Posts Tagged ‘ video

Can I Afford To Buy Twitter? 05 March 2010 at 8:25 pm by admin


Twitter is worth an estimated $1.5 billion. For most of us, it’s a figure that we simply cannot afford. However, if your name is Mark Z and you have $300 million in cash and $4 billion in Facebook stock, the story might be a little different. Still, Mark wasn’t sure if he could afford Twitter so he decided to call up financial guru Suze Orman during her “Can I afford it” segment to see if Miss Orman would approve of Mark spending $1.5 billion on the micro blogging platform.

Did Suze Orman approved or denied Mark’s request to buy Twitter? Watch the video to find out the answer.

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+ Keynote: Peter Norvig, Google By admin 03 March 2010 at 10:23 am and have No Comments

Last night’s SMX After Dark party was kickin’ — thanks Bing!

Oh, and get this. I left my iPhone at the BCI booth and they locked up the expo hall before I realized it. So last night I was feeling a little concerned. You know how it is when A) you don’t have your phone, and B) you think you know where it is, but you’re not sure, so you realize maybe you’re putting your hope in the wrong thing when really you should be looking elsewhere. Ugh!

Luckily the awesome SMX team worked some of their lovely magic and got the convention center security to let me in to get my phone. Thanks so much, Michelle Robbins, Karen DeWeese, and Santa Clara Convention Center Security! This is one happy, mobile-ready blogger!

Now on to the keynote! Peter Norvig, director of research at Google, is beyond impressive. He’s a search pioneer, an author, a rocket scientist and was an “adult partier” in the Nutcracker. And that isn’t even half of the accomplishments moderator Chris Sherman just rattled off. Google and their geniuses.

Keynote: Peter Norvig

Peter will start by presenting a number of Google’s research projects:

  1. Person Finder: really useful after natural disasters
  2. PowerMeter
  3. Earth Engine: shows deforestation of rain forests
  4. Trike and Snowmobile StreetView: taking StreetView to new frontiers
  5. User Photos in StreetView
  6. Image Swirl: see images related to each other
  7. Web-Scale Image Annotation
  8. Image Rotation Captcha: Instead of swirly, hard to read words, they’re experimenting with having users turn an upside-down picture, right-side up.
  9. Goggles: take a picture and get info on it
  10. Discontinuous Video Scene-Carving
  11. Sharing Cluster Data
  12. App Inventor for Android: introductory program development
  13. Speed Recognition
  14. Punctuation/Capitalization in Transcribed Speech
  15. Translating Phone: translate text, Web pages and documents
  16. Low-Resource MT: Yiddish: Some languages don’t have much written text examples, but they used languages that share attributes with Yiddish and were able to figure out translation
  17. Sound Understanding
  18. Google Squared
  19. Clustering
  20. Attribute Extraction
  21. Browser Size

“You can observe a lot just by watching.” -Yogi Berra

Now Danny Sullivan and Chris Sherman will be throwing out questions.

Q: What’s the biggest thing that came out of the 20 percent project?

One story is that both Gmail and Adsense were built by a Googler because he was frustrated he couldn’t search his e-mail. Machine translation is similar. And speech recognition has come so far since its original iteration.

Q: How hands-on are Google’s founders in 20 percent projects?

They’re still involved, but we don’t see them around as much. I don’t think they have their own 20 percent project because their jobs are pretty much 100 percent.

Q: Are your research facilities around the world separated by project or is it you just can’t fit everyone in Mountain View?

It’s both. Some projects you need to have people that are living in the language and culture. Also, sometimes we need more engineers and we can’t hire everyone from the same pool.

Q: What’s the most hyped technology development?

I think the emphasis is on the right place right now. Mobile emphasis is appropriate. Are we going to have hand-curated tags or be able to machine read the content? That’s going to be messy but I don’t think it’s overhyped any more.

PageRank is one thing that’s overhyped. Yes, the PageRank computation is important, but it’s just one of many things. It’s got the catchy name and the name recognition, but we’ve always looked at all the available data. The infrastructure that we built

Q: Is there a difference between core search vs. ads vs. other projects?

Yeah, in some sense there’s a separation of the house, just like at a newspaper they don’t let the ad department effect the editorial department.

Q: If you want to grow up to be a search engineer, how does someone do that? There’s no school for search engineering.

In other industries you can get trained at school and then step into the field quickly. When people are doing information retrieval in college and then come to Google, after a few months they’ll say, wow this is a whole different world than what I did in school. The books coming out now are getting better now, expanding from library science to search.

