Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Which Social Network Is Right For You? [Lifehacker Explains]


Between Twitter, Facebook, and Google's new social networking tool, Buzz, it's hard to turn a corner without running into another social network. But how do you know which networking tool fits you best? We're here—with big charts and all—to help.

Last week Google Buzz made us ask ourselves what we wanted out of social networking. To answer that question, we charted what we liked and disliked about setup, privacy, usability, and other aspects of Buzz, Twitter, and Facebook. Here's the result.


This chart doesn't cover everything about every network out there. MySpace is (seemingly) on the decline or, at best, re-purposing itself. LinkedIn is really a business contact pool, FourSquare a geo-location game, and other networks generally too niche to be compared in the same aspects and categories.


For the simple read, here's the full chart of our Buzz, Twitter, and Facebook comparison. We color-coded each answer to give a context of where it stood, in comparison to what we know is possible and what a smart user would like to see. Red means that you can't rely on this network for this feature. Yellow indicates that the network offers it or makes due, but could definitely be better. Green means something works, and can be considered a selling point.


Click on the chart for a bigger view, or right-click to download the full-resolution file.



There's a lot of text there already to parse through, but it's obviously segmented and specific to each function. Having dug into the settings of each network and debated it with my fellow editors, I'll try to offer up a concise take on how I'd explain each network to someone completely new to any of them. I hope it might spur some thought about which network you're using now, too, and why.


Facebook


Facebook's strongest feature, as it stands now, is that it's relatively easy to figure out who your 'friends' are. You can pull them from your webmail address book, sure, but you have to check off those you want to be a friend with, and they have to reciprocate. After that, you start seeing their status updates, photos, and other activities on Facebook.com, right when you log in. Simple enough, right? Not exactly.


You can't, or at least shouldn't, create two separate Facebook accounts for personal friends and work contacts/co-workers/casual acquaintances, all of whom are likely to hit you up on Facebook sooner or later. So it's up to the user to create groups of friends, set what those different friends can see. Also, your Facebook identity is tied to certain "networks"—an employer, a school, a location—that you have to remember to set controls for, too. Dig around and you'll almost certainly find the very fine-grain controls you might need. But then, every few months, Facebook changes up their offerings, for better or worse, and it's up to the user to notice and re-learn how to decide what's private, to whom, and, in a much more worrisome way, what's being made public and search-able on the web.


Facebook does have a pretty great iPhone app, and offers a good amount of access to third-party clients like Brizzly and TweetDeck. But they're still limited in some ways meant to drive you to the web site, and their non-iPhone mobile apps and sites are tough to love.


Twitter


What's easy to like about Twitter is the simplicity. You get an account, you see a suggested list of famous users that you can feel free to ignore, and then you're asked to write 140 characters about something, anything. It will be made public, search-able, and able to be re-broadcast by other users, unless you've decided to lock your entire account and require your permission to view it. You can follow other people, block the occasional jerk from following you, reply to others' posts, message other users privately (if you both follow each other), and, over time, you'll learn about third-party apps and context tricks that make the service make more sense. I started using Twitter one day into my first SXSW, and I had it mostly figured within one or two over-eager days.


That simplicity, and reliance on third-party sites and apps for picture posting, link shortening, and the like can be confusing to newcomers that aren't into digging around, for sure. And the speed and volume of the main stream can be overwhelming and off-putting. But Twitter has grown slowly into a network that adapts to users' needs, whether by force or through user innovation. If you don't like how noisy and fast your main feed is, creating a list of high-priority friends and thinkers will do the trick. As you figure out what you like and don't like about Twitter, you'll be able to find third-party apps and interfaces that cater to those interests. We'd love to see expanded features here or there (for discovering who's following you, and perhaps hiding certain posts from all but a few close followers, for example), but Twitter is a pretty novel solution for those who like to share short updates with the web at large.


