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LEAKED: First Shots of iPhone Nike+ Interface [Nike+]

19 Aug
Mark Wilson via Gizmodo shared by 4 people

We've known that Nike+ has long been in development for the iPhone. Now we're finally getting a peek at the first shots of the interface. From what we can skim, Nike+ users will get all of the nifty performance graphs right on the phone (before this stuff was available on the web only). But the biggest improvement over the old Nike system may be Google Maps support:

We don't know just how robust the Nike+ maps support will be, but mapping routes directly on the iPhone could make for more organized training sessions. If only we had the coordination to use the iPhone's touch interface while running. Hell, if only we had the coordination to run. Hit the link for a lot more shots. [iPhone.fr via Ubergizmo]


 
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I tried to care, but you would not shut up.

19 Aug
Jessica Hagy via indexed shared by 4 people

www.indexed.blogspot.com
 
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Examining The Internet’s Top Blogs: What We Can Learn From Their Success

19 Aug
Danny Dover via SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog shared by 5 people

Posted by Danny Dover

Everyday a fiercely competitive battle takes place online over capturing the attention of millions of readers. As a result the blogosphere constantly changes shape and different players thrust forward as content kings for the day. Lately, I have been trying to find out what forces control this volatile scene. I have been looking for recurring themes and hoping to find useful correlations.

Last Friday, (August 15th, 2008) I took a snapshot of the Internet’s top blogs. This freeze frame identifies the blogs that have developed the skills necessary to compete. Unlike traditional top blog lists, I did not seek to place blogs in order of perceived importance. Instead, I combined public lists of top blogs ordered by the amount of inlinks (Technorati), amount of community subscriptions (Bloglines), ability to start and follow trends (BlogPulse) and the ability to thrive in foreign markets (Wikio). I then weighed each individual blog against its all encompassing internet performance using SEOmoz’s Trifecta Tool. The result is a list of blogs that have proven to be powerful in all aspects of Internet success.

Top Blogs Spreadsheet


Download the Complete Spreadsheet Here:

CSV   EXCEL   PDF


My hope is that by analyzing what all of these blogs have in common, I can learn how to become a better internet citizen and participant. Simultaneously I want to share my findings and gain additional insight by learning from all of your unique perspectives and experiences. I have already identified some common traits and trends below and I look forward to learning more from all of you.

Big Corporations Don't Dominate, Yet...

Ownership of Top 100 Blogs

Of the 100 proven blogs in my sample, 66% were self owned. This leads me to believe that blogging is still dictated by ability rather than budget.

Top 50 Blogs vs Top 50 Domains

This shows the ownership consolidation of ownership for the top 50 blogs compared to the top 50 websites. Although there is a remarkable amount of popular independently owned blogs, the ownership of popular blogs overall is heavily consolidated.  (Top 50 Websites Source)


Branding That Works

Blog title Conventions

76% of the top blogs titles contain only one or two words. (Not including 'The') This reinforces the idea that when it comes to marketing it is best to keep it simple.

Top Level Domain of Blogs

86% of the top blog Top Level Domains were the traditional dot com. This doesn't mean that there are not notable exceptions, but it does allude to importance of sticking with conventions.

Think the Market is Over Saturated? Think Again

Primary Subject of Blogs

There are already established paths to success. The interesting insights from diving into the niches.

Technology Niche of Blogs

Every subject has many niches. Success can come from any one of them.


Its as Much About Who One Writes for as it is About Who is Doing the Writing

Number of Blog Authors

Can't do it all by yourself? Neither can the experts. 80% of the top blogs have more than one primary writer.

Gender Focus

I interpret this as supply rather than demand. Blogs catering to women will likely find audiences much more easily than the over saturated male oriented market.

Blog Country of Orgin

95% of the Internet's top blogs are based in the United States. Yet, the potential audience abroad dwarfs the current American audience. Why?

