Tag Archives: review and story

Google Earmarks $20M For Charities As Holiday Gift To Everyone

Some time ago, Google established a tradition of sending top AdSense and AdWords users holiday gifts. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged adsense, adwords, among-seniors, Business, charity, detailed explanation, google-launches, google-most, happy-holidays, holiday, holidays, mango tree, popular-site, related articles, review and story | Leave a comment

Ford Turning Cars Into Mobile Wi-Fi Hotspots

Next year, Ford will be introducing it's new version of SYNC , a technology it partnered with Microsoft on. This technology will allow you to have constant Wi-Fi in your car. All an owner of a SYNC-ready car would have to do is plug in a compatible USB mobile broadband modem (or air card), and they will create a secure wireless connection that will be broadcast throughout the vehicle. "While you're driving to grandma's house, your spouse can be finishing the holiday shopping and the kids can be chatting with friends and updating their Facebook profiles," said Mark Fields, Ford president of The Americas. "And you're not paying for yet another mobile subscription or piece of hardware because Ford will let you use technology you already have." "The speeds with which technology is evolving, particularly on the wireless front, makes obsolescence a real problem," said Doug VanDagens, director of Ford's Connected Services Solutions Organization. "We've solved that problem by making SYNC work with just about any technology you plug into it. By leveraging a user's existing hardware, which can be upgraded independent of SYNC, we've helped ensure 'forward compatibility' with whatever connectivity technology comes next." "Using SYNC with existing mobile devices helps Ford provide the most value, the most flexibility and the most convenience for owners," said Fields. "Constant connectivity is becoming a routine part of our customers' lives, and we're making existing technology more accessible without adding costs: That's the kind of value Ford drivers have learned to expect." Ford has proven in the past to be a particularly Internet-savvy company. This was evident from an interview WebProNews did with Scott Monty, who runs the company's social media efforts: Ford says studies by the Consumer Electronics Association show that as many as 77 million adults make up the so-called technology enthusiast drivers population, more than half of whom express the desire for a connected communications and information system in their vehicles. They say over a third of Americans would be interested in the ability to check email and access Web sites in their vehicles. Have You Read This? > Google Earth Makes Leap To Automobiles > Google Develops Fleet Of Fuel-Efficient Cars > How Ford Does Social Media Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged automobiles, Business, consumer, facebook, ford, holiday, microsoft, ready car, review and story, sync, technology enthusiast, wireless | Leave a comment

The Things People Looked for Pictures of on Twitter in 2009

Earlier, we looked at Twitter's top trending topics of 2009 . They broke it down into several top ten lists based on various categories. Yfrog , a site that hosts images and videos for people to share on Twitter, has shared its top ten image searches for 2009. In other words, this is a reflection of what people are looking for images of on Twitter. Granted, Yfrog is not the only service that people use to share pictures on Twitter. TwitPic is an obvious one. Still, Yfrog is a reasonably popular one, and it would be hard to believe if TwitPic's list was too different. Here's Yfrog's Top 10 of 2009 1. New Moon / Twilight 2. Jonas Brothers 3. Tiger Woods 4. Michael Jackson 5. Halloween / costume 6. iPhone 7. Adam Lambert 8. Kanye West / RIP Kanye West 9. Iran election 10. Miley Cyrus "In 2009 posting pictures and videos to sites like Facebook and Twitter became standard practice for the tech savvy," a YFrog representative tells WebProNews. "Instant media sharing defined not only a new form of citizen journalism, but revolutionized how pop culture, politics and current events are captured and shared globally." This is only one of the many top ten of 2009 lists we have covered, and don't be surprised if there are more. Check out some of the other 2009 lists in the related articles and get ready for a new year. Related Articles: > What the Most People Watched on YouTube in 2009 > The Most Searched For Terms of 2009 > Death, Disease, Money, and Twitter on Bing > The Definitions That People Didn't Know in 2009 > What People Talked About on Twitter Most in 2009 Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged people, pop culture, review and story, tiger-woods, twitter, twitter-granted, yfrog, youtube | Leave a comment

