Monthly Archives: April 2006

Search for I.S. citations

Gary Price points to a nice search engine for citations in the Information Science field: CiteSeer. See, for example, this search for my most recent interviewee at Net Squared, Stuart Weibel. Scroll all the way to the bottom of the page to see all the features included. Nice.

I got to meet Stuart in Seattle after I made a blog post saying I’d be there last week. Thanks for making the connection Stuart!

Find blog posts, photos, events and more off-site about:
, , ,

URLs explain it all

Check it out, was just reading an article that humorously referred to God.org so I thought I’d look it up. Then I looked up God.com. Both religious looking enough. Check out God.us though – the U.S. registered URL. It redirects you to Free-Samples.com – where you’ll find lots of coupons and cheap stuff to buy. Does that make sense or what? The internet is so funny.

Adwords and Social Justice Campaigns

Update: See also this story on Dutch UNICEF AdWords activities.

Couldn’t help but notice after doing a Google search for Amnesty these paid results:

You’ll notice that the political right has got its grips on this one. I think this is a way underutilized means of promotion, especially by small radical organizations. You get your links on these lists by chosing keywords, bidding on a price-per-click and setting a maximum daily expenditure. It doesn’t have to be expensive. Here’s where you do it.

Check out this dismal example, paid results for “immigrant rights”. There’s only one paid result. That means that if you bid anything – you’re going to be at least the number 2 result on the right had side of the page in search results for “immigrant rights.”

More, better and stranger after the jump.
Continue reading

Live Help Desk went well

Last Friday I did a conference call by Skype with Seth Mazow of Interplast, Norris McDonald of the African American Environmentalist Association and Kim Felton from Northwest Medical Teams. I thought it went quite well. Everyone had some overlapping interests and experiences and communicated well. We didn’t address all of the things we planned to, but I think that was ok.

We did discuss:

  • Adding a presence-indicating (available/unavailable) “Skype me!” button to the sidebars of blogs.
  • Good times to use Skype and good times to use Gizmo Project (Seth says Skype is better for calling land lines or mobiles – Skype out – in developing countries, otherwise go with Gizmo.)
  • Using Audacity to record, edit and turn Skype calls into MP3 format. (Seth’s great idea!)
  • Using Odeo to upload recorded Skype calls and to record single voice audio files through the browser.
  • How to submit that Odeo channel to iTunes for inclusion in its podcast directory.
  • Trying to include a cell phone into an otherwise all four Skype-in conference call crashed the call.
  • We discussed the limitations and possibilities of using Skype conference calls.
  • We also talked a little bit about how to use Feedburner to watch for unpermitted scraping of your content by other sites – a problem that Seth is dealing with right now.
  • And we talked about how to use comment tags to hide code in your blog and leave notes for yourself and others.

All in all I thought it was a good use of time. A little more structure could have been helpful, but I don’t think it was too bad. I’ll put on another one of these calls soon, so keep your eyes peeled. For now though, I’ve got some serious catch up to do. I’ve been doing too many training type activities last week and not enough content production.

AjaxWrite is nice

I’ve used AjaxWrite a number of times now to prepare documents on my Mac for people that I’m guessing are MS Word dependent and it’s great! It’s a project of a group calling itself AjaxLaunch. They aim to launch a new Ajax application every week and have so far succeeded. Their newest is a browser based video editor that seems to be getting good reviews. I’ll be exctied to see what else they come up with.