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    Beanstalk's SEO News Blog

    At Beanstalk Search Engine Optimization we know that knowledge is power. That's the reason we started this SEO blog. We know that the better informed our visitors are, the better the decisions they will make for their websites and their online businesses. We hope you enjoy your stay and find the SEO news contained within this blog useful.


    November 5, 2012

    The Ever-Changing Face of Google

    New Gmail message screen
    If you haven’t noticed it already, Google is making some sweeping changes to the look and feel of their Gmail service. Probably the next time you sign in to your Gmail account, you will receive a prompt informing you of the changes to the compose message interface.

    Google has continued to implement a minimalist, streamlined interface across their properties. The new compose window is very reminiscent of a social chat window. The new window sits on top of the screen rather than opening up in a new window. Users can now compose a message without leaving their inbox and now have the ability to edit more than one message at a time.

    This is an ongoing move by Google into a more ‘social’ source of revenue due to a failing business model that targeted click ads for revenue. It is also part of a larger rollout of sweeping changes being made to Google properties such as Gmail, Search, News and Google Docs (now called Drive) by integrating more of a consistent G+ social feel to them. It may also be an attempt to familiarize people to the G+ interface by bring the look and feel of the fledgling G+ platform to the user, in order to make the transition more seamless.

    SEO news blog post by @ 9:53 am

    Categories: Facebook,Google,Google+
    Tags: ,

     

    August 13, 2012

    Brace Yourselves – Windows 8 is Coming!

    windows 8 is coming

    With only scant months away before the pending release of Windows 8 this fall, the final build of the new Microsoft operating system (os) has already begun to appear on torrent sites. Some of the biggest concerns about the new Windows interface is that will not allow users to opt out of the “formerly known as Metro” UI. Prior builds still allowed users to create a shortcut on the desktop to bypass Metro and go straight to the Explorer desktop.

    ZDnet reported that Microsoft will be blocking the ability of administrator accounts to use the Group Policy to allow users to bypass the tiled Metro screen. There has been pressure on Microsoft to at least allow corporate users to have the ability to create a bypass for compatibilities

    And now for something complete different…

    autonomus Driving

    Google’s automated cars are now surpassing humans with better driving records than the average American. Since the projects inception, the desire by Google was to create an automated vehicle that would be capable of out-performing human drivers and it seems they may have succeeded. Google’s self driver cars have now logged over 500 000 km (300 000 miles) accident-free without one single instance of an accident that was under computer control. Sebastian Thrun announced the project in 2010, and stated that, “According to the World Health Organization, more than 1.2 million lives are lost every year in road traffic accidents. We believe our technology has the potential to cut that number, perhaps by as much as half.” It would certainly seem that Google is on the right track.

    SEO news blog post by @ 12:19 pm


     

    May 1, 2012

    Search Engine Experiment in Spam Surfing

    If you took a very heavily spam-influenced search engine like Bing for example and removed the first 1 million results for a query, how good would the result be?

    How about doing the same thing to the best filtered search engines available?

    Well someone got curious and made the million short search engine.

    What this new service does is remove a specific # of search results and show you the remainder.

    I became immediately curious about a few things:

    • Where are they getting their crawl data from?
    • What are they doing to searches where there’s only a few hundred results?
    • Where is the revenue stream? I see no ads?

    Given the lack of advertising I was expecting them to be pulling search data from another site?

    There’s no way they are pulling from Bing/Yahoo, there are 14+ sites paying for better spots than we’ve earned on Bing for our terms..

    And while the top 10 list looks a bit like DuckDuckGo, we’re seemingly banned from their rankings, and not at #6 at all. It’s funny when you look at their anti-spam approach and then look at the #1 site for ‘seo services’ on DDG. It’s like a time machine back to the days of keyword link spam. Even more ironic is that we conform to DDGs definition of a good SEO:

    “The ones who do in fact make web sites suck less, and apply some common sense to the problem, will make improvements in the search ranking if the site is badly done to start with. Things like meta data, semantical document structure, descriptive urls, and whole heap of other factors can affect your rankings significantly.