It is my hope that others will be able to learn from my research. If I have learned only one thing about this industry, it is that online there is always more opportunity than one person could ever possibly need. By pooling resources and cooperating, I think we can beat the battle that takes place in the blogosphere and receive the mutual benefits that come with the victory.




Graphs created in Apple Numbers.

 If you are an experienced blogger, feel free to share your opinions and expertise in the comments. This post is very much a work in progress. As always, feel free to e-mail me or send me a private message if you have any suggestions on how I can make my posts more useful. Thanks!

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Install a Water-Saving Shower Shut Off Valve [Step By Step]

18 Aug
Jason Fitzpatrick via Lifehacker shared by 4 people


A small addition to your shower head can save you time, money, and water: a simple shut off valve can toggle the water flow off and on without undoing your carefully-calibrated mix of hot and cold on the faucet itself. When you want to save water (and money on your water bill), you can quick switch off the water while you soap up or leave conditioner in using a shower head shut off valve. Last summer we covered how the Navy Shower prevents waste water and decreases your water bill. A shut off valve can have the same effect, and it's dead simple to install. Here's how I did it in my shower.

First, here are the tools you need:



2008-08-17_191604.jpgOne shower shut off valve, one roll of Teflon pipe tape, and one pair of vice grip pliers. The total cost of this project was $5, the cost of the valve itself. A small roll of Teflon tape is about a $1 if you don't have any on hand. On the right, a better photo of what the valve itself looks like.


You may or may not need the vice grip pliers. I have needed them in the past when removing stubborn plumbing fixtures, though this time the fixture wasn't as stubborn as I anticipated. If you do use them, make sure to wrap a wash cloth or something similar around the fitting if you want to protect the finish of the fixture from the teeth of the pliers. Here is the fixture I modified:



All it took to remove the fixture was a firm grip, thanks in part to the Teflon tape I had wrapped the pipe thread in when I originally installed it. Here is where the vice grips come in handy if years of mineral accumulation and rust have locked up the connection.



Teflon tape isn't the sturdiest stuff in the world and removing the shower head shredded the tape that was on the pipe. I peeled it off with my finger nails pretty easily, but if your threading is gunkier a stiff wire brush might be in order. While you've got the shower head off, it's a perfect time to descale the fixture if you've got hard water.


We've trumpeted the uses of vinegar in the bathroom before showing you how to get the mildew smell out of towels with it, but in this case we're going to steal a trick from the kitchen: descaling a coffee machine with vinegar. Find a container large enough to hold the shower head (or just use the sink) and throw the fixture in. Pour vinegar in until the shower head is fully submerged and leave it while you work.


Once you have cleaned up the threading, wrap a few layers of Teflon tape on the threads. Don't overdo it; More than a few thin layers of the Teflon and the tape tends to just bunch up and tear itself free when you put the fixture on. It's important to wrap the Teflon tape firmly around the threading following the direction of the threading. This way when you screw the fixture back on to the threading, turning the fixture will help tighten the tape down into the threading instead of making a mess of it.



Once you've got the main pipe wrapped in Teflon tape you can screw the valve into place. It shouldn't be necessary to do more than tighten the fixture by hand. Extra force with tools will just make it more difficult to get off in the future. Wrap the male threading on the shut off valve the same way you did with the threading on the main pipe. Rinse off the shower head if it's soaking in vinegar and then screw it onto the shut off valve.



While you may not use your valve for the extreme water conservation that comes with a true Navy Shower, you'll be able to properly lather up and scrub in a small shower without resorting to contortionist tricks.


 
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Miniature cattle – family pets that provide milk

18 Aug
Mark Frauenfelder via Boing Boing shared by 6 people

200808181117.jpg

The Times Online reports on the Dexter cattle breed, “the world’s most efficient, cutest and tastiest cows."

For between £200 and £2,000, people can buy a cow that stands no taller than a large German shepherd dog, gives 16 pints of milk a day that can be drunk unpasteurised, keeps the grass “mown” and will be a family pet for years before ending up in the freezer.

