Posts Tagged ‘internet’

Google Real-Time Search

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

Google is finally rolling out its long-awaited real-time search option.

The search engine will now include some results in real-time on its main results page.

“Our users will get the results as they are produced,” said Google fellow Amit Singhal at an event in Mountain View in California.

How it works? Well, a search for “Obama” would include a constantly updated listing of the “latest results” on Obama pulled from live tweets, Yahoo Answers, news articles, and web pages. Click “pause” and the listing stops refreshing.

Google will offer realtime trends, similar to Twitter’s, and you’ll see the real time option labeled “latest” alongside the current past “day” and “hour”. This new realtime search will also work on both Android devices and iPhones immediately. There is also a way to filter results just to status updates from Twitter, Facebook etc.

Google’s just announced partnerships with both Facebook and MySpace, both of which will see Google pull in any available public data in real-time.

Real-time results will be rolled out to users over the next few days. How can you try real time serch now? Simply search for something and then add the following text to the end of the URL: “&esrch=RTSearch”. The trick doesn’t work for every query, but for searches where there are a lot of results you’ll find a small, frequently updating box somewhere among the first search results.

Source: Google Blog

Google Image Swirl

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

Google is trialling an interesting new take on Image Search – Image Swirl.

Image Search is a hugely popular part of how people use Google and it’s become increasingly advanced in recent years. The ability to recognise similar images to the one you’re looking at is particularly useful.

Image Swirl, a new product from Google Labs, takes that and makes it all a whole lot easier to use. It’s based on Google’s existing Wonder Wheel search tool but because it uses images it’s much sexier to look at.

Enter a search term and a grid of twelve matching images in displayed. If you on any of those it flies out from the grid and a bunch of similar images to that one spawn off it like a spider diagram. Click on one of the new images and the same will happen again.

While it doesn’t change much about the actual results you get from a search, it’s far more click and natural to cick through a series of images than it is to tweak ‘advanced search’ options to find the best result.

As it’s still a test product not all search terms currently work with it.

Source: Google Blog

Deep Brand Engagement Creates Customers

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

The power of online brand interaction is not to be denied: A solid majority of connected consumers have had their opinion of a brand swayed, either positively or negatively, by an online experience. And more than 97% said that experience influenced whether they purchased a product or service from that brand.

An impressive 64% of connected consumers told they had made their first purchase from a brand because of a digital experience—be it a Website, microsite, mobile coupon or e-mail. And friending, following and content creation spurred upticks across the marketing funnel—from raising awareness to consideration, purchase and recommendations to friends.

Source: eMarketer

The IAB Click Measurement Guidelines

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

I just discovered that that The IAB Click Measurement Guidelines Version 1.0 was released on May 12, 2009. That’s right, I said May, 2009. Yet, the first clickable internet ad appeared way back in 1993 and the first banner ad, bought by AT&T and appearing on HotWired, appeared just a year later. With this major lag in measurement standards, is there any wonder why it’s been hard for the interactive marketing industry to gain credibility?

Source: IAB

Facebook search

Monday, August 17th, 2009

Facebook announced that it is rolling out the new Facebook search.

You now will be able to search the last 30 days of your News Feed for status updates, photos, links, videos and notes being shared by your friends and the Facebook Pages of which you’re a fan. If people have chosen to make their content available to everyone, you also will be able to search for their status updates, links and notes, regardless of whether or not you are friends. Search results will continue to include people’s profiles as well as relevant Facebook Pages, groups and applications.

Source: Facebook

Marketers Embrace Twitter over Facebook

Monday, August 17th, 2009

Facebook may have recently passed MySpace as the most-visited social networking site in the US, but it’s facing stiff competition for the attention of social media marketers. By some metrics, Twitter is more popular in the marketing world.

Burson-Marsteller, in a July 2009 study of Fortune 100 companies, found that more companies had a presence on Twitter (54%) than on Facebook (29%).

According to the study, which looked at corporate blogs in addition to Twitter and Facebook profiles, about one-fifth of Fortune 100 firms only used one of the three channels. Those companies were overwhelmingly likely to choose Twitter (76%) over Facebook (14%) or blogging (10%).

Companies that used two of the three channels were most likely to have a blog plus a Twitter account (64%).

Burson-Marsteller found that these top companies were using Twitter for several purposes: company news, customer service, marketing promotions and employee recruitment.

Twitter is also beating out Facebook’s popularity among e-mail marketers. Email Data Source found that among the US e-mail campaigns it tracked, links to Twitter became more common than links to Facebook in March 2009.Links to both the social networking giant and the microblogging site rocketed in the first half of 2009, but Twitter’s rise has been more dramatic.