Buzz


Whatever we write about Buzz will be slightly inaccurate in a week's time, most likely. Buzz is brand new, and already it announced an apology and upcoming 'fixes.' From what we've seen, though, it seems like it wants to be the solution that FriendFeed never was to tracking your friends and contacts' multi-varied interests. Some friends change their IM status to say what's up, while others post on Flickr, Twitter, their own blog, and other places. Rather than making you head to each site, or make those friends become endless self-promoters, Buzz aims to connect you to everything your friends are doing from a place you're already familiar with—your Gmail and Google contacts.


And that, of course, is where the uproar started. Buzz showed up, suddenly, inside Gmail, and when asking users to sign up, assumed too much that they'd like to turn their email contacts into people they 'follow,' and maybe make that following status public. If Google could reassure Buzz users that what they did on the network was only among their followers they've individually approved, it would be more appealing. The service also needs a dedicated home, instead of being spread across mobile sites, Gmail, Google Maps, and elsewhere, and gain better controls for how much 'buzz' flies at you. But it's promising, still, because it's not a public-type Twitter, or a walled-off Facebook, but something else entirely.




Now that we've run down the three biggies above, give us your take:



Which Social Network Fits You Best?(survey software)


How would you revamp our chart of social network strengths and weaknesses? What did we get right, wrong, and miss entirely? We're open to your ideas, suggestions, and links, in the comments.


Ollie the bluebird/Twitterrific © The Iconfactory, used with permission.






"


Monday, February 15, 2010

The Economic Consequences of America’s Morality Police

The Economic Consequences of America’s Morality Police: "


There is a price to be paid for morality. Laws prohibiting alcohol, marijuana, same-sex marriages and gambling which promote community morals and standards also have another effect — a major loss of revenue from sales and taxes.



Click to Enlarge


The Economic Consequences of America's Morality Police


"





How Niche Search Engines Can Help Your Business

How Niche Search Engines Can Help Your Business: "


In recent years, several promising applications have begun to redefine Web search. One hot niche, if you will, is niche search. Although niche search engines like Technorati have been around for some time, a deluge of new search sites continue to refine the field.


From purses to podcasts, developers have built an engine to cover almost every category of product and service available. When you conduct a search on a niche search engine, you can find exactly what you’re looking for in a matter of seconds. Many such engines verify the quality of their results and pull from a variety of different sources, offering a one-stop shop for the niche you’re interested in. Sure beats sifting through hundreds of irrelevant or bogus results to find what you need.


Consumers clearly stand to gain from specialized results. But how can these smaller, targeted search engines benefit your business? In several ways:


They help people see your product or service.

If you have a website selling a product or service, a high rank on the right niche search engine can generate a lot of traffic. This is especially if the niche search engine in question is indexed by Google. For example, say you’re selling New Orleans Saints T-shirts. If you google the term, result #3 is a T-shirt from a niche search engines (Teenormous). If you have a high ranking on Teenormous, a T-shirt search engine, you have a vicarious high ranking on Google.


If you’ve ever tried fruitlessly to land on the first page of Google, or tried to advertise on a big search engine to make up for those low rankings, focusing on your niche presence could be much easier.


They make your ads more powerful.

Niche search engines target a predefined audience. If you advertise online, think of the benefit this may have for your conversions. Niche search engines target a predefined audience. You know who that audience is, so you can target your ads more effectively. If you’re a purse boutique, for example, running a Google AdWords ad on “purse” might land you a page 5 spot. If you target your ad to a niche search engine like the Trendy Purse, however, you’ll be more visible and more relevant.


They help you define your market’s competitive landscape.

A niche search engine can help you find who you’re competing against, and fast. Say you own a cafe in LA’s San Fernando Valley. A niche search engine like Goby will help you see exactly who else is out there, as well as what events they’re hosting today or this week. Niche search engines help take the guesswork out of your market.


If you haven’t incorporated niche search engines as a part of your overall marketing strategy, it might be time to start. Compilations like this one offer a good launching point.


"




Palestinian Na'vi Protest Separation Barrier

Palestinian Na'vi Protest Separation Barrier: "navi-protestors.jpg

This is a group of Palestinian Na'vi protesting a separation barrier Israel has in place. I actually have no idea what a separation barrier is. Unless it's anything like a restraining order, in which case DAMNIT JULIE YOU KNOW I WALK MY DOG ON THAT STREET.

