Archive for April, 2005

Ways To Encourage Blog Reader Interaction

Friday, April 29th, 2005
  1. Enable Comments Functions
  2. Share Your Email Contact
  3. Use Trackback
  4. Create Polls
  5. Add Tag Boards or Shout Boxes
  6. Post and Use Instant Messaging (IMs)
  7. Keep Discussion Boards or Forums

Top 7 Ways To Encourage Blog Reader Interaction

WebSpeed Simulator for Windows

Thursday, April 28th, 2005

WebSpeed Simulator helps you design more efficient web pages by previewing your web page at the speed of real world dial-up connections. You can avoid designing pages that look great on your LAN but are too slow for the real internet.

  • See how your web site will look on slow links
  • Make sure text and graphics are loading as you expect
  • Highlight HTML and Java coding errors
  • Quality check the designs of your authoring company
  • Simulate speeds from 1200 bps crawl to LAN speed
  • View statistics and download times
  • Identify areas of your site that could be speeded up
  • Works with dynamic HTML and ASP sites
  • Safe to try: does not interfere with you machine setup or network

Powerbullet Presenter Flash

Wednesday, April 27th, 2005

Powerbullet Presenter is a small, simple program for creating presentations in the Flash� format. You don’t need any experience to create slick animated presentations by typing, clicking and dragging.

Powerbullet Presenter is specifically designed for creating multi-page presentations that are commonly used in electronic sales brochures and catalogues, splash screens, slideshows and student projects.

You can also create a self-running show, specifying delays on each page, or you can link the timing to the sound attached to each page.

Your presentations can be exported as an HTML page with an embedded SWF (Flash) file or as an executeable file which you can run on any Windows PC.

AdSense in RSS – Explained

Tuesday, April 26th, 2005

Q: What is Google doing?
A: I can’t talk a whole lot about this yet. I can tell you that this is a pilot program for a new AdSense product that Google is looking into. Like all of their tests, it may disappear for a while, or be discontinued altogether.

Q: Is anyone else currently testing this technology?
A: No. Right now LonghornBlogs.com is the only site running this test. That will probably change in the next few days as their other alpha testers bring their systems online, but for now, we’re it.

Q: How are you putting ads in the feeds?
A: I can’t talk at all about implementation yet, because the system is not finalized. It’s just a test to determine how well the current thought process works, the performance bottlenecks, and to discover any barriers to others using it. I CAN tell you that it isn’t using Javascript.

Q: When can I start putting ads in MY feeds?
A: IF Google decides to launch this product, you can expect to see a wider public beta in the next few weeks. I wouldn’t waste my time trying to figure out the current implementation yet. It will most likely change, and your AdSense account won’t have the proper permissions from their servers to display contextual ads anyways.

From LonghornBlogs.com

How to make money from your blog: 5 tips

Tuesday, April 26th, 2005
  1. Sell advertising
  2. Help sell others’ products
  3. Solicit contributions
  4. Market your services in your blog
  5. Use a blog to deepen your existing customer relationships

Make money tips!

Blogs Will Change Your Business

Sunday, April 24th, 2005

BusinessWeekOnline launches blogspotting.

One more idea. Think of TiVo, (TIVO ) think of the iPod. When you’re using one of them, do you consider the company that provides the programming? CBS, for example? Not much. You’re putting together your own package. The pieces come from lots of companies and artists. Often you don’t even know where.

Aggregators do the same job for the Net. So, just like the record companies, which have figured out how to market bits and pieces of their albums as standalone songs and ringtones, the rest of the media and entertainment world is going to have to think small. Content, whether it’s news or a Hollywood movie, is going to travel in bite-size nuggets. The challenge, for bloggers and giants alike, is to brand those nuggets and devise ways to sell them or wrap them in advertising.

Take a look at blog advertising today, and it’s hard to see a glittering future. Sure, enterprising bloggers make room on their pages for Google-generated ads, known as AdSense, and earn some pocket change. Some blog entrepreneurs, such as Nick Denton, publisher of New York’s Gawker Media, sell ads for everything from Nike to Absolut Vodka (FO ). Popular blogs can land sponsorship deals for as much as $25,000 per month, say consultants. O.K. money for an entrepreneur, but a rounding error in the ad industry.

Still, blogs could end up providing the perfect response to mass media’s core concern: the splintering of its audience. Advertisers desperate to reach us need to tap niches (because we get together only once a year to watch the Super Bowl). By piggybacking on blogs, they can start working that vast blogocaf�, table by table. Smart ones will get feedback, links to individuals — and their friends. That’s every marketer’s dream.

Dan Gillmor, who quit his San Jose newspaper job, is lining up investors for a new type of media company, Grassroots Media. He’s interested in elements of an online journalism business in Korea, called OhmyNews. It mingles articles from 50 staff journalists with reports e-mailed and text-messaged in from thousands of citizen reporters. OhmyNews says it has been profitable for a year and a half and expects revenue this year of $10 million. “I keep hoping that all of the new conversational forms will augment the existing one,” Gillmor says

Think of the way we produce stories here. It’s a closed process. We come up with an idea. We read, we discuss in-house, and then we interview all sorts of experts and take their pictures. We urge them not to spill the beans about what we’re working on. It’s a secret. Finally, we write. Then the story goes through lots and lots of editing. And when the proofreaders have had their last look, someone presses the button and we launch a finished product on the world.

If this were a real blog, we probably would have posted our story pitch on Day One, before we did any reporting. In the blog world, a host of experts (including many of the same ones we called for this story) would weigh in, telling us what’s wrong, what we’re overlooking. In many ways, it’s a similar editorial process. But it takes place in the open. It’s a discussion.

Blogs Will Change Your Business

Macromedia Flash Privacy

Sunday, April 24th, 2005

The Macromedia Flash Player Settings panels let you make decisions about privacy, data storage on your computer, security, notifications of updates, and the use of the camera and microphone installed on your computer. Use the links in the table of contents to learn how to make these decisions.

Macromedia Flash ads can store information on ones computer even if you have cookies disabled. This is one of the reasons that Flash ads are becoming more popular.

Macromedia wrote an article on how to disable this.

To stop sites from storing information on your computer: Go to the Global Storage settings page, move the slider all the way to the left, then click the Never Ask Again checkbox.

To remove existing content stored using Flash: Go to the Web Storage settings page, then click the Delete All Sites button.