How to Write Engaging Blogs People Want to Read

Thomas Edison famously remarked that genius was "1% inspiration, 99% perspiration." For bloggers this means that if you put your effort into it, you can create a blog that gathers a following. If you look at a group of bloggers, one with a worldwide following and the rest with small audiences, the former will not necessarily be the best writer, the funniest, the smartest or even the one with the most inside info or useful tips. The great bloggers you follow yourself could have varying amounts of these characteristics. So what separates the good bloggers from the ones with larger followings? Many call it the "x factor." Since this is a bit amorphous we'll touch on it later. You can take your first steps toward creating an engaging blog that builds a loyal following by following some simple guidelines. There are definitely tips, techniques and tools that will get you there and equip you to compete in the blogging big leagues. We'll return to the "x factor" after getting you to that starting line. Audience as foundation Know your audience. Marshall McLuhan observed almost 50 years ago that the world was transforming into a "global village" through mass communication. The global village is here. People don't log on to the Internet to be lectured. They log on for information, but also for intelligent dialogue – for exchange, for discussion, for sharing – with people like themselves. Know your audience and the information and conversation they are looking for. You need to engage your readers and speak directly to them with a personal touch, a sense of inclusion, and even a hint of intimacy. Blogs are about relationships, and relationships are about discussions and dialogues of all kinds. The "Monologue Era" is over. Your blog will succeed to the extent that you connect with your audience. In our Dialogue Era, if you offer people something useful you can become a resource. People bookmark resources and return to them repeatedly, expecting more of the same. Once you have defined your audience you must set about adding value to their visits. Provide information helpful to your audience. Write clearly and don't try too hard – be natural but concise, instructive but conversational. Produce useful, supportive and brief pieces that people can apply – today, tomorrow, whenever. That will show they can return for more information without wasting their time. Blogs are not articles, so keep them to the point, but do not enforce an arbitrary word limit. Your length will depend on your topic and your audience – make every word count. Draw them in, move them along To engage an audience in the first place, craft interesting headlines that invite readers in and use subheads to move them along and allow them to scan for the specific information they are looking for. The flow is enhanced if you keep sentences shorter rather than longer, and active rather than passive. Don't posture, pretend, boast or brag, and always maintain a healthy skepticism and sense of humor. You are not writing great literature, your helping your neighbor. Finally, always review your output and rewrite where necessary. During this process, make words "pay their rent" by weeding out unnecessary ones. You have many things to consider, a number of bottom lines – plural. Bottom line: You need to read about writing, learn how to edit and refine your technique over time. Bottom line: You need to learn the particular writing techniques that have evolved around blogs, like how to craft good bullet points, when to use them, how to use the page layout to your advantage and so forth. Bottom line: You have to continue reading your competition and your colleagues, often one and the same, and analyze what works and what doesn't. Bottom line: There are a lot of bottom lines in blogging. Go forth and blog Coming full circle, then, let's consider that "x factor" again. Although it's not possible to define it quite precisely, we know where it is located. It is in you. It is your personality, your spark, your unique outlook. Be yourself, not what you think they want you to be. In that jigsaw puzzle that is "you" there are many traits and abilities, opinions and truisms, dreams and fears, and the sum total of them all is what adds up to "you" – and no one else – and your own real personality coming off the page is often what engages people. How can you inject "you" into your writing? There's only one way to draw it out, of course, and that is to write. Since you are forming relationships, do what Dale Carnegie advised about 80 years ago and ask small favors of your readers. Invite their comments. Ask for their opinion. Encourage them to express their point of view. This tells them you value what they think. More importantly, it engages them and makes them a valuable active participant (instead of a passive visitor), a member of your community, and part of an ongoing and growing dialog. This is what will lead many of them to make the all-important cognitive leap that will have them bookmark your blog, link to your posts, tell all their friends about it and continue the dialog. The leap occurs when readers stop thinking of themselves as readers, and start thinking of themselves as "stakeholders" – readers that interact with you. If you can convert readers into stakeholders, you're on your way. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged audience, dialogue, internet, neighbor, point, readers, review and story, time, unique, writing | Leave a comment

Nielsen Also Puts Bing Up November

Earlier today, we relayed comScore's figures for the search market during November 2009. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged another-source, comscore, exec, microsoft, mozilla-exec, nbsp, nielsen, review and story, search, search features, source, trend, yahoo | Leave a comment

Facebook Gives Translators Awards for Their Services

Facebook has launched an award system for translators, where those who translate for the social network can get special icons as they accomplish specific milestones. Awards are grouped into into the categories of voting participation, words published, and translations published. "Since launching our Translations application two years ago, more than 300,000 people have answered the call to contribute translations and make Facebook available in more than 70 different languages," says Facebook's Eric Kwan. "These translators are helping more people connect in the languages that feel most comfortable to them, no matter how big or small of a community speaks a language or dialect. For all of their efforts, we think that translators deserve some extra recognition." "We would have never accomplished so much so quickly without the help of all of you who have contributed to translating Facebook," says Kwan. "Since the first translation, we've grown to more than 350 million users on Facebook, with 70 percent of them now outside of the United States. We appreciate the hard work from all of you who've taken part, and we hope you'll enjoy translating even more with the new award system." Currently there are nine awards that translators can receive, but Facebook says it may add more depending upon feedback. Facebook's Translations application has nearly 47,000 fans. Those who want to translate for Facebook can simply add the app, review, and vote on translations in their language. Currently there are 96 languages open for translation, while 64 have already been released. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Pay-Per-Click | Tagged dialect, iran, latin, milestones, review and story, social-media, translating, translations, translators, vote | Leave a comment