Q: What’s the training to become a Googler?

There’s a course they start with, then they get put on a starter project. They get experience and lots of help as they get their feet wet.

Q: Do people move around a lot at Google?

We encourage moving around. We try to keep projects short, three or six months. And you find that people will come up with a new idea as they’re working on a project that they want to develop once it’s over. The infrastructure of departments is parallel, which makes it easy to move around.

Q: Anything you’d like to know from our attendees?

How are we doing?

[The audience applauds!]

…I didn’t do this session justice. So much good stuff and my fingers aren’t awake yet or something. Thankfully there’s a whole slew of bloggers covering this session:

Keynote: Peter Norvig, Google was originally published on BruceClay.com, an SEO services company.

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+ The Mr. Rogers Guide to Blogging from the Heart By admin 26 February 2010 at 6:56 am and have No Comments

image of Fred Rogers

As bloggers, we put a lot of effort into telling our readers how to do things.

We believe that if we can just give them enough informative content that they’ll subscribe to our blog and never leave. We try to become the best teacher we possibly can, instilling wisdom down into short, usable posts that our readers can put into action right away.

But what if that’s not what they really want?

What if they don’t want a teacher to tell them what to do?

What if all they’re looking for is a warm and understanding person who understands what they’re going through and is willing to love them, no matter what?

Someone like (you guessed it) Mr. Rogers.

Do you care how they feel?

Being a kid can be tough.

Everyone is always telling you to be quiet. No one wants to listen to what you think. Your parents make you go to bed, just when all of the fun is starting.

But not Mr. Rogers.

Fred Rogers made you feel like it was just you and him hanging out. He respected what you thought. He loved you, not because he had to (like your parents), but because he genuinely believed you were special.

After a while, you believed him. You felt special. You came back to the TV, day after day, just so you could feel that way again.

The best bloggers do that too. I read Copyblogger everyday for years before submitting this guest post, and it wasn’t just the information that kept me coming back. It was because, when I was done reading, it made me feel smarter, like I was one of the few people on the web who was truly in the know.

The more I think about it, the more I believe that’s a part of our job. Our job is bloggers isn’t just to inform our readers, but to make them feel special.

And yes, I realize it’s a little hokey, but I think Mr. Rogers can show us how. Listen to some of these quotes:

Lesson: For your audience to love you, first you have to love them. And they have to know it.

You know, I think everybody longs to be loved, and longs to know that he or she is lovable. And, consequently, the greatest thing that we can do is to help somebody know that they’re loved and capable of loving.

How much do you care about your readers? I mean, really care?

Mr. Rogers didn’t just talk to children on television. He also visited them in person. On a regular basis, he would go out into public and ask kids about themselves. He would bend down and look little boys and girls straight in the eyes, so they knew he was fully focused on them. Then they poured their hearts out to him right on the spot.

No, he wasn’t compensated for that time, and neither are we. Most popular bloggers spend inordinate amounts of time reading every comment, responding to every email, and watching what people say on Twitter. None of this has any direct effect on traffic, but what it does is build goodwill. One at a time, your subscribers find out that you really care, and it transforms them from readers into raving fans.

Lesson: Before you can be a leader, first you have to be a neighbor.

Our world hangs like a magnificent jewel in the vastness of space. Every one of us is a part of that jewel. A facet of that jewel. And in the perspective of infinity, our differences are infinitesimal.

Mr. Rogers didn’t pretend to be better than the children who watched his show. He didn’t point out how young and ignorant they were. He didn’t appoint himself as an expert and command them to listen.

Instead, he decided to be their neighbor: someone just like them, who knew what they were going through, and was ready to help in any way he could, not because they were defenseless children, but because that’s what good neighbors do.

The same is true for bloggers. If you really want your audience to listen to you, you need to take the time to tell them your story, pointing out the ways you’re similar to them and inspiring them through your example.

Lesson: Create an environment where it’s okay to be imperfect.

I like you just the way you are.

Most kids are terrified, not just of getting caught with their hand in the cookie jar or their parents finding a bad grade on their report card, but of the possibility that they’ll do something so bad that their family will stop loving them. They believe that love is only for “good” children, and they worry that they don’t deserve it.

This quote was Mr. Rogers’ gentle way of correcting (and comforting) them. Over and over again, he would tell them that, “I like you just the way you are,” not just because it sounded good, but because it was what they needed to hear. They needed to know that love wasn’t conditional, and that they were safe enough around him to make mistakes and learn how to improve.