The Dexter, a mountain breed from Ireland, is perfect for cattle-keeping on a small scale, but other breeds are being artificially created to compete with it, including the Mini-Hereford and the Lowline Angus, which has been developed by the Australian government to stand no more than 39in high but produce 70% of the steak of a cow twice its size.

Just right for the garden: a mini-cow (via Arbroath)

 
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Olympic logo cops enforce stupid rules with masking tape

18 Aug
(author unknown) via Boing Boing shared by 5 people

Shared by Nick
oooh, the logos, my eyes are burning!!!

ah, thank you olympics. i feel better now.
Marilyn sez, "Olympic logo police workers are tasked with vigilantly going around all facilities and putting masking tape over the logos for any product where the company is not an official sponsor.

7 To ensure that only the companies that pay millions of dollars to be official Olympic sponsors enjoy the benefits of exposure in Olympic venues, organizers have covered the trademarks of nonsponsors with thousands of little swatches of tape.

In media centers, dormitories and arena bathrooms, pieces of tape cover logos of fire extinguishers, light switches, thermostats, bedroom night tables, soap dispensers and urinals. The Taiden Industrial translation headsets in a large conference room have had their logos covered, as have the American Standard faucets in the bathrooms nearby, and the ThyssenKrupp escalators down the hall.

At the Athens games, people wearing logoed t-shirts were asked to remove them or turn them inside-out before entering the stadia. Nothing says "incorruptible international competition" like a bunch of bullshit rules about what your t-shirt is allowed to say and whether an elevator can display its manufacturer's mark. Ignore That Logo Under the Tape! (Thanks, Marilyn!)

 
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How Are Enterprise 2.0 Vendors Pitching Web 2.0? Using Wordle to Find Out

18 Aug
Hutch Carpenter via I'm Not Actually a Geek shared by 7 people


Recently, a website called Wordle debuted. What is Wordle? You can think of it as similar to a tag cloud, except Wordle analyzes words, not tags. You can see people’s blog Wordles on FriendFeed. Wordles are only graphics - you can’t use them for navigation.

A nice use of Wordles is that you can quickly pick up the pulse of a website. Higher word counts show up as larger fonts, the way tag clouds do.

I wondered what enterprise 2.0 vendors are talking about now. We’re a couple years into the introduction of the term “enterprise 2.0“, made popular by Harvard professor Andrew McAfee. The market is still young, but a decent number of companies have entered the space. Given that they’re selling to corporate customers every day, I was curious as to how their message has evolved.

So I “Wordled” the websites of the following ten enterprise 2.0 vendors:

  1. Jive Software
  2. SocialText
  3. Connectbeam (my company)
  4. Atlassian Confluence
  5. Six Apart Movable Type
  6. Newsgator
  7. Traction Software
  8. Near-Time
  9. SpikeSource SuiteTwo
  10. Worklight

I focused on these pages for the vendors: home page, product pages, “about” page. Let’s see what’s going on out there.

Ten Enterprise 2.0 Vendors’ Wordle

For the Wordle, I removed company and product names to keep it focused on themes.

So looking at this Wordle, what do we see?

Content and information get a lot of play, while knowledge shows up less often in the messaging. That seems about right, doesn’t it? Knowledge is information that you’ve internalized. Well, enterprise 2.0 should help people with that task. Still, it does seem that the focus is on the inputs (content, information), not the outcome (knowledge).

Search shows up a lot. If you’re familiar with the enterprise 2.0 philosophy, creating and finding the good stuff that is locked up in workers’ heads is a key value proposition. Search as a basis for let workers’ connect with one another makes sense.

If search is the leading use case, what’s the next one? Collaboration. Very much in keeping with the web 2.0 ethos. After that, we see learn and networking as important use cases.

Note that RSS is only slightly bigger than email. A good acknowledgment of what the leading application in the enterprise continues to be.

Social as a top word is no surprise. Isn’t that the premise? Community falls in a similar vein.