    The ones who want to subscribe you to massive link farms, cloaked gateway pages, and other black hat type techniques are not worth it, and can hurt your rankings in the end.
    Just remember, if it sounds too good to be true, is probably is. There are some good ones, and also a lot selling snake oil.”

    We know the data isn’t from Google either, we have the #1 seat for ‘seo services’ on Google and maintain that position regularly.

    So what’s going on?! This is the same company that gave us the ‘Find People on Plus‘ tool and clearly they know how to monetize a property?

    My guess is that they are blending results from multiple search engines, and likely caching a lot of the data so it’d be very hard to tell who’s done the heavy lifting for them?

    All that aside, it’s rare to see a search engine that blatantly gives you numbered SERPs and for now MillionShort is, on the left side-bar, showing numbered positions for keywords. That’s sort of handy I guess. :)

    You can also change how many results to remove, so if your search is landing you in the spam bucket, then try removing less results. If your search always sucks, and the sites you want to see in the results are on the right, you’ve apparently found a search phrase that isn’t spammed! Congrats!

    Weak one: Google Drive

    Well my enthusiasm for Google Drive just flew out the window on my second week using it.

    UPDATE: Turns out the disk was full and Google Drive has no feedback at all. Thanks FireFox for telling me WHY the download failed. Oh man.

    SEO news blog post by @ 11:01 am


     

    April 26, 2012

    Week One with Google Drive

    Well Google Drive has been making a lot of headlines about ownership of files, depth of file privacy, virus scanning, archive support, etc.. etc..

    One item I have not seen anyone mention is the installer/login system that Google Drive is using.

    As an SEO who has to be able to test a multitude of browser versions, I’ve managed to work myself into a neat situation where each time IE is called upon to render something I get a warning message about the version I have installed.

    The warning message is great because it lets me know when an application is cheating and using IE for displaying information vs. using default system calls built into windows. The most common application I see doing this is VMWare’s ESX console which has a very graphical summary of the virtual devices.

    So imagine my amusement yesterday when installing Google Drive and seeing this:

    Google Drive using IE
    “O RLY?”

    Ownership of Files

    A certain technical news source (rhymes with SEENET) that’s famous for publishing outright false information, misleading articles, and brainless technical pieces, one-up’d itself yesterday by trying to scare people away from Google Drive by publishing a hard hitting new post about Google Drive an it’s terms of service.

    Picard Face Palm

    In order to make the story work however, they had to omit the first sentence of the section they were complaining about. Anything less wouldn’t make the post seem worth writing, much-less reading. After considerable hate from readers they actually had the nerve to ‘tack on’ the honest truth, at the very bottom of the post, instead of removing it entirely due to it being completely worthless.

    The bottom line with Google and privacy is that NOBODY would use them if they abused your trust so you can rest assured that Google is doing everything they can to keep your files safe. The clauses in the TOS that state Google has rights to your files is clearly there so they can more accurately provide services that interest you.

    If you take a lot of high resolution photos of animals, Google knows you work with animals. If you upload videos of cars on a race track, Google can guess you like race cars. Etc..

    I’d much rather have my screen space wasted with info about the next WRC event than see a bunch of adverts for a local dog grooming outfit (I don’t hate animals, but I also don’t have pets).

    File Privacy

    Lots of folks are wondering how private the files are in a Google Drive.

    The truth is that unless you’ve changed something from the defaults, every file uploaded is private to you. You can share files and folders with a few clicks, and there’s multiple options for how files are shared (read-only, contribute, full control), but it’s up to you to manually allow sharing.

    One fellow even claimed that Google Drive was modifying the JPG files uploaded from his digital camera!?