I believe it’s important for us to create the same environment for our readers. You may not realize it, but lots of your readers are probably intimidated by you, believing that they can never be as good as you are, and they’re afraid to reach out to you for help.

It’s important to remind them that you like them just the way they are. Maybe you don’t have to tell them as often as Mr. Rogers, but take a moment every few weeks to mention how impressed you are with the creative ways they’ve implemented your suggestions and how are honored you are to have them as readers.

It’s a small thing, but it matters.

Lesson: Keep what works, throw out what doesn’t, but always know what and why.

Propel, propel, propel your craft softly down liquid solution. Ecstatically, ecstatically, ecstatically, ecstatically, existence is simply illusion.

Every day, Mr. Rogers honed his craft, paying attention to even the smallest of details.

One time, he asked a fellow actor to say “the dog is going back home” instead of “the dog is going back to his owner.” He didn’t like the word owner because it was too possessive for the children viewers.

He also stuck with what worked. “Won’t you be my neighbor?” wasn’t just the theme song for the show; it was a way to set the tone at the beginning of every episode, getting children ready to listen. And so he repeated it, show after show for years.

It’s our responsibility as bloggers to hone our craft in the same way. You should experiment, not just with headlines or post ideas, but with new openings, new closes, new pictures, and even new words. It’s how you improve.

And at the same time, take a lesson from Fred Rogers and don’t be afraid to repeat what works.

Lesson: Seize your opportunity

When will your opportunity be?

Every day that communicate from the heart, you have a chance to change the world.

Back in 1969, Nixon proposed cuts to PBS, leading the Senate to hold a hearing that would decide the future of the station. And who do you think appeared before them and melted their hearts with words?

Mr. Rogers.

He wasn’t the CEO. He wasn’t a Washington insider. He wasn’t even well-known to the committee. Yet he showed up, spoke from the heart, and transformed some of the toughest, most hardened politicians in the country into raving fans.

It was the opportunity to create change that many of us dream of, and he seized it. But here’s the real question:

When will your opportunity be?

Watch this video, and think about it. Because when it comes, we’ll be counting on you.

About the Author: Karl Staib writes about building stronger relationships and being happy at work: Work Happy Now! If you enjoyed this article, you may like to subscribe to his feed, follow him on Twitter, or read one of his most popular articles: How to Write a Career List.


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+ Check out this preview of the Scribe SEO web-based application By admin 25 February 2010 at 12:54 pm and have No Comments

image of Scribe logo

This is a quick reminder that the Scribe introductory offer, where you get our most advanced plan for the Starter price, ends tomorrow, Friday, February 26, 2010, at 6:00 pm Central.

But I also wanted to share a video with you. It was created for current Scribe customers to let them know what’s coming next month, but I’m going to hook you up too.

It’s a preview of the Scribe web-based application. So while you can use Scribe right in your WordPress interface, you will also be able to use this web-based version to analyze any content before posting it online on any platform. Or analyze and optimize older content for any platform. Total freedom.

This is especially useful for professional web writers who create content for clients. The Scribe web version even generates an SEO analysis report that you can deliver to your clients along with the content.

This video preview was made by Sean Jackson (one of the technology ninjas behind Scribe) for our current customers. So trust me, it’s not a sales pitch. But it’s very useful for getting an idea how the Scribe web-based application works.

And if you decide to hop on board tomorrow with our great introductory offer, you’ll get Scribe Web during your very first month as a customer at no extra charge. You’ll also get every other version of Scribe we develop, all inclusive.

Check out the video preview of the Scribe web-based version here.

About the Author: Brian Clark is founder of Copyblogger and wants you to know that Thesis + Scribe = SEO Made Simple. Get more from Brian on Twitter.


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+ Welcome To Yahoo! FANcouver By admin 20 February 2010 at 10:05 am and have No Comments


Our Vancouver 2010 Olympic adventure continues with a trip down to Yaletown to check out the Yahoo! FANcouver welcome center. Yahoo! seems to be the only Internet based company to have a presence in the Olympics. Their welcome center had a broadcast station, free wifi, hot chocolate and coffee, photo stations and rolls of iMac to check your Gmail Yahoo! Mail.

The Yahoo! FANcouver center is located at the site of the old Mini Yaletown (1039 Hamilton Street). I mistakenly said that Mini went under and Yahoo! took over the location. That was not the case. Mini Yaletown moved to a temp location during the Games.