The demonstrators also donned long hair and loincloths Friday for the weekly protest against the barrier near the village of Bilin.


They equated their struggle to the intergalactic one portrayed in the film.

Israel says the barrier is needed for its security. Palestinians consider it a land grab.

The 'Avatar' protest comes a day after the Israeli government began rerouting the enclosure to eat up less of the Palestinian village.


Did you know one time I dressed as a Smurf to protest my neighbor calling the cops every time he caught me stealing his electricity? I did. It wasn't very effective, but I did break a window and flood his basement with a garden hose when he was on vacation. Don't f*** with me, Gargamel!

Palestinian protesters pose as Na'vi from 'Avatar'
[thedailyitem]
and
Palestinians dressed as the Na'vi from the film Avatar stage a protest against Israel's separation barrier [telegraph]

Thanks to Victor, CRIME, Grace and Shawn34, who protest the old fashioned way: dressed as Klingons. Nanu-nanu."




Hobart Brown

Hobart Brown: "'Money doesn't always bring happiness. People with ten million dollars are no happier than people with nine million dollars.'"





Mick Jagger

Mick Jagger: "'It's all right letting yourself go as long as you can let yourself back.'"








Friday, February 5, 2010

Trust in Your Decision-Making Skills


FEBRUARY 5, 2010
Trust in Your Decision-Making Skills
Yes, knowledge is power, but too much knowledge can take away your power. When solving problems, many leaders gather an abundance of information and conduct in-depth analyses to give them what they hope are the right answers. This can lead to analysis paralysis or to data-driven, but illogical, answers. Often the best answers are educated guesses informed by your past experiences coupled with new information and insight. Don't put too much faith in information analysis alone, and don't disregard your decision-making skills. Remember to always check answers with your gut before acting.


Harvard Business Review more info here



Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Woma who inspires

There is a woman who inspires me everyday, she is simple, consider not so ordinary she is special, she has a radiance something that comes from her smile, her positive attitude, the way she looks at you. When I first met her i was like, wow "She is Crazy", see her everyday will be a challenge, I saw her and the first thing that came in my mind was she was intimidating, yes! I was scared of her. I didn't even wanted to look at her. Days went by and her crazy look, her intimidating look was turning into positiveness, accepting life as it is, laugh about everything made me realize they are people that share my same virtue. So intelligent, every day she teach me something new. She gave me strength, I am telling you, since the beginning i thought i would never see her after work. Things change in the time and sometimes it surprises you LESSON #1. Strong woman, pleasant light, candid, and positive lady, I am glad I can see her now everyday, and one day let her know how grateful I am to have met her and tell her she is an inspiration to make me better. Work would not be as fun as it is without her, she the one that keeps me coming and i am happy I can count on her as she can count on me.

Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Benvenuti in Seletti


Seletti an italian company have created this awesom chair for Pantone lovers. What color you want?



From: http://ping.fm/zszNj

Wednesday, January 6, 2010

Google Custom Search Engine

Google Custom Search Engine Management Bug http://ping.fm/XcgQb

Tuesday, January 5, 2010

How to Survive a Job That Makes You Miserable - You 2.0.10 - Lifehacker

The economy being it what it is, jobs aren't exactly growing on trees. If you're stuck in one you hate, here are a few ideas to make it bearable until something better comes along.

From: http://lifehacker.com/5440563/how-to-survive-a-job-that-makes-you-miserable?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+lifehacker%2Ffull+%28Lifehacker%29&utm_content=Google+Reader

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

Be Safe, In Style: Fashionable Safety Vests - Geekologie



Hi-Vis is a set of innovatively designed, highly-visible vest collection, specially designed for road side safety.

From: http://www.geekologie.com/2009/12/be_safe_in_style_fashionable_s.php

Why It's Better To Pretend You Don't Know Anything About Computers - The Oatmeal

Sometimes is better to look like Dumb

From: http://ping.fm/RrZb3

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Screw TweetDeck - Tweet By Fax

This is o funny, but at the same time you can tell grandma to start the vicious world of social networking

From: http://ping.fm/AgYsS

SEOmoz | 8 Predictions for SEO in 2010

The thing that capture me the most about this article are the Site Explorer & Linkdomain Disappearance... Gee technology is getting us very far..

