Archive for category internet
Google Chrome Plugin/Extension Support: The Baconizer!
Google Chrome, Google’s quick and open foray into the browser world, is quickly becoming more than just “the prettiest browser.” The Chrome team recently released a little program that allows anyone to pick the “channel” of Chrome they would like to use: Regular, Beta, or Developer. Developer has lots of subtle new features, one of which allows for rudimentary Extensions, helpful add-ons that many Firefox users say they cannot do without.
Given the internet’s recent love affair with bacon, I whipped fried up this crispy little extension that ADDS BACON TO GOOGLE!!! Most helpful was Matt Cutts’ Blog entry on Adding Extensions to Chrome. Then the helpful, albeit sparse official Chrome help page here got me through the rest of the way, with some additional javascript help here.
Step 1: Learn how to switch your installation of Chrome over to the Developer Channel
Step 2: Read through the official HowTo here.
Step 3: For the manifest.json file in your Extension’s folder, I just have this: Read the rest of this entry »
Auto-Seek to a point in Youtube Video based on Highlighted Transcript
Posted by admin in computer science, internet on March 11, 2009
The following Example and video demonstrates a cool functionality that is possible when you combine Youtube's embeddable transcripts, and "Auto-Seek" capabilities. This is best described in the source article: Clickable Transcript of my Canonical Links Element Talk by Matt Cutts. The example below uses this javascript function here, and the Youtube Javascript API here, along with some frankensteined-together arrays of data made from Matt Cutt's data, to automatically seek to the point in the Youtube video that corresponds to the text you have highlighted.
Try highlighting some of the text below the video, it might take a second for the Youtube Video to load the first couple highlights you make, but it should speed up eventually.
note: you must highlight at least 10 characters of text to queue the video, if you are very careful, you might be able to confuse the page by highlighting text that occurs more than once in the transcript.
Hi everybody. Welcome back to another video. We’re doing this thing where when we speak at a conference and we talk about something substantial, not just questions and answers, we talk through our presentation later and put it up so people can follow along, watch the slides, and hopefully learn a little bit. So today I wanted to talk about the canonical link element. And that’s something that Google, Yahoo!, and Microsoft all announced that they will support in the future at SMX West. So, the date that we had this announcement was February 12, 2009, and the funny thing about it is that Charles Darwin was born exactly 200 years ago that day.
Read the rest of this entry »Digg Users: The Daily Telegraph is NOT a Legit News Source
- "Man pulls out 13 of his own teeth with pliers " - Daily Mail
- "How we became powerless to stop the huge growth in lap-dance" - Daily Mail
- "Woman fails driving test 771 times" - Daily Telegraph
- "3,000 Year Old Egyptian Vase Left in Garden For 20 Years" - Daily Telegraph
In the next post I'll show you how you can rid your Digg.com of this scourge!
“Hang in there Jack” not quite hangin at all.

Hang in there Jack!
Coming Soon at Google: Conflicts of Interest
Google is going to have some major conflicts of interest pretty soon. They recently released a new web browser, Google Chrome, and will soon have to decide between doing no evil, and losing major profits.
Chrome is open-source, just like Firefox, meaning that anyone can see exactly how it works, and anyone will soon be able to create add-ons for Chrome to make it better. Thats when Google will have to make a big decision:
What will Google do when someone creates an Add-On for Chrome that removes Ads?Google makes ALL of its quarterly net income of $1.3 billion on Ads in Search Result pages, and more and more on Ads on webpages all over the web. Currently, one of the coolest extensions for Firefox is AdBlock Plus, is assuredly putting a dent in Google's numbers. This amazing little add-on instantly removes all those annoying ads from webpages, resulting in quicker load times, and literally zero distracting banner ads. This is the third most popular add-on for Firefox, and it had been downloaded 27,452,360 times at the time of this posting!! Imagine all the people not clicking on Google Ads thanks to this Add-On. Google has recently made changes to Youtube, Google Maps, iGoogle, and AdSense that all attempt to serve more Ads, and squeeze more money out of each of their properties. So what will Google do when someone creates an Add-On that makes all of Google's revenue sources literally disappear for a User!? As a side note, it would be interesting to know how much Google loses each year thanks to AdBlock Plus, it has to be more than the $110 Million that it loses yearly thanks to the "I'm Feeling Lucky" button on its homepage, as Valleywag reported last year.
Yelp London, Yelp Paris, Yelp UK Where are You?!
When will Yelp expand into Paris and London? How complicated can that be? Yelp London and Yelp Paris need to happen pronto. If you look at the Quantcast demographics for Yelp, its exactly the group of people that would be most likely to travel to Europe, research their trip online, and use internet reviews for hotel, restaurant, and nightlife recommendations once they arrive as well.
Quantcast - Yelp Demographics
A Yelp London could easily get a nice kickstart from its growing, supremely loyal, US user base. Address Bar Spamming – Leech Visits off Big Websites
"Dang! If I was a spammer I would totally do that!"The newest releases of Firefox and Internet Explorer feature smarter Address Bars, that use your web history to "predict" what URL you are trying to type, and the closest matches pop up. (see below)
If you are thinking about buying a domain, and want people coming back to your site often, get a URL that begins in the same way as a popular site's URL.
For Example:
- Googly-eyed.com
- Amazomatic-toys.com
- NYTimsBlog.com
- wwwidgets.com - (This one will come up when people start typing www... into the address bar)
Lets Play: Find the PC at CPB (Agency behind MS “I’m a PC” Campaign)
Ego-Searching – 5 Tools to Monitor your Name Online
Ego-Searching: Typing your name in on Google to see what kind of stuff comes up, lets be honest everyone does it; some companies have made even made a business out of capitalizing on the millions of searches like this every day. But with the right resources, you can go beyond just Google, and really dig deep into your own presence on the web!
5. Monitor your name with Google Alerts:
Have Google notify you via email every time they find a new page with your name on it. This way when that person you met drops your name on their livejournal you are actually the first to hear about it, dont worry if its bad, no one reads people''s livejournals anyways.
4. See How Many Times Your Name is Searched on Google:
Are you one of those people that possesses the double-edged sword of a Unique Name? See how many people search for you on Google with the Google Adwords Keyword Tool. Type in your name, fill in the CAPTCHA, and make sure you select "Exact" in the "Match Type" Dropdown.
(If you're not famous like me, you may get "insufficient data", but anyone with any sort of web reputation gets a significant amount of searches. "Michael Arrington", for example, gets 2,900 searches a month.)
3. Verify your Professional Info with ZoomInfo:
ZoomInfo scrapes all sorts of sites that Google may not hit, and aggregates data about your career history. Search for your name here and make sure their web-crawlers didn't pick up on the fact that you were a night manager at the Lusty Lady back in 1985.
2. Snoop on Hipsters with Twitter Search:
Twitter is a "micro-blogging" site that allows its hipster users to post 140 character updates, many of which can be shared publicly. Although it is still used by only a small portion of the internet world, Twitter's audience and media attention is growing quickly. Snoop on people's posts with the Twitter search engine:
1. Scan the Social Web with Friendfeed Search:
Another new social media overload service out there is friendfeed, which "aims to be a one stop shop for all your social networking updates and news items." Basically, it aggregates everything its members do on sites like facebook, twitter, youtube, etc...
WIKIPEDIA BONUS:
Want to see how many people look at a wikipedia page? Use this Wikipedia Article Traffic Statistics tool to see how many people check out any page on Wikipedia. The numbers aren't exactly encouraging, just as many people look at the XENA: Warrior Princess page, as the World War II page. 






