had to weigh heavily on their minds.

Now it is here, lets sit back and see how it plays out.

Looking out the window


I was never privy to the the inner workings of selling links. But I had a good grasp of most of the mechanics behind it. There were certain intricacies that I felt were important, but could never get a clear understanding of what they were.

This calculator reveals what the designers think are important areas of the page. Most of those areas are generally understood to be important, by me, and the ways from others around the SEO area. It is not written -- it is perception.

Taking the perception of link placement and representing it an intuitive manner to the masses will have a great impact. The graphical interface with instantanial reporting only solidifies the proposition. If this is Web 2.0 and the direction it is headed, then they are on the right track.



VIA: Blue Sky Brothers,LLC

Are you PING-less in Technorati?

I had problems getting my blog to update at Technorati last Tuesday. When I post to the blog it automatically pings them, but nothing happened. I tried to manually ping it, and even though I got the customary "Thank You" message ... still nada.

Well after a couple of days of this, I check out the support forums and find that there are literally dozens of people with the same problem. Some have been pingless in Technorati for days, weeks, even months. well.

There is a tech guy there named Spidaman(Ian Kallen) who works at Technorati on the back end technical software. He is taking them one at a time, and every pingless problem is somewhat different.

If you are a WordPress blogger, this may interest you, actually probably would apply to most blogging software. If you use the option to publish with Gzip on an Apache 2.2 Server, then it might choke the Technorati crawler, Spidaman said. This problem appeared to happen on a few WP blogs.
The crawler is using python's native gzip library (which I believe is also linked against zlib) and I think it is the culprit, other HTTP client implementations I've tested don't have this problem. I plan on implementing a workaround soon, I suspect this is inhibiting a small but not insignificant number of sites from getting indexed.

Spidaman was helped out immensly by wa7son(Thomas Watson Steen) on the other end. Made for quick debugging. Good job.

A Joomla blog did not have a discoverable feed. Adding a link alternate tag for Real Simple Discovery should fix it.

Two WP blogs fixed themselves and another WP blog needed a support ticket opened, something "glitchy" about crawling it. [Aside] This glitchy blog is anti-Microsoft, complete with the stock warning about using a *compliant* browser right at the top of the page. Funny thing is, the CSS uses extensive hacks for IE5 involving the underscore in front of element names. Pffft[/aside]

Six blogs at Blogspot magically fixed themselves, while another four where "errantly flagged". I am assuming the same issue applied to the both.

Make sure you ping us directly, not through Pingomatic or some other third party. Please understand, our automated systems process millions of blogs everyday. The automated flagging keeps a lot of splogs out of our searches but it also makes mistakes which we regret and try to remedy as fast as we can.


The Url's from a My1Up blog are problematic because of the HTTP redirects. Will be investigated later.

One problem with Feedburner. The feed had not been updated since Friday the 13th. Spidaman suggested that he exorcise the feed daemons (verify that the feed was up to date) or take Feedburner out of the picture and ping again.

Dozens of others were answered with a simple post from unknown Admin figure who simply stated that "We've made the appropriate adjustments so that your blogs should be indexed succesfully from now on." Presumably it is another errant flag that is built into the indexing routines.

As for me, by the time I was ready to put in a support ticket my feed was magically indexed. Isn't that always the case? It is like the days when you were able to smoke in restaurants and when you got tired of waiting 52 minutes for your meal and decide to light one up.

Fierce! Festival's "Name in Lights" Provides Instant Celebrity

Name in Lights was a competition to find a name that will be created in giant illuminated letters and installed on a prominent UK landmark building. The competition is part of the Fierce! Festival 10th anniversary commission to artist Joshua Sofaer, who devised the concept and will be doing the installation.

The idea is to find the name that will be created. Entries were taken for names, alive or dead, and up to 150 words as to why they would want to see that name in lights.

The contest is closed now and next week a panel of judges will pick the lucky winner. Then that name will be fabricated as a massive illuminated sign (as you see below) beaming out across the city, from Birmingham Central Library.

Go ahead, get your name in lights too and share it with a friend. Flash is required.


I got my name in lights with notcelebrity.co.uk

VIA: Larry Hnetka

5/10/2007

TechnoFave Highway to SEO Heaven

In the wake of the NoFollow fiasco, honest commenters (eg: non-spammers) have had a rough go in developing deep links with like minded individuals in the blogging community. Some people may be drifting off into link-comaland and having near death experiences ... wait, what is that I see? Just go towards the LIGHT!

The alarms on the cart next to your bed sound off. Code Blue is announced over the com, and in rushes Dr. Dosh Dosh (or as his bevy of nurses call him,Kawaiikuma Honey). Years of experience tell him that you have just gone into cardiac arrest --- he reaches for the TechnoFave™ paddles, applies them to your chest and gives you a jolt that would of killed you if you were not already half there.

Dosh orders the nurse to inject you with 1cc of Linkittohim to stabilize rush you just received from all of that adrenaline pumping thru your veins --- not from the TechnoFave™ paddles, but the nurse that just gave you the injection has the nicest rack that you have ever seen. Obviously Dr. Dosh Dosh is a plastic surgeon as well.

Road to Blog Recovery


During rehab, Dr. Dosh taught me everything there is to know about taking my blog vitamins to keep up link strength, and I am recovering quite nicely.

Being a born-again blogger of late, I would like to pass on some of the wisdom that Dr. Dosh bestowed upon me. The world would be a better place if we all would just Fave each other and Link hands.

Therapy Process


I think most of you already know the recuperative powers of Dr. Dosh's miracle therapy:

  1. You fave me and link to this post.
  2. Post a Comment below with the URL of your post that has my link to this post on it

  3. Also include in comment, how to Fave you back. If you forget, don't worry -- I will find you with my divining rod.

I will verify very quickly and return the treatment. Since this blog has comment moderation set to on, you will know that my healing hand has done its job when you see the comment appear below and rise to an altar in the following table.