When I went to check my email on one of the public iMacs, I discovered that the last user forgot to log out of her Gmail account. I had complete access to it. let this video serve as a reminder to always log out when using any public computers.

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+ More Sights and Sounds of Vancouver 2010 By admin 18 February 2010 at 7:45 pm and have No Comments


The Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics is well under way and the city is just buzzing with activities. Even if you don’t take in a single Olympic event, there is just so much to see and do right now. Here’s a few more videos and photos from around downtown Vancouver.

The first video was taken at the Royal Canadian Mint Pavilion. You already saw the pictures of the $1 million coin. Now you can watch the video. The second video shows the Olympic cauldron. I have a great view of the cauldron from my house in West Vancouver. However, the flame looks even better when you’re only 100 feet from it. The BBC was filming at the cauldron when we got there and it seems I got on some BBC news broadcast (I was filming them while they were filming me).

Vancouver 2010

The lantern display on Granville Street. The street was sealed off from cars.

Vancouver 2010

The world’s biggest Canada flag. It draped two sides of a 12 stories building.

Vancouver 2010

The line up to get into the Royal Canadian Mint Pavilion was over two hours long.

Vancouver 2010

Sally Chow dancing inside the Royal Canadian Mint Pavilion.

Vancouver 2010

The Olympic cauldron looks a lot like Superman’s fortress of solitude.

Vancouver 2010

Sally and her Grandparents in front of the cauldron. You can see the BBC doing their news broadcast from behind the fence.

Vancouver

The Olympic cauldron from my home in West Vancouver. I have the best view in the world!

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+ How To Do Paid Social Media Marketing Right By admin 08 February 2010 at 3:20 pm and have No Comments


An increasing number of social media websites are finding that the only real way to structure advertisements so that they have any significant ROI for sponsors is to integrate them into the social nature of the website itself. StumbleUpon did this through the use of “paid stumbles” where they charged $.05 a visitor from the StumbleUpon toolbar and Digg rolled out a similar program soon after showcasing “sponsored stories” amongst the other submissions on the home page.

If you are going to pay to advertise on social media websites, this is the way it is to be done. This is the only way to force readers to seriously consider clicking on your “advertisement” as it is essentially part of the content, essentially being the key word. To retain any sort of credibility, any social media website adopting such advertising forms will display a visible, although often times discrete, “sponsored post” message to let users know the link is an ad. However, since the ad is part of the content, users can’t help but to take notice of it and thus if intrigued they will click. This is a far cry from traditional sidebar banner advertisements which many users will glance over without any consideration.

The key to successful social media marketing through the purchase of paid advertisements is discretion. Simply getting users to read your ad isn’t enough, you need them to click through. This is especially true for sites like Digg where the ad is featured in a list of links people are looking to click on. The traditional 5% click through ratio does not apply here. Social media users hate advertisements so how does one go about promoting a product in this form? Through NOT trying to make a sale.

The moment your social media submission focuses to discussing prices or making a purchase, you have lost the potential visitor. Instead, you need to focus on what value you can add to the visitor assuming they won’t buy anything, while EDUCATING them about your product so that they can if they are interested.

The best way to see this is through an example so take a look at two recent sponsored posts on Digg. One, an advertisement for Virgin Atlanic airlines reads, “Bubbly Low Fares from $49” with a description that says, “Fly in style with WiFi, movies, on demand food and drinks, and more–all for a fabulously low fare”, while another for the HTC Google phone reads, “Who Knows You Better than your Phone” with a description that says, “See you from the perspective of your phone”. The Virgin Atlantic post has amassed 250 Diggs, while the HTC ad has done twice as well, generating over 575 diggs and 360,000 views on YouTube.

Why? Simple, Virgin Atlantic was simply trying to sell its product and even with the popularity of the brand in the tech community, its ad was not as highly rated as the HTC ad that took the reader to a cleverly put together short video on YouTube which served as the video advertisement for the company’s phone. The HTC ad also allowed the user to interact with the brand on two social media sites, Digg and YouTube, where the user could view and subscribe to the official HTC channel.

Here is more information on the most effective marketing techniques for start-ups .

This post was written by Aditya Mahesh, founder of AMBeat.com, one of the web’s most popular entrepreneurship blogs.

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+ Make Money Online with DirectCPV By admin 05 February 2010 at 11:07 am and have No Comments


What Is CPV?

CPV stands for Cost Per View (it also goes by the name PPV – Pay Per View) and is one of the fastest growing advertising channels for affiliate marketers. Unlike the CPC model pioneered by Google, which charges you per ad click, the CPV model charges you every time someone views your site or landing page. For affiliate marketers, the CPV advertising model has been a gold mind and a well kept secret.