    I tested this on my own this morning with a 5.8MB .JPG @ 3968 x 2976 resolution. Yes, indeed, if I choose to view or preview the image Google isn’t going to waste my time viewing a 6MB .JPG, and instead it renders a much smaller preview to get the image on my screen quickly.

    However if I choose to download the image I get the exact same file I uploaded with no changes whatsoever, EXIF data included!

    Archive Support

    So far I’ve had no problems with .RAR and .ZIP archives in Google Drive, and I have the option of opening the archives which means downloading individual files inside an archive is very easy. I’ve only tested Google Drive with Windows and Ubuntu so far, but as expected it’s making things very easy to share between the machines and the OSes.

    .7z (7ZIP) support is not enabled yet, but at the moment the format isn’t very widely used so I doubt many users will mind the fact that you have to download the whole archive vs. opening it on-line. Obviously anti-virus scanning isn’t available on archives that aren’t supported.

    Protected archives are also supported in that you can browse the unencrypted contents, but Google Drive doesn’t make any attempts to get passwords out of you, which should help with all the tin-foil-beanie types.

    Limitations of Use

    This one is yet to be determined. Google clearly won’t allow you to upload a 4.7GB DVD and then share it public with no limits, that would be amazingly poor insight from a company that takes great efforts to plan each move.

    How much ‘sharing’ you can get away with seems to be an unanswered question at the moment, but given the lazy pirates around the globe I’m sure someone’s going to put this to the test immediately.

    Another rumour floating around is that the largest single file you can store on Google Drive is 10GB. While that’s a MASSIVE file allowance for a single file, it still seems odd that such a cap would exist since you would have to be a paid user at that point. Since the cost of trying the commercial version is very low I’m going to give it a whirl and see what I find.

    More to come!

    Beanstalk Minecraft Map Contest!

    I haven’t been flogging this very much, which is bad form given my profession, but we still have a glorious brand new Android tablet with Minecraft PE installed to give away!

    How do you win this approx ~$300 prize? You play a video game, and you have fun creating a map that will be displayed and recognized by fellow gamers on our website. Yeah, life is rough eh?

    Our initial contest winner of the $50 prize, Faragilus from the Ukraine, got his prize this week and we will be featuring his work with the rest of the winners at the end of the contest.

    For more information please look at the original post here: Beanstalk Minecraft 1.2 Contest

    PPS: I know this is a REALLY long post today but I had to toss in a Google Chrome video that really is neat. While Microsoft is spending time and money trying mock it’s competition, Google’s having fun with demonstrating it’s products and how they help people on-line connect in real life.

    SEO news blog post by @ 12:06 pm


     

    April 24, 2012

    Google: Drive to Space

    Last week I shot the blog in the foot by talking about Google Drive and Planetary Resources 1 week early. Now that the wraps are off both what’s to talk about?

    Google Drive: Go signup!

    Drive is alive! You can get started by clicking here: drive.google.com/start

    Obviously that video is REALLY bad as it’s not showing any actual product, just some marketing.

    I’ve already heard from one friend that the Google Drive app for Android works, so we should see some demonstrations of actual use very soon. I’ve actually got a copy of Chrome OS and Android installed on my Windows PC so the instant they approve me I’ll have something to review and compare how Google Drive works across devices/OS.

    As more features are rolled out we’ll also try to cover integrations with GMail, YouTube, G+, Picasa, etc., as they are all apparently going to get some loving from Google Drive integration.

    Planetary Resources: Go for mining!

    Today is a big day for humanity and our future in space. By leveraging the value of near-earth asteroids Planetary Resources hopes to advance the science of space travel/discovery by identifying and mining these valuable hunks of floating rock.
    Planetary Resources Asteroid Mining

    While there’s obviously a lot more to be learned, current predictions of densities of just platinum-group metals alone (iridium, osmium, palladium, platinum, rhodium, and ruthenium in particular) could be more than anything we’ve ever mined in Earth’s history, on a single 500 meter asteroid.

