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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.


    February 14, 2013

    iOS popularity = Big Bills for Bing Hating

    We decided to call a spade a spade, and Google is paying a fee to keep Bing from being the default search engine on iOS.

    The fee is based on per-unit pricing, and not only are there more units than ever, but the per-unit price is also going from $3.20 last year to an estimated $3.50 per unity in 2013!

    A flock of sheep attempting to enter a building with an apple logo at the same time.
    Given the growing user base these should almost be rabbits?

     
    Since the prices are a guesstimate, one can honestly say that it will cost more for the exclusive right to the default search engine on iOS in 2013.

    However there are certain ‘publications’ that have forgone the guessing part and are rather certain that Google will pay up.

    For example..

    Techcrunch title: GOOGLE TO PAY APPLE 1 BILLION
    An honest title: GOOGLE COULD PAY APPLE 1 BILLION

    In fact, if Samsung, or Google (via it’s Motorolla Mobillity acquisition), can keep one-upping each of the new iPhones, then the cost of licensing to the user-base will be peaking at a point which it will never return to again.

    But is it worth the money knowing how much of a search advantage Google has over Bing? Well that depends entirely on who you ask!

    Apple pundit:

    People will use whatever is the default like pack of blind sheep. Everyone knows this.

    Google fan:

    If that’s true then why is the Google Maps app on iOS the most popular app on the device? People clearly don’t just use the default apple maps?

    .. and really, if we’re talking about users who skipped over the BlackBerries, Nokias, Samsungs, etc.., for a specific device, then perhaps we should give them some credit for also choosing a better search experience?

    After all, how many times would you let your phone load Bing before trying to switch it?

    I personally would let a ‘Bing’ search happen once at the most, just to get info on “setting default search engine on iOS”. :)

    SEO news blog post by @ 5:08 pm


     

    September 12, 2012

    The New iPhones are here! (but do they have 4G?)

    After much speculation, the new Apple release details of the new iPhone 5 today and stated that the new iPhone will begin shipping September 21st.iPhone5

    Gizmodo compiled a great list of features, but here is a quick rundown of the new iPhone features:<

    • 18% Thinner and 20% Lighter: Coming in at 7.6 millimeters (0.29 inches) and weighing a scant 112 grams (3.95 ounces), the new form factor stands to be the world’s thinnest Smartphone.
    • Large Panoramic Screen:  Supports more resolutions and uses less power. Apple claims that the new 16:9 4-inch panoramic screen has 44 percent more saturation than the iPhone, which makes the display full RGB. The display features the touchscreen sensor built-in.
    • Upgraded CPU: Apple claims that their new A6 processor is 2x faster in CPU and graphics and will load web pages 2.1 times faster than the iPhone4S.
    • LTE: Long Term Evolution capabilities will make this versions connectivity much faster than its predecessor.
    • Battery: Huge improvements have been made here. The new iPhone features 8 hours talk-time on 3G, 8 hours LTE browsing, 10 hours Wi-Fi browsing, 30 hours video playback, 225 hours on standby.
    • earpods

    • Updated Camera: 5 elemental lens, 8 megapixel sensor (3264 x 2448 pixel), backside illumination, hybrid infrared filter and f/2.4 aperture. The updated camera also comes with a new panorama capture mode and improved video face detection (now at 1080p FullHD).
    • Improved Front FaceTime Camera

    • Upgraded Audio:  added 3 microphones (front, back & bottom), speakers now have 5 transducers from 3 for clearer, fuller sound, and improved ear buds – now cleverly dubbed “EarPods”.
    • Wideband Audio: This new iPhone 5 technology uses something called wideband audio, that if supported by the carrier, the phone will use more of the spectrum of available bandwidth to send much better, high-fidelity version of your voice over the network.
    • iPhone connector

    • New Dock Connector: Apple calls its new connector interface “Lightning.” It’s all digital and features 8 pin connectors. It is an adaptive interface that will send different signal types based upon your connection needs. The best part? It is REVERSABLE!
    • Comes in black or white models
    • Prices:All the new iPhone5s come with a standard 2 year contract with Apple.
      • 16GB: $199
      • 32GB: $299
      • 64GB: $399
      • iPhone 4S? now only $99

    SEO news blog post by @ 3:05 pm


     

    June 21, 2012

    Apple: On the Charge!

    apple controller

    Over at Apple things are changing to give the company even more power, profit, and exclusive control over it’s customers than ever before.

    The good news is that Apple has been charged and found guilty of misleading Australian consumers who purchased Apple’s advertised “iPad with WiFi + 4G” only to find it’s not compatible with the 4G networks in Australia.

    This resulted in a $2.25million fine + $300,000.00 in costs for Apple, a fine that seems light given the gross disregard for Australian consumer laws that Apple showed by selling a product that cannot deliver on it’s advertised specifications.