From: http://ping.fm/rHRli

Monday, November 30, 2009

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Prehistoric Freak


A really cool Shirt From Threadless




Monday, November 16, 2009

Why You Need to Fail - Peter Bregman - HarvardBusiness.org

"We spend a lot of time and energy at work trying not to fail. However, most people describe their failures as an important part of learning and growing. Adapt a growth mindset and accept that failure is part of the process of skill development. People with a growth mindset feel smart when they're learning, not just when they're succeeding. Don't limit yourself to doing things that you know you can do — you won't grow that way. Instead, try things that are above your ability, set high goals that you aren't sure you can reach. You might surprise yourself and succeed — and if you don't, you'll learn something new".... keep reading more interesting post

From: http://ping.fm/lqj3g

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Monday, November 9, 2009

Would you buy print mag again?









Twitter Incorporates Retweeting (Beta Launch) - John Battelle's Searchblog




Retweeting is integrated in an elegant way, tweets that have been retweeted have a little cycled arrow icon, which identifies tweets that folks you've followed have retweeted. Another signal (as are Lists) that Twitter will be able to use as core data to drive its unique value. Watch that space, it's where Twitter will win (or lose)....

From: http://ping.fm/DzfC8

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

Aha Mobile, Inc.

Aha Mobile is an iPhone app that offers drivers location-based information and entertainment. A personally tailored audio stream not only provides up-to-the-minute traffic info, but also features "shouts"—15 second snippets recorded through the application by other drivers in the area. The idea is that drivers can help each other out by sharing reports on road conditions, extending the real-time connectivity that people have on Facebook or Twitter. Furthering the social element, drivers can belt out tunes in the Caraoke Room, or vent their road rage in the Bad Driver Shout Room.

From: http://ping.fm/4ZNKh

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

How To Use An Apostrophe - The Oatmeal


Awesome way to explain it

From: http://ping.fm/5UtcL

2009-11-02-98d3be4.png (PNG Image, 800x377 pixels)


Awesome picture of everybody's belt

From: http://ping.fm/xfIqS

The Google Story in 2 minutes...





When PCs Stand Out� | Business Pundit





From: http://ping.fm/8A4R5

Latest Data on Facebook�??s US Growth by Age and Gender �?? November 2, 2009

On the whole, Facebook’s US audience grew by 6.8% in October to 94.2 million uniques (compare to latest data from Quantcast, Compete, and comScore). Here’s how Facebook’s gender and sex numbers break down as of today: http://www.insidefacebook.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/facebook-november-2009-age-gender.png

From: http://www.insidefacebook.com/2009/11/02/latest-data-on-facebook%e2%80%99s-us-growth-by-age-and-gender-%e2%80%93-november-2-2009/

Monday, November 2, 2009

Worst cut to commercial ever

I was watching The Perfect Storm on The Weather Channel the other night and witnessed the worst cut to commercial in the history of television....

From: http://ping.fm/2tdZq
Zynga Takes Steps To Remove Scams From Games http://ping.fm/dPd3e
How To Spam Facebook Like A Pro: An Insider’s Confession
Last night we wrote about the lead generation scams within social gaming networks. This is a guest post by Dennis Yu, the CEO ...

http://ping.fm/UDjy0
@TheNextWeb: Digg: Google Wave open for federation! Yes, you can host the bad boy! http://su.pr/1D4HBm Tech IndustryNews GoogleWave

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Bagatelle Word of the Day

[bag'-ah-TEL] Play Word

1. something of little value or significance; trifle, fluff, frivolity: "We will not delay the meeting for this bagatelle, but I can discuss it with you afterwards."

2. a light piece of music for piano

3. a table game in which short cues are used to knock balls into holes that are guarded by wooden pegs; penalties are incurred if the pegs are knocked over; bar billiards


Origin:
Approximately 1637; French, from Italian bagatella, diminutive of bagata: little property; maybe from Latin baca: berry.