I discovered Cost Per View traffic about two years ago when I was on the Top Affiliate Challenge reality show. Johnathon Van Clute, the winner of the challenge, was using CPV traffic to generate over $4,000 per day of income from affiliate offers. Since then, I’ve been using CPV traffic to promote affiliate offers.

One of the CPV networks I deal with is DirectCPV. They’re a local company with offices in downtown Vancouver. DirectCPV is unique in that they allow advertisers with smaller budgets. You can set up an account with only a $100 deposit. Other CPV networks want you to spend at least $10,000 a month before they even talk to you. It’s because of this high deposit limit and highly selective nature of the networks that have kept CPV traffic as a secret society. DirectCPV is hoping to change all that.

Advantage of CPV Over CPC

The biggest advantage of CPV over CPC is cost. CPV is a lot less expensive. While the minimum bid on Google AdWords is 5 cents (and good luck getting that), you can start a CPV campaign for a low as 1 cent for targeted and only 0.4 cent for a run of network (RON). If you were running an email submit offer that pays $2, you would need to get 1 in 40 submitting their email in order to break even with a 5 cents CPC Google ads. However, with DirectCPV, you would only need 1 person out of 200 submitting in order to break even. If you’re using RON traffic, the number increases to 1 in 500!

Another advantage of CPV is there’s no need to worry about a quality score and you can direct link to the offer page in most cases. Your landing page will also be the first thing viewed because it pop up over anything else. This video explains how it all works.

Use Code JCH30 For $30 Bonus

Unlike other CPV networks, DirectCVP requires only a $100 deposit to start a campaign. However, if you enter JCH30 when you make your deposit, they’ll credit your account with an extra $30. It doesn’t cost anything to sign up for DirectCPV but you must deposit at least $100 before you can use the service. This is a very inexpensive way to test a new traffic source and you’ll get a $30 bonus to boot.

Sign Up For DirectCPV

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+ Should I Switch To YouTube As My Default Video Player? By admin 21 January 2010 at 1:10 pm and have No Comments


For the past year, John Chow dot Com has used Vimeo as its default for embedded video. The main reason for doing this is Vimeo allows HD embedding while the other video services does not. I’m starting to see comments that say the Vimeo service runs very slow for some readers and they’ve asked me to switch to YouTube. I should note that all my videos are available on YouTube, I just choose to embed Vimeo on the blog because it’s in HD 720p by default. However, YouTube recently allowed viewers the ability to choose their resolution on videos embedded on a web page. The default is 320p but you can easily change it to 480p or 720p if the video was filmed in those resolutions.

From a marketing standpoint, it would be better to use YouTube as the default player. The video views racked up by Vimeo would go to YouTube and that will give the clip a much higher chance of being a YouTube featured video. The other advantage of switching to YouTube is it’s free. Vimeo cost $59.95 a year and they don’t allow commercial content.

What do you guys think? Should I switch to YouTube as the blog’s default video player or should I remain at Vimeo. Please vote and leave your comment. I’ve included a sample video from YouTube and Vimeo so you can see the difference in video quality.

Note: There is a poll embedded within this post, please visit the site to participate in this post’s poll.

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+ Affiliate Summit West 2010 – The Show Floor By admin 19 January 2010 at 11:21 pm and have No Comments

Affiliate Summit West Show Floor


The show floor of the 2010 Affiliate Summit West is where all the action is. With a record breaking attendance of 4,125, the 2010 Summit was the biggest show to date. The show floor was buzzing with activities on the first day with over 100 booths competing to get the attention of the show goers.

Pretty much any company that has anything to do with the affiliate marketing industry in here. It’s a great way to catch up with some of the affiliate networks that I deal with and meet new ones. When it come to building relationships, face to face networking is still where it’s at and a show like the Affiliate Summit is a great place to do it. The show floor gets filled very quickly. The best time to visit is right at opening time.

The following video gives you an idea on what the show floor is like. As you will see, attending an Affiliate Summit is a lot of fun. Companies featured in the video include Clickbank, Market Leverage, AzoogleAds, Clickbooth, Affiliate.com, Copeac, RevenueAds, DirectCPV, CityMax.com and Share A Sale.

Affiliate Summit West Show Floor

Affiliate Summit West Show Floor

Affiliate Summit West Show Floor

Affiliate Summit West Show Floor

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