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Friday, 17 August 2012

Do Natural Links Exist? If So, What Would They Look Like?


Do Natural Links Exist? If So, What Would They Look Like?

 

 
 
link buildingYou can buy 8000 links for $1500...probably not natural
As is clear to anyone working in the field of search marketing, links are still the main SEO currency and remain the over-riding factor in getting a site to rank in a competitive niche. In Google's Webmaster Tools guidelines, Google states the importance of inbound links:
GWT inbound links
So, they start with a nice active statement 'make sure that other sites link to yours', then follow it up with the passive statement : 'natural links to your site develop as part of the dynamic nature of the web when other sites find your content valuable.'
So we need to 'make sure' that links naturally develop on their own. Ok, glad that is clear.

We Must 'Build' Links

Ever since Larry & Sergey revolutionised the search landscape with their PageRank algorithm, webmasters have sought to improve their search rankings with incoming links. 'Link building' has become an accepted phrase although it sounds at odds with the GWT guidelines.
Due to SEO firms and webmasters seeing very solid results from active link building campaigns billions of pages of content have been made with the sole purpose of 'gaming' the Google algorithm. If an alien species were to evaluate the internet and the content on it they would probably move on to the next civilisation and not bother making contact. Why would they stop after they happen upon the swathes of worthless directory sites that provide a resource to no-one, or read millions of pages of gobbledegook that sits on article sites cluttering up the internet with rubbish?
In fairness to Google, the recent Panda and Penguin updates seem to have helped promote good quality content and have stopped the majority of these practices but the question remains 'what are natural links and how do we get them?'

'Create Great Content'

So we all know that the solution is to create great content right? Make content on your website that is sufficiently resourceful, informative, useful, funny or controversial, and people will 'naturally' link to it.
Working for a small UK B2B company we work very hard trying to make content that people may want to link to, but it is simply not that straightforward. Just producing great content is not enough, you still have to go out there and get people to link to it.
Producing amazing content obviously works great for sites that already have a massive audience: they make something awesome, their community shares it and it generates plenty of natural links. But unless you have an audience already, you have to go out and pitch your content, hoping it gets you some links.
Is this really the natural development of links? Surely a natural link is one that you did not 'build' yourself? Is it only natural if you don't have to ask for it?
Fortunately this can remain a semantics issue that we need not resolve as Google hasn't found a way to determine the intent of a piece of content; if it is made for users or simply as linkbait. Like it or not, most of the creative content that webmasters and SEO agencies are building these days is in order to attract links — and here are some of the ones that could be considered natural:

Infographics

We recently published an interactive infographic about the Olympic sponsorship outrage. We offer people an embed code so they can put it on their site, and hope that they link back to us, then email hundreds of webmasters and ask them to share it. I know this is not 'natural', but until we develop a decent community, we won't be getting any links from it at all.
Infographics have come under scrutiny recently as Matt Cutts has mentioned that Google may look atdevaluing infographic links, and Justin Briggs has done a neat evaluation of how and why this may be implemented.
At the moment, so long as an infographic is not massively off-topic, and you don't play fast and loose with your anchor text, infographics remain a great way to build brand links.
Interactive Olympic InfographicInfographic snippet, the interactive version is much better anyway

Reviews

For e-commerce websites, sending bloggers products to review can be a neat way to get exposure for your products and links at the same time. Most people love getting things for free, and if all they have to do is a short write-up on their blog you can generally get a good response rate from pitches.
However, is this merely the equivalent of a paid link? Morally, it probably is, but as long as the anchor text does not look manipulative then it should at least appear natural.