... and now. Back to our regularly scheduled program "Yoga With Bertha" already in progress.

Participants Who Completed Treatment


Hear what these happy people all have to say about the Dr. Dosh Miracle therapy. Testimonials abound by clicking on their links.

Dosh's Exchange Primer [Show your love]
Show Me the Money [Show the Love]
Azazil.net [Show the Love]
India PR Blog [Show the Love]
Technacular [Show the Love]
Design Adaptions [Show the Love]
Life in the Fast Lane [Show the Love]

Firefox Extensions for Resizing Form Fields

If you do a lot of forum posting or blog commenting, most of it is done online with a provided textarea box from within a form. The textarea boxes are usually very tiny to post any extended length of commentary and causes you to continually scroll up, down, and even sideways just to review what you had just typed. Of course there is the "preview" option, but if there is a correction to make -- you still have to locate it inside of that miniscule box.

Enter Two Extensions to the Rescue


First there is the quick and dirty Resizeable Textarea extension which lets you resize virtually most textarea form boxes. The other, more bells, is a Resizable Form Field extension for textareas, as well as select boxes, text fields, and even iframes.

I use the Textarea only extension, and it works quite well. A little buggish at times, seems it will not work if open the form up in a new window. Another user reported the same thing, citing Gmail as an example, works well when composing in the main window, but doesn't work for the text area if you click the "open in new window" icon.

Have not tried the other flavor yet, and as of this post, there are no reviews. Asa Dotzler likes it though, even though there appears to be some abnormal behaviour with it -- such as form fields getting resized in other tabs.

Coming to a YouTube Theatre Near You - Web Pages That Suck

If picture s are worth a thousand words are still not enough to teach you about bad web design, then maybe video presentations on the subject will.

Vincent Flanders, who coined the phrase "Learn good web design by looking at bad web design" from his WebPagesThatSuck site, has taken his craft into the realm of vLogging.

Personally, I like his glossy pictures with arrows and descriptions instead of the YouTube presentations. His videos suck as stand-alones, and only come into context if presented with companion articles.

Three Most Important Graphic Design Mistakes

At AIGA's national conference in September 2005, Jessica Helfand of Winterhouse Studio presented ABC's John Stossel the three
most important design mistakes
Americans make. Jessica, a
media consultant of very good standing, holds a B.A. and M.F.A. in
graphic design from Yale University.

Jessica, noticing Stossel's disconcern over the matter, added:
"In the 27 years that (20/20) has been on the air, you have never done a story on graphic design. Why is that?"
Apparently, Stossel pondered the question, and it prompted him to produce an in-depth report the following season. The report included some font selection guidelines that, up until now, I have been completely oblivious to.

Paul Rand was mentioned in the report. Rand was a well-known American graphic
designer, best known for his corporate identities (logos, if you will) for IBM, ABC, Cummins Engine, Westinghouse, and UPS (original UPS logo has since been replaced).

See the report via YouTube.

Official Firefox Top 10 List ...

Yeppers. This is the Official Webware Top 10 List of lists. It was posted quite some time back by Rafe Needleman, but worth mentioning again.

The lists for About.com and Mozilla seemed to have vanished, but a pretty decent compilation of Top 10 Extension lists from Download.com, Irfan Habib, CyberNet, Simple Dollar and Moleskin . Depending on each list's slant, there should be one in there that will fit you just right.

Read/Write Web is Web 2.0 addons for Firefox, and probably the most impressive of the lot. They take a closer look at what web apps are using the browser as a platform.

The Lifehacker list was for top 10 tweaks.

And after you install all of those extensions, made all your tweaks, then you will need the Quick Online Tips list of extensions for managing ...ahem... extensions. I know I will.

Google Analytics Gets Major Overhaul

Judging by the buzz around the new version of Google Analytics, there seems to be a lot of happy people out there. Google will be activating this new version on all current Analytics accounts over the next few weeks.

Here are some of the improvements:
  • Email and export reports: Schedule or send ad-hoc personalized report emails and export reports in PDF format.

  • Custom Dashboard: No more digging through reports. Put all the information you need on a custom dashboard that you can email to others.

  • Trend and Over-time Graph: Compare time periods and select date ranges without losing sight of long term trends.

  • Contextual help tips: Context sensitive Help and Conversion tips are available from every report.


Jeff Gillis of the Google Analytics Team says:
Since Google Analytics launched in November 2005, the demand for website analytics has increased significantly. Today there are hundreds of thousands of Google Analytics customers, and web analytics has moved from being a niche function to becoming a mainstream aspect of the business for companies of all sizes. You've asked that we focus our engineering efforts around maintaining the sophistication and features that experienced users want, while also making it easy for both experts and non-experts to quickly and easily find the answers you want.

Open Registration for AdSense Webinar

Google is sponsoring an upcoming AdSense Webinar and registration is now open. The webinar will be held next Wednesday, May 16th at 10:30am PDT.

The one hour broadcast will take place on Webex. Scheduled panelists include Jennifer Su, Sunil Subhedar, Mike Deeringer and Laura Chen. Topics include using channels to track your ad performance, optimizing your ad placement, design, & layout, noticing trends & making proactive improvements to your site, and keeping your account in good standing.

5/07/2007

PHP - Easy Reflections Script

Core PHP has a cool little script for making easy reflections that will take any image and create a reflection of it. Options include caching, height of the reflection, tinting, and fade start/end.

While this is something easily accomplished in something like Photoshop, it could come in handy to automatically display reflections for user-uploaded images in a public gallery site for instance.