Source: eMarketer

The Twitter Guide Book

Monday, August 17th, 2009

Twitter is a social network used by millions of people, and thousands more are signing up every day to send short messages to groups of friends. But where’s the user manual for Twitter? Where do new Twitter users go to learn about Tweeting, retweets, hashtags and customizing your Twitter profile? Where do you go if you want to know all about building a community on Twitter, or using Twitter for business? How can you find advanced tools for using Twitter on your phone or your desktop? To answer all these questions and more, Mashable assembled The Twitter Guide Book, a complete collection of resources for mastering Twitter. Happy Tweeting!

Agencies Spending Less on Traditional Media

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

The ad market may have hit bottom, but it has also changed. As agencies begin to spend, they are shifting dollars from traditional to digital media and advanced advertising, according to STRATA’s quarterly survey of 40 agencies of various sizes.

“While many people have cut back their approach this year, many are looking at other ways of advertising such as video on demand,” said John Shelton, CEO and president of STRATA, a company that provides buying and selling software to agencies.

Of those polled, 22 percent felt business was improving in the quarter; 67 percent believed the market would rebound by the end of the year.

Spot TV is still at the top of the media list for 45 percent of agency customers. However, that’s down 25 percent compared to the end of last year. Agencies are diverting dollars to advanced advertising or digital media, such as video on demand or interactive television with 62.5 percent of respondents predicting their customers were either very likely or somewhat likely to fit digital or advanced advertising into their media plans.

Spot radio plans have remained the same or increased since last year, according to 65 percent of respondents. But 75 percent also said they were more focused on the Internet than they were a year ago and a 20 percent increase compared to first quarter 2009.

Print took the biggest hit with 65 percent responding that they will be focusing less on the medium, a 37 percent drop from the first quarter 2009.

Source: Mediaweek

Shop with Bing and Save Money

Wednesday, August 12th, 2009

Starting August 10, 2009 and valid until the end of August Microsoft will pay users to search and shop via Bing. When you shop online through the Bing search engine, Microsoft will refund you a portion of your purchase price at its own expense.

It is called Bing cashback (formerly known as Live Search Cashback) and they actually been doing this for a while, but now they will double that amount to up to 50% of your purchase price.

When a buyer searches for an item on Bing and then purchases it, Microsoft gets paid a commission for the referral. There are many sites that do this, but Microsoft is the only one that refunds 100% of this commission back to its users. What is really surprising is that Microsoft not only refunds 100% of the affiliate revenue to its users, but for the purposes of this ‘Back to School’ promotion, they will be matching these revenues at their own expense, effectively doubling Bing users’ savings.

This offer is only available to U.S. residents with Windows Live ID and cashback account.

Source: Bing

Facebook buys FriendFeed

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

Facebook, the world’s largest social networking site, said it will buy FriendFeed, netting a group of prized ex-Google engineers in the fast-growing Internet business. FriendFeed, an up-and-coming social media startup, lets people share content online in real time across various social networks and blogs.

The service is similar to, though less popular than Twitter, the microblogging site that Facebook tried to buy for $500 million in 2008, according to sources familiar with the matter.

Terms of the deal were not disclosed on Monday, but Facebook said FriendFeed would operate as it has for the time being as the teams determine long-term plans.

Facebook’s big gain in the acquisition is the engineering talent at FriendFeed, rather than the actual product, which has won critical praise, but lagged in popularity compared to Twitter, said Forrester Research analyst Jeremiah Owyang. FriendFeed’s four founders are former Google Inc employees who count well known products like Gmail and Google Maps among their accomplishments.

One bridge between Facebook and FriendFeed might have been Matt Cohler, Facebook’s former management vice president. He joined FriendFeed backer Benchmark Capital last year.

Source: Facebook

Don’t rely on URL Shorteners

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

Thanks to Twitter’s rising popularity — and its finite, 140-character message length limit — free URL shortening services have been all the rage recently. But they should not become a critical part of your company’s infrastructure.

Why not? Because there’s no guaranteeing they’re going to work. Most of today’s short URL services are run by small, modestly funded startups that could easily shut them down — or change the way they work. Both have recently happened.

Source: The Business Insider

Enhanced XSPF Player With Autoresume Support

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

I was recently searching for some mp3 player which can be added to web site. I’ve found this interesting player which is Flash-based MP3 music player with an autoresume feature. This means when user moves between pages it remembers where music has stopped and resumes playing from that position. Very nice feature that users are not disturbed with playing the same song over and over from beginning.

This player also supports:

  • Autoplay,
  • XSPF Playlist support,
  • Shuffle play function,
  • Repeat Play function.

It comes in two versions Extended and Slim and You’ll also get also source Flash files so you can fully customize the look of the player.

More info and download at this page: http://www.boutell.com/xspf/

Facebook faced DDOS Attack

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

Today this popular social network does not work properly, slow loading, broken connections, some fan pages are still not available … As it seems they faced DDOS attack:

“You may have had trouble accessing Facebook earlier today because of network issues related to an apparent distributed denial-of-service attack. We have restored full access for most people. We’ll keep monitoring the situation to make sure you have the reliable experience you expect from us.”

Twitter is also not working for a few hours now. Do they have the same problem?