Games/Widgets

Embeddable games or widgets can be a great way to generate links – people love games, and won't want to mess with the embed code for fear of breaking the game. Probably my favourite example is theTraveler IQ Challenge by Travel Pod (don't play it, you'll lose hours of your day…)
 
There have been some fairly well publicised cases of widgets gaining penalties from Google, but often this is due to highly manipulative tactics. Again you should be ok if you avoid manipulative/off-topic anchor text in your embed codes.
Guest Blogging
Guest blogging can be a great way to publicise your company particularly, if thought leadership is your bag. You can expose yourself or your brand to different audiences, and even generate plenty of leads if you feature on particularly well-read and highly targeted blogs.
Unfortunately I feel that blogs could very well go the way of article repositories in the not too distant future. Since guest blogging is currently considered a nice white-hat tactic to generate quality, provable links, SEOs will exploit it. If an SEO company can satisfy a client with a monthly report that shows all the guest posts they've had placed, this tactic will be scaled by outsourcing and ultimately, reduce the overall quality of blog content on the web.

Videos

We have experimented with video marketing in the past. So long as you pick the right niche, people will embed your video and give you a nice branded link back to your website. If your video advertises a product, you can also get links back to your product pages, however it can be difficult to get the balance right between creating commercial content and making it sufficiently sharable.
The downside with videos is that the video hosting sites are only interested in promoting the video ontheir webpage, rather than yours, so all their social sharing buttons will link to the page on their site. As such videos require a great deal of manual outreach if you expect to generate links from them, but at least they would be editorially granted, and therefore, entirely natural.

Unfortunately, all of the techniques covered above can and will be abused by SEO companies looking to make a fast buck. As we are seeing, Google is increasingly clamping down on what it considers to be manipulative tactics. In each example above, the 'better safe than sorry' tactic involves sticking almost exclusively to brand links, and avoiding anchor text entirely. Why so?

Anchor Text isn't Natural

Anchor text has long been known as a key relevance factor for ranking in a competitive niche. If you have plenty of unique incoming links with the anchor text 'red widgets', it was a fair shout that you could rank for 'red widgets'. Although this seems to have been dampened down recently, it is clearly still a factor.
But keyword-rich anchor text is not a natural phenomenon, and only exists because Google made it a ranking factor. Natural anchor text looks like this:
  • here
  • website
  • article
  • product
  • post
That is how most people, with no eduction in blogging practices or SEO, would 'naturally' link to something. Maybe Google should implement this as a key indicator that links have been developed naturally…

Social Media Shares – The New Links?

The whole debate about natural/unnatural links has been brought sharply into focus by Google recently sending thousands of webmasters emails about unnatural links. The general consensus seems to be that, if these warnings coincide with a drop in rankings, you should try to remove as many of the unnatural links as you possibly can.
This situation highlights one of the reasons that links will remain a significant ranking factor – because of their permanence. Imagine if the emails were instead warnings of 'unnatural tweets', and you had to try and get thousands of users to sift through months worth of tweets and delete the offending ones? It just wouldn't happen.
But social media has affected the way that content is cited. Whereas only webmasters or website owners can put a link up for you, anyone can tweet or like a webpage. People will like things to share them with their friends, brands will tweet useful resources to their followers – surely this is the most 'natural' way for content to be shared?
I would like to see linking factors combined with social factors, rather than as 2 independent triggers. In this day and age, if a piece of content is high quality, it is very unlikely that it would only be linked to, with no social shares whatsoever. Consider the much vaunted ac.uk/edu-links, which are often achieved by sneaky SEOs paying students for links on University blogs. In a natural environment, if a University website found a resource so useful they would link to it, they would very likely also share it socially to their follower-base, as they would very likely be the same audience that might read the webpage.
For most of the web, Google's concept that 'natural links to your site develop' is incredibly naive, and practically negligent advice to give to newbies in the world of search marketing. Their earlier statement, 'make sure that other sites link to yours', is more on the money, just make sure you try and make it look.