Two other words I found interesting: can and new. Can is very much in keeping with the spirit of enterprise 2.0. Companies continue along the adoption curve, but there’s lot of opportunity out there. So emphasizing what you can do is in keeping with the state of the market. New has a similar vibe. The sector is continually iterating and innovating. Web 2.0 moves fast, and vendors have to be nimble to keep up.

Finally, note that Microsoft and SharePoint show up in the Wordle, but not Oracle, SAP or IBM. In terms of incumbent corporate software, Microsoft is the most pervasive and has enterprise 2.0 aspects with the collaborative features of its SharePoint application. As InformationWeek notes:

SharePoint dominates collaboration.

Companies’ use of SharePoint and the importance of Microsoft to the enterprise ecosystem is seen in the Wordle.

There are probably other interesting things to be gleaned from this Wordle. What do you see?

 
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Google Poll: According to Scientists…

18 Aug
Philipp Lenssen via Google Blogoscoped shared by 4 people

According to scientists:

  • New data could help Canada stake claim to a highly disputed area of the Arctic seabed
  • People can see the future
  • An octopus has only six arms
  • Ugly Betty will never come out on top
  • Dogs pick up yawning from their owners
  • Neanderthals and modern humans shared an ancient ancestor who lived about 660,000 years ago
  • Elderly people should take probiotic supplements
  • Only about 20 percent of the energy stored in a car’s gas tank is available to propel the vehicle
  • The North Pole may be completely ice-free later this summer as global warming melts Arctic ice
  • Only 4% of the total energy density in the universe can be accounted for
  • Chlorine is one of the most toxic natural elements
  • The gingerols in Aframomum are related to the properties in ginger that prevent nausea
  • The very first organisms to dare engage in sex were more like Adam and Steve than Adam and Eve
  • The Sun is pretty big; the Moon, however, is not so big
  • Men are not going extinct
  • Comets are balls of ice and rock made of debris left over from the formation of the outer planets some 4.6 billion years ago
  • A human brain is capable of processing an enormous amount of information
  • The mosquito alone spreads more disease and causes more health problems for more people than any other single entity
  • Humans may have occupied Oregon’s diverse landscapes for more than 15,000 years
  • Electromagnetic field hypersensitivity currently affects about 3% of the population
  • Holbox has the highest concentration of whale sharks in the world
  • Mosses once grew and insects crawled in what are now barren valleys in Antarctica
  • A total solar eclipse will occur on August 1, 2008 and it can be witnessed from the entire territory of Vietnam
  • Meandering streams occur when a flowing river or stream cannot dig its channel any deeper as if it flows over
  • As the beam containing the song propagates across the universe, the signal could theoretically be picked up by anyone or anything with the right equipment
  • Kangaroo farts are fighting global warming, thanks to a special bacteria in their stomachs
  • 4,500,000,000 years ago our little planet was born
  • The latest findings indicate that Earth is warming faster than at any time in the last 10,000 years
  • The husks of the cocoa beans that chocolate is made from contains an antibacterial agent that fights plaque
  • A positive outlook is not enough
  • At least 52 new species of animals and plants have been identified this past year on the island of Borneo
  • Conservationists should become palm oil farmers themselves
  • The world’s chocolate supplies are under serious threat
  • The Mars Phoenix lander uncovers ice
  • California at the time had the dirtiest air in the nation, and today, 90 percent of Californians still breathe unhealthful air
  • Wild flowers could provide environmentally friendly biofuel
  • A daily dose of yummy dark chocolate may help patients suffering from the chronic fatigue syndrome
  • Hidden talents can be stimulated using magnetism
  • Water cooling beats air-cooled systems
  • Birds have the right equipment for emotion

[By Philipp Lenssen | Origin: Google Poll: According to Scientists... | Comments]


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Cameesa: A Threadless where customers are also investors

15 Aug

It's no secret I'm a fan of Web T-shirt shops. This time last year I rounded up 20 different online shops that specialize in selling the cotton wonders, but few of those were as interesting as Cameesa.