    Asteroids are just the ‘low hanging fruit’ of our universe and, by taking this easy first step, we’ll learn and discover so much that the truth is this project is clearly long overdue for humanity.

    Until now asteroids have been studied for fear, but we know now that asteroids on a near earth orbit are actually a blessing for gathering resources that are not native to our planet, like the platinum-group of metals which are deposited on our planet by collisions with space debris. Rather than wait for more minerals to fall from the sky, we’re ready to reach out and explore.

    I know that I am excited to bear witness to this in my lifetime. Really cool stuff!

    SEO news blog post by @ 11:54 am


     

    April 17, 2012

    Google Drive is going nowhere but is still moving

    I swear there’s Google staffers who are so devoted to the projects they are working on that they don’t know what the rest of the company is developing.
    One hand does not know what the other is doing.
    If I was working on self driving car technology I think that the last thing I’d do is call my on-line storage solution ‘Google Drive’, but that’s exactly what they are doing and it’s coming out next week.

    For old-school nerds, this might seem boring. GMailFS came out years ago an it allowed GMail users to add a ‘GMail’ drive as a file system in your PC. Anything you drag over to the GMail drive would be uploaded to your GMail account as hidden email messages with attachments. Browsing the GMail drive on any internet connected PC would show you all your files and you could copy/delete/upload from any location. It was actually pretty handy.

    Sadly GMail’s technical staff saw the potential nightmare that would arise if something changed with these ‘special hidden messages’ and quickly moved to block the GMailFS tool from working before it became too popular.

    Everyone using GMailFS knew it was a hack, against the EULA for GMail, and so the move to block it wasn’t a big stink, more of a ‘bummer’ moment like when they realize they forgot to increase the price of your favourite soda in the school’s vending machine and then fix it.

    Also, while Gmail offers almost 8GB of storage, using it for files could cause mail interruptions if you were to max it out trying to copy some files between machines. Plus all your mail eats up your storage, and in my case, that means only 3486MB of storage not 5GB.

    While prices aren’t available, we know all Google storage limits are expandable for paid accounts. It would only make sense, given the processing needs of email, that Google Drive will allow you to add more space to your drive for less money than you’d pay for the same storage in GMail.

    Speculation is that Google Drive will have desktop integration on Windows, Android, and Mac meaning it should be as easy to use as a USB drive yet you only need to pack around your username and password.

    Other operating systems will obviously have web access to the drive, that’s a “no brainer“, so even obscure versions of Linux and potentially even appliances like WebTVs will have limited access to your shared files.

    Why not sign up a few friends using a DropBox referral ID and get 15GB of free space? Well if you want to use your friend’s info like that, you either hate your friends or they are really understanding. Plus DropBox doesn’t have the best track record of privacy and security; in fact it seems like the hackers lay off DropBox just long enough for it to become a ripe target and then they hack it again.

    Even without the historical issues surrounding the competition, this is going to be just like G+ vs. Facebook, Skype vs. Google Voice:

    • If you use GMail you already trust Google with your most private assets, using them for files is no extra risk.
    • Google is a hardware and software solutions provider. Anything they deliver will be more advanced than the competition.
    • Google has a much larger exposure base than the competition yet a much better track record on security and data integrity.

    Personally, to me this is a no-brainer, and the only questions I have are how awesome the integration will be with other services?

    • If I upload a music folder with a playlist so I can put my music onto my car-pc, can I open the playlist and stream my tunes from Google Music on my work PC?
    • If someone emails me a file and I wanted to share it with my co-workers, will GMail let me save the file to a shared folder in Google Drive?
    • If I put a huge RAW image from my DSLR camera on my Google Drive, can I open it in Picasa and share a thumbnail on G+ without making 5 copies of the same picture?
    • If something crazy happens while I’m in a Google self-driving car, can I save the last 5 minutes of exterior video to my Google Drive and then later share the pertinent time-segment of that clip on YouTube without having to upload/download?

    ;)

    SEO news blog post by @ 12:13 pm


     

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