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Why So Many Suffered from Google Penguin Update + How to Recover


Why So Many Suffered from Google Penguin Update + How to Recover

bitten-by-penguin
A big reason why many blogs, businesses and websites have suffered from Google's Penguin and Panda updates this year is due to inexperienced, Black Hat, or just plain bad SEOs. If you've paid for these inexperienced, Black Hat or bad SEOs, or are one yourself, you were waiting to be penalised. And now you may have a big mess to tidy up.
Perhaps the Panda and Penguin updates would never have existed if not for bad SEO work, or those "tricks" and techniques used to manipulate the rankings. But a clean-up of Google results was long overdue, even if these updates have provided a few strange results of their own.
Separating the experts from the amateurs in SEO comes down to you doing one thing. Research. Simple research. Of course, no Black Hat or amateur is going to admit they're one, but if you have the right questions to ask, see the results of previous work they have done, and maybe even getting a testimonial or two from the companies they have previously worked with will go a long way to making sure you're working with the right SEO for your site. And certainly avoiding any penalties that bad SEOs and Black Hat techniques are vulnerable to.

Finding A Good SEO

You probably expect the more reputable SEO agencies generally tend to appear on the first page of Google results:
clip_image002
Search Engine Optimisation is one of the most beneficial investments a business can make in today's world. And saying "one of" is probably understating its importance. The benefits SEO can do for your online promotion and ROI is significant. Whilst more and more High Street shops are closing down year-on-year, lots of businesses are flourishing online. If you're a website or business owner who hasn't properly implemented SEO on your site then I have to question the reason of having that site – no-one's going to see it.
SEO gives you the opportunity to drive plenty of free traffic to your website, depending on the success of your strategy and implementation. Bad SEO and no SEO takes away any opportunity of traffic reaching your site organically.
As an employee at a long-existing and successful internet marketing company myself, I am aware of the large number of enquiries we receive asking to get to the top of Google on a bootstrap budget, or to drive thousands of enquiries for pennies. It doesn't happen like that. Those who use to take on the budget clients and outsourced their link building overseas will now, no doubt be suffering due to their poor link building and SEO strategies. Budget SEO and cheap link building does not work. And in the long run, it's costing you a lot more.
When you come to hiring an SEO and/or link building company that's right for your business, try not to let your budget make the decision for you. If your budget is too small, it may be advised to hold off on hiring an SEO company until you can afford a professional, with some successful experience.

What We Believe We Know About The Penguin

Although specific details of Google's algorithm and updates never get revealed, here are a few things we believe the Penguin update is penalising sites for:
Unnatural Links – Google is having a crackdown on those purchasing links, building them on unrelated sites and generally just building low-quality links for the sake of building links.
Little Anchor Text Variation – There's nothing natural about building all of your links targeting the anchor text you're looking to rank for. This needs to be spread out and the majority of your links should be brand name-related.
Over Optimisation – Earlier this year, Matt Cutts said that Google are working on a penalty for "over-optimised" sites. So cut back on your keyword stuffing and other tactics now.

How To Recover From The Penguin

I've read a lot of guff on the internet about how to recover from a Penguin penalty. I've only worked on and fixed a few sites that have been hit by the penalty so it's hard for me to give a definitive answer on what exactly it is that fixed them. But here are a few suggestions:
Make Your Anchor Text Look Natural – You're putting yourself (or your website) at risk by purchasing or forcing unnatural anchor text links in posts or on blog rolls. The safer option will be to make them look natural. There's no harm in it being of low-value anchor text (such as http://yourdomain.com) because at least you're not penalising yourself then.
Dilute Your Anchor Text – Building 90% of your links to one keyword doesn't work anymore. Do that and expect to be penalised. Find variants of your anchor text, link to other parts of your website, and link to your brand name a lot.
Get Quality Links Pointing to Your Website – Don't just build any link these days. Go for the quality ones. If you have a great, genuine product or service to sell then this shouldn't be a problem. If you're an affiliate this will be tougher for you.
De-optimise Your Website – If it's obvious to a user that you're over-pushing a keyword on your website, then it's obvious to Google.
Scale down Internal Links – A problem we found with one of our client's sites was the number of links in their drop down menu which was in the header of every page. We removed this and shortly after their rankings started coming back. Simple changes like removing the large number of internal links on your site appears to make an impact.
Produce Better Content – "Content is King" is the old phrase and it's coming back into fashion again. Google, and no-doubt users alike want to read the best content out there. So make sure you're writing worthy content if you want it to be read.
Get Social – I'm still unsure of how big social is as a factor in Google's rankings just yet, but I've certainly experienced it having a positive effect in the short-term at least. And that's something worthwhile certainly. So add social buttons on your site, get active on Google+, Twitter etc.