Like many online T-shirt operations, everything on Cameesa is designed by freelancers who submit their stuff with the hopes of making a buck and getting some recognition. These designs (once approved by human editors) go into a pool where shoppers can pick out a shirt they want; the only catch is that they've got to invest in it so Cameesa can scrap together enough money to get it printed.

Designs have 31 days to get funded, and any investors who fund a failing design get their money back. If a design is completely funded, the 20 benefactors get the first run of the shirt and a small cut of future sales. The designer gets $500 and a free print of his or her shirt. From then on, anyone who comes by Cameesa can freely purchase that shirt like they would any other shop--seeding the dividends to the initial investors.

The shop currently has three shirts that have gotten over the funding hump. Meanwhile, the upcoming pool is filled with a handful of really good-looking designs that can be sorted by date or what needs the most funding. Because of the slim selection I'll still likely stick to places like Neighborhoodies which pumps out 200 new designs every month, and Shirt.Woot.com which has a new shirt every day for $10 shipped. Neither of those have nearly as cool of a business opportunity for the buyers, though.

Artists and shirt investors can make a buck or two off a hot design with Cameesa, a crowd-funded online T-shirt shop.

(Credit: Cameesa)
 
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Street View throws Japan for a loop

14 Aug

Does Google know judo? Maybe. Google Street View has pulled a sutemi--a judo throw in which you launch yourself at the ground, risking disadvantage, to topple your opponent--on the entire Floating Kingdom. Even though Japan knew that the controversial Google Street View was coming to Japan, the tech savvy country was caught off-guard by Google's willingness to involve itself in yet another privacy imbroglio.

A photo shoot in Japan, captured by Google Street View.

(Credit: Google)

The pattern is familiar. Cars mounted with the Google Street View cameras scoot through a neighborhood, taking 360-degree shots of all they surveil. When the feature finally goes live, amused Netizens find images of people in compromising positions, while others decry the end of innocence--uh, privacy.

In Japan earlier this week, the real-world Google Street View effect saw images of two high-school lovebirds playing dentist, a photo shoot in a park, a person collapsed or asleep in a street, the wife of a CEO of a major Internet services company, and the expected shots of couples entering love hotels, which is basically a motel with hourly rates and vibrating beds. The irony of this is that the Japanese are often obsessive about their privacy and ''saving face'' can often be taken literally, where people will cross their arms in a big X in front of their bodies or faces when you threaten an unwanted photograph. When I was living there, I even had a shop owner come out and demand that I not take a photo of the exterior of his trendy shoe store. That's quite a different attitude from what we experience in the U.S., and ironic given the popularity of photography there.

An uncontroversial bird caught in flight by Google Street View in Japan.

(Credit: Google)

On message boards, the debate has mirrored that of other countries, from the expected, ''new technology is ruining our way of life,'' to a bear-hugged embrace of finally being able to see what the place you're supposed to be going to looks like. That's no small accomplishment in Tokyo's notorious neighborhoods, where warrens of streets zig, zag, and loop back upon themselves seemingly without logic.

Still, Japanese IT professional Osamu Higuchi was so horrified by Street View that he wrote an open letter to Google explaining how it has acted out of disregard for local standards and could encourage more crime. He called the effects of Street View ''evil.'' Heavy stuff.

Despite being a country with one of the lowest per-capita crime rates anywhere in the world, Japan's media is obsessed with reporting on any change that could lead to an increase. As such, Higuchi's letter isn't surprising. His concerns that laundry left out to dry and car parking spaces revealed in Japan's densely packed and often-empty-during-office-hours residential neighborhoods could lead to higher theft rates are not without some merit, at least in theory.

While it's not as crazy a theory as the Hadron Collider destroying the planet, I've yet to see any reports of increased crime anywhere being linked to Google Street View. Also, as JapanProbe and others have noted, Google has been quick to remove offending images and has been using face-blurring algorithms to try to add a modicum of privacy protection.

 
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