You are the CSS to my HTML T-Shirt




Do You Go to Google.com?

Do You Go to Google.com?

Posted using ShareThis

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

The best flag in the world

http://kottke.org/09/10/the-best-flag-in-the-world


Return to OZ: The Munchkins 70 YEars Later



PicApp Simplifies High-Quality Image Search With WordPress Integration

PicApp Simplifies High-Quality Image Search With WordPress Integration

Posted using ShareThis

Word of the Day - GEWGAW

[GOO-gaw']
1. a showy trifle; cheap showy jewelry; a bauble: "Carolyn's house is filled with gewgaws that she has gleaned from garage sales."

Origin:
Approximately 1225; from Old English 'gigawe,' 'gugawe,' 'gewgaude,' and possibly a reduplicated form of Anglo Saxon 'gifan': to give; also related to French 'joujou': plaything.

www.Vocabvitamins.com

Monday, October 5, 2009

Wednesday, September 30, 2009

Vintage Ads we will never see today



Griffin Microsheen (1957)
Advertising has drawn some bold connections over time, but I’m still at a loss as to how cleavage and shoe polish go together—or maybe that was the point. Somehow, I picture Mrs. Cleaver not allowing this particular brand in her home.





Mixed metaphors
I couldn’t help myself. The following ads are for everything from frankfurters to office projection equipment that had to have been over the top both now and then.














Click here to have more information about this post.

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

The future of TV

From 3D television units to interactive TV scheduling, we look at where is television is headed from now.

3D TV and interactive TV scheduling are changing the fact of television
Put your hand against the screen: scheduling will become interactive; it will be far more about the viewer than about the broadcaster

When the BBC broadcast its first public television signal – 80 years ago on Wednesday – the experience for viewers was utterly unlike that of 2009. John Logie Baird’s electromechanical system was housed in boxes that dominated rooms, yet now screens less than an inch thick hang on walls and “content” is broadcast, downloaded, streamed and even user-generated.

Television has come a long way, but does anyone know where it’s going? On this page we examine the key themes that will shape television, from digital switchover to 3D, but the over-arching debate about how television and technology will combine in the future centres on one thing: interactivity....

READ MORE HERE


Motivational Poster

Glenn Beck Struggles to (Weasel Out of Having to) Explain His "White Culture" Comment

Subliminal advertising really does work, claim scientists

Subliminal advertising really does work, claim scientists who found that people subconsciously respond to flashed messages - especially if they are negative.

Researchers found that briefly displaying words and images so quickly that people do not even consciously notice, does nevertheless change their thinking.

They found it was particularly effective with negative images and words which could alter a person’s mood. ...

Read more click here


Monday, September 28, 2009

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

A unique Wedding invite (i want one)


info from http://badbanana.typepad.com

Thursday, August 20, 2009

check twitter before yelling by DREA








http://www.businesspundit.com/check-twitter-before-yelling/

Sunday, May 3, 2009

Power ranger Tshirt


www.mypartyshirt.com

Paper bag


Info Click Here

Tea V

Tea V

I survived the Bush administration

I survived the Bush administration

Saturday, May 2, 2009

Calendar Scratch


Click here for more info

F the Economy Tshirt

More in click here

Polaroid Mirror

www.designboom.com

Saturday, April 25, 2009

casas pre fabricadas

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Saxsofunny

Café pelé


by Julie Pfligersdorffer

The handle of the espresso coffee cup is cut. This particular feature means that the cup can only hold very concentrated coffees.


More info here: www.industreal.it

This cushion is chocolate

New ! This cushion is chocolate perfumed !
We take great care to match the back with the front. The fabric of the back may therefore vary from one cover to the next.

More info : www.bonjourmoncoussin.com

Helvetic Pillow


Mission statement. Plain white pouf spells out black helvetica declarations that inspire us. 100% cotton, plain back. Feather-down insert; hidden zipper closure. Machine wash. Imported.

More info www.cb2.com

Lulu's shared items

Little Lulu Show Intro