How To Get Actionable Data From Google Analytics & Answer The "So What?" Question


How To Get Actionable Data From Google Analytics & Answer The "So What?" Question

If you have ever generated an analytics report, you know what the problem is – nobody reads them. All your pretty charts end up in the trash and you have a feeling that you wasted your time. The bad news is that, perhaps, those reports lacked analysis. The good news is that you are not alone.
Here is the better news – those reports are fixable.
They were missing the answer to the ultimate question – "So what?"
Say, you rank for a thousand keywords. So what? Is it bad or is it good? Should you be ranking for millions keywords? Or, should you be dancing a victory dance? You will not be able to navigate your data without actionable analytics reports.
Unlike popular belief, the proof is not in the pudding, but in smart analysis. It starts with goals. You need to know what you want to achieve and how to recognize success when you see it. Setting targets will allow you to put a face to a hypothesis. Tracking key performance indicators (KPIs) will ensure you are not flying blind.

Objectives, Goals, Targets, KPIs

objectives, goals, targets, KPIsBefore you start any marketing campaign, you start with goals rooted in objectives, targets and KPIs. When formulating your objective, state clearly, why you need to create this campaign. Then, describe what you can realistically achieve with the resources you have. Your statements need to be brief and specific. Do not forget to include benefits to the business.
I am going to use an example, "Expand brand recognition as a consulting company, not just software company." It is clear, that consulting services need more exposure. There are probably resources in place to highlight a different side of the business. Expanding market reach is beneficial because it will likely increase revenue.
Set Campaign TargetsOnce the overall objective is formulated, let's talk strategy. The main goal is to increase consulting customers. A good way to expand market reach is through social channels. Here is the strategy: "Increase consulting customers through promotions on social channels." And here is the target: "Increase consulting customers by 10%." If the campaign is successful, there will be increase in social mentions of the consulting services, higher impression share on searches. Those will be your KPIs, along with number of conversions (new consulting customers).
Dive deep in the planning process and create something like this Marketing and Measurement Model.
Now you are ready for actionable reports.

Segmentation

Segment your data
Your reports need to support your overall objective and goals. You cannot get any insight from just one lonely metric. You need perspective. As a start, look at the traffic and compare it to the previous month. Better yet, include conversions and revenue. That way you are making your metric more relevant to business goals.
In our example case, we are trying to increase exposure through social channels. In analytics reports, segment data by channel and examine the social channel. Don't be afraid to segment the data even further. Look at specific sites and campaigns, evaluate engagement activities, check out conversions during different times of the day. How else would you know what is working and what failed?
Do not forget your multi-channel funnels. If you are expanding your social efforts, pay attention to how social channels contribute to conversions through other channels. Traditionally, conversations start on Twitter, Facebook, Google Plus but conversions happen through other channels.
Multi-Channel Venn Diagram
Expect your social efforts to jump-start more conversions through organic search, paid campaigns, direct traffic, email, etc. Assisted conversions report in Google Analytics will help you understand the interactions specific to your website. You can find the report under Conversions -> Multi-Channel Funnels.
Multi-Channel Funnel Report
In order to get all social campaigns references, do not forget to tag your URLs properly. Use structured social sharing and track your efforts.