    Indeed a small price to pay to purchase Australian tablet buyers without investing in efforts to make the hardware work with the country’s ISPs.

    Protecting you from yourself :

    Apple also made headlines by patenting an anti-surveillance technology that endeavours to mask a user’s on-line activity with fake information.

    Clone Troopers

    In a nutshell the service would hide your real activities behind a wall of fake information. If you ‘like’ a Mars Bar™ then your clone would like a brand of chocolate bar that directly competes with your choices. In essence it’s like an electro-acoustic muffler that covers your on-line activity with white-noise.

    There is some implication that Apple has a technique to confuse actions of the clone with your actions, but I’d have to see that in action to honestly discuss it.

    At the end of the day this means that instead of Apple and ‘others’ knowing about your interests/habits, only Apple will have accurate information, and they can claim that all other ‘targeted advertisers’ are second to them in accurately promoting to someone’s interests.

    To me, this reinforces that Apple customers are the sole property of Apple, including their information.

    Soul’d Out?

    Apple has some great changes coming for loyal consumers. They are spending the time to remove the excellent Google Maps application, which is a free service, and replacing it with Tom Tom maps, which they likely had to purchase/invest in.

    It’s also rumoured that the next update to Apple’s Siri app will focus on data from Apple partners like Yelp, Rotten Tomatoes, and OpenTable, instead of Google.

    This was a brave move to protect Apple from Google’s growing competition in hardware markets. If Apple doesn’t limit Google growth with every effort they can muster, Apple consumers will start to see why so many people are switching to Android.

    From a SEO perspective, the fact that Apple, and it’s users are getting away from Google is worth noting. When I am optimizing a site, I’m doing it for the good of the site/company, not my preferences in search engines.

    So if I had a client who sold flower arrangements or something that is very likely to be searched for with Siri, I’d seriously be considering the competition and rankings over on Yelp as part of their external ranking strategy for coming months.

    Spending your money for you…

    These changes from free services to paid options won’t cost consumers too much more, at least not compared to the new 19pin iPhone interface that Apple is switching to starting with the iPhone 5.
    The old iPad and iPhone adapters
    You heard that correctly, all those accessories you have purchased over the years with iPad/iPhone connections are all going to be junk. Not to fret however, Apple’s authorized partners will sell you all new devices, and are already working on a new line of must-have add-ons featuring the new connectors.

    This way, all the cheap knock-off adapters/accessories that aren’t making Apple any money are going to be worthless and Apple will be climbing back into your pockets to kick those imposters out.

    And thus the walls of the garden appear to be growing, taller, thicker, and electrified on both sides.

    Speaking of Power & Charging…

    In more promising news the process of pulling solar power from infrared light is closer to ‘practical application’ with recent progress in the field of carbon nanotube research over at MIT.

    If you look at a typical solar panel, exploring the reaction between light energy -> power conversion, you’ll note that infrared (non-visible) light energy is largely wasted.

    This is especially troublesome when you realize that ~40% of the sun’s light energy that reaches our planet surface is actually in the infrared spectrum and isn’t being converted to electricity by traditional solar panel technology.

    Plus this new research is pointing to a compatible technology that can be added to existing installations vs. replacing existing solar panel installations.

    Here’s the relevant section from the original article:

    The carbon-based cell is most effective at capturing sunlight in the near-infrared region.

    Because the material is transparent to visible light, such cells could be overlaid on conventional solar cells, creating a tandem device that could harness most of the energy of sunlight.

    The carbon cells will need refining, Strano and his colleagues say: So far, the early proof-of-concept devices have an energy-conversion efficiency of only about 0.1 percent.

    So while the recent announcement is exciting, and very promising, we won’t see the results for some time to come due to efficiency/cost issues which need to be resolved first.

    The real news is that folks worried about investing in current solar tech need not worry as much about the future if the next improvements are going to be complimentary to existing solutions.

    SEO news blog post by @ 1:10 pm


     

    May 3, 2011

    I For One, Welcome Our Google-Android Overlords!

    Google continues to be dismissive over the public’s concerns regarding the ability of its mobile devices to send precise user locations back to its servers. Google has been collecting the location information from millions of mobile phone and devices stating that the information was "extremely important" to the direction of the company’s future.

    Andy Rubin, Senior Vice President of Mobile at Google wrote to Larry Page, founder and now CEO, explaining that location data from mobile phones was "extremely valuable to Google," especially given the privacy blow-up concerning its Street View cars at the time.

    Google is suspected in gathering the personal data of portal users from October to May through various Wi-Fi networks during the implementation of its controversial street view program last year. Resulting investigations in the US, Germany Korea and Australia has forced Google to acquire this data through alternate means.

    Google location manager Steve Lee told founder Page in the memo: "I cannot stress enough how important Google’s wifi location database is to our Android and mobile product strategy," "We absolutely do care about this because we need wifi data collection in order to maintain and improve our wifi location service."