Looking for Patterns

Be prepared for changesPractice predictive analytics, look for patterns in your data. If you notice a trend, you will be prepared for changes and have your resources ready when you need them. For example, if your social efforts show steady increase in conversions through paid advertising, you'd better figure out how to adjust your PPC budget. One way to identify a trend is to track changes in data patterns.
Let's say, someone from your company did a presentation at a conference about your consulting services. As a result, your referral traffic and conversions went up. Perhaps, you can now target the visitors coming from those referral sites. You can post a guest blog on those sites, display some targeted content just to those specific visitors, or send the speaker to more conferences. On the other hand, if the referrals increase, but the conversions stay the same, it might be better to cool your heels and focus on more beneficial efforts.

Putting it All Together

Making It All Work1. Have goals. You cannot act if you do not know where you are going. Goals and targets are essential to actionable analytics.
2. Use segments to focus on what matters. When running campaigns, do not distract yourself with extra data. Use your reports to measure your specific efforts. And always link the performance to revenue.
3. Watch patterns and trends for better resource allocation. Anticipate changes in your traffic or user behavior or conversions. Be prepared for a change ahead of time instead of reacting to it when it happens.
You can always find more examples of how to make your Analytics actionable.
Now you have a starting point to make all your reports actionable. When creating analytics reports, always know what exactly the reports are going to show you – new opportunities, key performance metrics, or trends. And keep asking that "so what?" question when looking at data. Only then you will have a chance to make a hole in one.


Are Ads Taking Over SERPs?


Are Ads Taking Over SERPs?

Over the past couple months I've talked with a lot of search marketers about the impact of the Penguin update, Google's most recent change to their ranking algorithm. Many sites have been dinged for over-optimization of anchor text. Major brands are making off like bandits. Everyone is being much more cautious with their linkbuilding tactics. At the same time I notice another trend:

SERPs are being taken over by ads.

I mean this in the most literal way possible. Look at the following SERP for "Seattle hotels":

Seattle Hotels Google SERP

You'll notice the standard Google ads at the top of the main section and down the right side. The only thing about those ads that stands out is how every one has the +1 count of the advertiser. You'll also notice the relatively new hotel finder provided by Google itself. Seems a bit self-serving (pun intended) doesn't it?

And what about ecommerce terms? Try out this SERP for Toto toilet seats:

Toto Toilet Seats SERP

Here we have 6 regular ads and 8 product ads (with image) to just 4 organic ads. And it's not just Google. Don't forget about our little friend Bing.

Bing SERP

Bing even increase the generosity by allowing 4 paid search ads in the main section as well as the ads in the right rail. But just for scorekeeping purposes, that's 9 ads to 3 organic ads and 3 new results. Again, not even close.

Paid Search Will Continue to Get More Real Estate

More and more of the SERPs will continue to be occupied by paid results, especially above the fold, for one simple reason: Money! Google, Microsoft & Yahoo are publicly traded, profit-focused companies. Serving awesome search results ins great for users, but doesn't pay the bills. Ad clicks pay the bills and so search engines are not just incentivized, but under a fiduciary responsibility to shareholders to maximize revenue. Thus, you'd better get used to paid ads, because you're going to be seeing a lot more of them.


Beating Google By Doing Better Than Competing On Price


Beating Google By Doing Better Than Competing On Price

The results pages delivered by Google for searches with commercial intent are undergoing two types of modifications that are harmful for online merchants who have become accustomed to profiting from website visitors referred through clicks on organic results. The prime space on Google's shopping result pages is increasingly being allocated to: 1) price focused product listing ads; and 2) Adwords sponsored ads. The organic results are being pushed down to positions "below the fold". Thus, Google is changing the user behavior of viewers. There is an increased likelihood of:
1) products and online stores being evaluated solely on price point,
2) an increase in clicks on sponsored ads and product listing ads; and
3) a decrease in clicks on organic results.
Product Prices
Google's decision to make product prices so prominent will hurt many online retailers. It is likely to lead to a race to the bottom on prices in order to attract visitor traffic, and this will cut into profit margins. It will make it harder to gain customers based on product selection and good merchandising with Google making price such a dominant product attribute.
User Interface
The increase in screen "self space" being allotted to paid placements will reduce clicks upon organic results. This increase in the percentage of clicks on paid placements is obviously good for Google, but not optimum for online stores.
Over the last few years, Google has made a number of modifications to their search result user interface to increase the click rate on sponsored ads.
  1. The shading of the sponsored ad box has been lightened up to a very pale shade of purple.
  2. The font on the headlines on the ads on the right hand side of the result pages has been increased in size to match the size of the organic results.
  3. The sponsored ads on the right hand side of the result pages have been moved closer to the organic results
  4. Adwords ad extensions and ratings have increased the "shelf space" allotted to paid ads
These changes have increased the ratio of clicks on paid links on Google. According to Wordstream "clicks onpaid search listings beat out organic clicks by nearly a 2:1 margin for keywords with high commercial intent in the US".
Google Shopping
The above listed changes may pale in comparison to the impact that Goggle Shopping and Google Visual Search Ads will have upon user behavior. These price focused paid ads will reduce the number of clicks on organic listings. A search on the term "convex mirrors" provides an example of the reduced exposure for the organic listings for online stores. The first organic listing for an online store is below the fold on many monitors (and Amazon is one of the top organic lisings). As shown in the image below in the red circled area, the organic listings are crunched into the bottom left hand corner of the prime screen space.
convex mirror search results pageResults Page for Search on Convex Mirrors
The introduction of Google Shopping, Visual Search Ads, and the increased prominence of sponsored ads, create significant challenges for online merchants that are dependent upon organic traffic from Google. Online merchants for whom: 1) buying Adwords sponsored ads is too expensive; and 2) competing based on lowball pricing is unattractive, had best prepare themselves for a future with reduced free organic visitor traffic from Google.
Adapting to Price Prominence of Google
There are three keys to success in a future with less free organic traffic from Google:
  1. Increase visitor traffic from other sources, such as referrals. social media, online display advertising, offline marketing, and email marketing.
  2. Increase the dollar yield of visitors to your site either by increasing conversion rates or by increasing average shopping cart size.
  3. Increase the lifetime value per customer by developing relationships that generate repeat purchases. Improving the effectiveness of email marketing, social media, referral programs, and repeat purchase continuity programs are tactics that can be effective in increasing customer lifetime value..

Judge Koh asks Apple if they’re “smoking crack” in Samsung lawsuit


Judge Koh asks Apple if they’re “smoking crack” in Samsung lawsuit

Go Judge Koh! Today some tempers are getting slightly heated after the continuous and ongoing legal battle between Samsung and Apple. This has been a huge topic in the news as of late, and honestly we feel it’s getting a bit old. Today however the Judge spiced things up by asking Apple’s Attorney’s if they’re smoking crack.


You’ve all probably noticed a drop off in the “lawsuit” stories here on Android Community, as we’d like to focus on the positive things in Android, as well as real innovation. The ongoing legal battle here is slowly but surely getting very old, and the Judge appears to want it to be over more than we all do.
According to The Verge, who appears to be sitting in on the case, after Apple submitted yet another massive 75 page document to the courts, Judge Koh finally has had enough. We are hearing this witness rebuttal document of over 75 pages was referring to 22 different witnesses that Samsung may call to the stand. Then the Judge showed her irritation by asking why Apple would waste the courts time and submit such a lengthy document “when unless you’re smoking crack you know these witnesses aren’t going to be called!”
That pretty much says it all. Apple and their Attorneys might be smoking crack. Now obviously this entire thing has been blown out of proportion by the media (us included) but the point we are trying to make is these legal battles are long, irritating, and getting very old — as we can tell from the judge’s growing frustrations. If anything major actually happens other than name-calling, we’ll be sure to update. In the meantime continue with your business as it’s just another drawn out day in court for Apple and Samsung.