    Google plans to use the data to create a database of Wi-Fi hotspots, for improving their Google maps services and to establish their increasing geo-specific advertising market.

    A researcher from Los Angeles, Sammy Kamkar showed how Google Android smart phones where transmitting GPS locations and other data back to Google up to “several times an hour.”

    The biggest concern that arises from this data collection comes if the data is compromised and falls into the wrong hands. The data is precise enough to allow a person to correlate the timing and the frequency of phone usage to pinpoint the home address of an Android phone user.

    "If your phone is at the same location during night hours, they know where you live," says Kamkar. "If your phone location is on the move, they can guess that you’re in a car and even calculate how fast your car is moving."

    How it Works:

    The Google Android system collects information about surrounding Wi-Fi networks and nearby cell towers. It is then uploaded and stored in a cache file. Unlike Apple’s iOS, there is a limit on the size of the file, so only the last 200 Wi-Fi networks and 50 cell tower locations are recorded. The data is transmitted along with a unique identifier for the phone itself, and is unencrypted.

    In a related story, two Android users are filing a class-action lawsuit against Google in the amount of $50 million USD. The plaintiffs, Julie Brown and Kayla Molaski of Oakland County say in the suit that Google’s privacy policy did not state that the phones would broadcast their location information. They further state that the privacy policy was written in such a way that most users would not be able to clearly understand that the privacy policy allowed for Google to track user’s locations.

    Last week Google issued the following statement: "all location sharing on Android is opt-in by the user." and that "we provide users with notice and control over the collection, sharing and use of location in order to provide a better mobile experience on Android devices. Any location data that is sent back to Google location servers is anonymized and is not tied or traceable to a specific user."

    Recently, Apple has become the target of a class action suit and both companies are now under increasing scrutiny. Both Google and Apple are expected to testify on May 10 to Congress about its data collecting practices.

    SEO news blog post by @ 8:49 pm


     

    October 22, 2008

    Looks out Apple iPhone here comes the Google Android

    Since the release of the Apple’s iPhone they have pretty much sat in a class of their own winning both small business and Mac fan boys over. As always when a product gets a large market share there can be a lot of grumbling over the quality, and support of a product which the Apple iPhone has definitely see its share (and lawsuits). One of the biggest draw backs of the Apple Apple iPhone is its very closed sourced and secretive nature, and it’s application distribution system (iTunes). In fact in the past Apple has even gone as far as preventing companies from releasing training material on how to develop for the phone.

    Now anyone in the SEO community has been hearing rumors of the Google Android Phone now since 2007, with the first model (HTC G1) recently hitting the market in the UK. Naturally you’d think that Google is a search engine, how can they produce a quality phone? That easy they don’t, essentially what they are creating is a Google Platform (Operating System) for handset manufacturers to integrate into their phones. For Google this is the best possible approach as all the non software costs are covered by the hardware manufacturers (other then reference designs), for Apple this is bad as it potentially will be competing against a multitude of handsets.

    The next major question is how can Google’s handset platform possible compete against Apple when it has had the iPhone on the market long enough to have already released a second revision prior to Google’s initial offers? Easy they just have to make it more appealing, and that is exactly what they did yesterday. On October 21st, 2008 Dave Bort a Google software engineer wrote “Today is a big day for Android, the Open Handset Alliance, and the open-source community. All of the work that we’ve poured into the mobile platform is now officially available, for free, as the Android Open Source Project.” For more information here is the (formerly linked to: http://source.android.com/posts/opensource) original post on source.android.com.

    How exactly does releasing a phone platform as open source make it more competitive?

    1. There is a lot of existing free software that has already been developed for Linux that will be easy to port to the Android as it is based on Linux already.

    2. Linux has an extremely strong community of programmers, and has some of the best free development tools on the market (lots of programming languages, compilers, and libraries to build GUIs).

    3. Linux developers, and open source proponents are WAY more fanatical then Apple Fan Boys. If you don’t believe this statement all you have to do is watch the movie Revolution OS to see the likes of Richard Stallman, Bruce Perens, or Linus Torvalds.

    4. Now that initial platform has been released to the general public there already will be developers sitting at home trying to improve on Google platform. Who doesn’t like free development on their product?

    5. Within 12 months I would be surprised if there were any less then 1,000 free applications for the Google Android. Just try to see how many free applications there are for the Apple iPhone.

    As for me I’ll probably wait for the platform to mature a bit first, but my next cellphone will definitely be based on the Google Android Platform. And I’m waiting with baited breath for all the SEO Applications that will be developed as Link Bait (Good free tools will always organically generate links). Not to mention that Firefox will most likely never be available on the Apple iPhone which already has dozens of SEO and Web Development addons. Essentially you can have a restrictive Apple iPhone, or the Google Android which is a true smartphone.

    SEO news blog post by @ 11:45 am


     

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