Instagram v3.0 brings share photos to Map, improved scrolling and more


Instagram v3.0 brings share photos to Map, improved scrolling and more

Who’s ready for more amateur photography? The creators of Instagram (now owned by Facebook) have just issued a rather large update to their extremely popular application bringing some neat new enhancements and features. Their new feature called “photo maps” will probable be popular so lets take a peek.


Now users that geo-tag or add their location to photos can check them out on a map and see where they’ve been taken. This is great for vacations, trips, or people that travel a lot in general. Your followers can also see too, so use caution. Being able to see where your friends go and where an amazing photo was taken is a great feature.
Next up is infinite scrolling. Previously you had to scroll the the bottom of the list, then tap the pesky “load more photos” button that always took far too long. Now they’ve added infinite scrolling where it will auto load content. A simple but much wanted feature, so give it a try. Check out the video below.


Finally, the last thing is speeeeed. This goes hand in hand with the new infinite scrolling feature, as photos now load extremely fast. With millions and millions of users speed has always been an issue, but now that Facebook has control on the backend we can expect things to hopefully get better — although judging their Android app I have my doubts. Get it right this minute on the Google Play Store.


Samsung confirms over 10 million Galaxy Note phablets sold


Samsung confirms over 10 million Galaxy Note phablets sold

For all the naysayers that didn’t like Samsung’s Galaxy Note (you know who you are) Samsung has just confirmed that while the phone isn’t a smashing hit, it has still been quite popular. During their announcement yesterday of the Galaxy Note 10.1 tablet they quickly reminded everyone that the original Galaxy Note has sold over 10 million units.


Just for a bit of context here. The Galaxy S III sold over 10 million in just over a month, but considering the small adoption rate by US carriers of the Note, that number is still quite good. Earlier this year in March Samsung announced they’d sold around 5 million, so it’s nice to see the Galaxy Note still doing well in most markets.
Either way Samsung felt that 10 million strong was enough to warrant a follow up, because come August 29th we’ll all be meeting the Samsung Galaxy Note 2 with a 5.5-inch display. The Galaxy Note 2 will be their third “Note” device with the Galaxy Note 10.1 tablet taking second, and it is available starting today.
LG has released their own Optimus Vu, and reports suggest HTC is planning their own “phablet” too, but for now Samsung is clearly leading the 5-inch and bigger market. Have you used the Galaxy Note, or does the size seem too large? We’ll be live in Berlin, Germany, for the unveiling of the Note 2 so stay tuned if you’re interested.


Google Play Store incremental “Smart App Updates” now live


Google Play Store incremental “Smart App Updates” now live

Back in June during Google IO we heard about an upcoming feature to the Google Play Store that would make users and carriers alike extremely happy. This was called smart app updates. Essentially how this works is when you get an update the Play Store will only download the new bits, rather than the entire application again.


What this means is when you get an update to Asphalt 6, or a large game like ShadowGun that is well over 50MB in size, you won’t be waiting forever to download the update, and you won’t be using up large sums of data either. Instead you’ll only get “incremental” updates of what’s new. For those on small data plans, or in non 3G/4G LTE markets this will come in handy.
Google’s been making tons of changes behind the scenes over the past few days with their Play Store. A new version was pushed out last night, and it looks like they’ll be adding gift cards and wishlists soon. Apparently though that isn’t all because the folks from Android Police noticed these new smart updates happening now.
A great example is the update to Instagram available this morning. It is a 13MB app and usually you have to install the entire thing on updates, but with Google’s smart app updates it only downloads 3MB and sends you on your way. Great stuff Google! I’m extremely excited to finally see this arrive, and I have a feeling carriers will be too.


DynaFlo LIQUID-ARMOR nano technology screen protection available now


DynaFlo LIQUID-ARMOR nano technology screen protection available now

If you’re the type that likes to protect your investment when it comes to your smartphone or tablet we have something just for you. Surely many of you all use screen protectors, but I’m personally not a fan. There are tons of products out there, but DynaFlo has something that is completely invisible. This isn’t your regular screen protector film.


It’s called LIQUID-ARMOR and it is exactly that. It comes in a spray bottle and you simply rub their nano technology screen protector liquid on your phone for the ultimate armor. This has actually been available for a little while, but starting today is available nationwide at many retailers and online.
“This is the world’s first truly invisible non-film screen protector solution,” says Tony Huang, CEO of Dynaflo.
Using their patented nano-technology you simply spray a nano liquid on your device and rub it with the included microfiber cloth, and you’ll have invisible protection for 6 months. What’s even better is the bottle lasts for tons of uses. For $25 you get an entire bottle that will last for multiple devices, not a one-use case scenario here. Their nano-coating makes an invisible layer of ultimate protection that won’t mess with screen sensitivity, dull colors, or cause your smooth touchscreen surface to have that “orange peel” look that most films do.
DynaFlo works on smart phones, tablets, gaming consoles, cameras and more. Anything with glass can be easily protected. It protects your screen from scratches, repels water and dust, and is completely invisible. Sign me up now! Starting today you can get LIQUID-ARMOR in stores nationwide at Walmart, Target, Fry’s Electronics and more, as well as online. We’ll be giving it a try shortly so stay tuned for a detailed review.


Samsung training documents reveal Galaxy S Relay 4G


Samsung training documents reveal Galaxy S Relay 4G

We’ve been hearing rumors that the Samsung Galaxy S Blaze Q was undergoing a name change, but today we may have just received confirmation. TmoNews has unearthed some Samsung training documents that show the Galaxy S Blaze Q, but this time around it has a different name: the Samsung Galaxy S Relay 4G. It would appear that the Blaze Q has indeed been re-branded, but Samsung has yet to make an official announcement on the switch.

The Galaxy S Relay 4G comes equipped with a slide-out QWERTY keyboard, a 4-inch display, and a 1.5 GHz processor. TmoNews reports that we don’t actually know what kind of processor the Relay 4G comes with, but they’re guessing it’s an S4. The Relay 4G comes with Ice Cream Sandwich installed, mobile hotspot capabilities for up to 8 devices, and has NFC and (obviously) 4G functionality.
The Relay 4G was originally thought to be launching this week, but with its expected August 15 release date now in the past, that doesn’t seem to be the case. Now it looks like we’ll have to wait for further confirmation from Samsung before the phone eventually arrives at T-Mobile. Perhaps the name change was the reason for the no-show?
All in all, the Galaxy S Relay 4G seems like a pretty solid device, as long as you can past the silly name. We’re not sure which name is worse, but we’re positive that both names are pretty bad. Regardless of the name, however, it should be arriving at T-Mobile soon, so if you require a slider that still sports some respectable specs, this might just be the phone for you. Stay tuned to Android Community, because we’ll have more information on the Relay 4G as it becomes available!


How many pages are on your Web site?


How many pages are on your Web site?


Now, those of you running small Web sites may be snickering at this point--you know how many pages you have, for Pete's sake. And if you forget, well, you know how to count. Many medium-to-large Web sites, however, can't pin down exactly how many pages they have. They need to use some method of estimating their total number of pages. Unless they know how many pages they have, they won't know how many they hope to see in search engine indexes.

So, if you don't know how many pages you have, how can you find out?
  • Ask your Webmaster. If you're in marketing, you might not realize that the IT people have a handle on this question. Your Webmaster has probably handled this question before, and has a ready answer.
  • Count the number of documents in your content management systems. If you use a CMS, or even more than one CMS, you can typically ask the CMS how many pages it is managing. Even a free CMS such as WordPress can do this.
  • Use your own spider. You can unleash special programs on your site, such as  Xenu, which is designed to find pages that you might have overlooked.
  • Take a guess. Maybe this sounds dumb, but it's better to hazard a guess than to just throw up your hands. If every page costs money, you should at least have an idea of what you are spending. A guess is better than nothing.
Every page on your site costs money, so you should know how many there are. What's your method?

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