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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.


    December 20, 2012

    Video Ads Planned for FB Timelines

    Co-Workers and clients ask me why I stopped using MSN Messenger, like it’s a surprise to them that I don’t willingly sign into an application that spends most of it’s time trying to download videos/advertisements to distract me?

    To me the more advertisements I see on a service the more I see that service as coming to an end, with one final attempt to monetize the fleeting popularity of the service at it’s peak of it’s traffic volume.

    So clearly then Facebook is signalling that now is the time to monetize and cash out, with executives promising video advertisement opportunities in 2013.

    TV Staticfacebook video

    To quote the original article on AdAge:

    “By April at the latest, it(FB) will offer video advertisers the chance to target video ads to large numbers of Facebook users in their news feeds on both the desktop version of Facebook as well as on Facebook apps on mobile phones and tablets.”

    There’s also some advanced speculation that the goal will be to keep the video adverts capped at 15 seconds, which would help minimize the amount of data transfer that is wasted on content you never wanted to see in the first place.

    Additionally, if advertisers have to compete in 15 seconds or less, this could produce ‘light’ video spots that are then re-used on other sites around the web, hopefully just replacing existing clips that are 30 seconds.

    To the advertisers out there (some of which are our clients) this means that if you were in the planning/edit stages of a video promotion for your site, and social media was one of your target audiences, then you would do well to plan on a 15 second version of your clip in advance.

    Speaking of Video Advertising

    What would happen if YouTube paid a handful of the most popular YouTube video creators together to make a ‘popular mashup’?

    I think this is what would happen (this is NOT the cheap re-mix you may be expecting):



    Felicia Day and Minecraft? It’s almost like I helped make this.

     
    Nice work YouTube! Clearly, at 28million (and counting) hits since it was released on Monday, people can’t get too much of a good thing, which is shocking considering how overplayed some of those videos are, especially the Gangnam Style remixes.

    The end of the clip has some references to the video sources, some of which were fresh links for this old dog. ;)

    SEO news blog post by @ 12:28 pm


     

    June 11, 2012

    The Google/Netflix Internet Land Grab

    There are indications of an apparent paradigm shift occurring with how your favorite streaming content is delivered to you. There appears to be a “land grab” by large corporations to move their servers next to their ISPs networking infrastructure in order to minimize lag and increase profits.

    land grab game

    In a typical setup, when you want to watch a YouTube video, your traffic get sent across your ISP servers, over the internet then to the website’s data center (where the movie is) and then sends the data back to your ISP and then to your computer.

    There is a growing move by large content delivery networks to move to a more streamlined infrastructure by moving CDNs to the ISPs. This allows companies such as Google and Comcast to save a lot of money in bandwidth traffic charges from their ISPs by reducing the amount of bandwidth required by these services and the ability to speed up the delivery of the content to consumers. Reports indicate that as many as 100 CDNs are looking to move theirs servers to a co-location setup with service providers.

    Google has been making the move with its own content delivery network for several years now, and Netflix has just announced that it will be following suit in their Netflix Open Content Delivery Network. Over 70% of all Netflix traffic is being served in through server’s setup directly at several ISPs. Prior to January all of their traffic was being distributed through CDN companies such as Level 3, Akamai and Limelight.

    CDN Traffic

    The Internet is in its Golden Age of video. There is such a large volume of traffic being generated from online video and movie providers that many networks are striking up deals directly with the ISPs themselves to get as close to the source as possible. Video providers such as Netflix can lower their operating costs by paying less for bandwidth and be able to deliver content at higher speeds (and even HD content). However, it is only the largest content providers that can afford to do so, which inevitably forces out the smaller players in the market, squashing all competition.

    Editor of StreamingMedia.com Dan Rayburn doesn’t call it a land rush.“Apple, Microsoft, Facebook, and others are doing this,” stated Rayburn, “There are a handful of companies that are large enough,” he says. “But you have to be a certain sized company doing enough traffic.”

    Andy Ellis, chief security officer with Akamai agrees that companies are moving to cache their content locally with ISPs, but stated that there are many services such as security and analytics that Akamai can sell them. “I don’t think we’re yet seeing a land rush into the ISPs,” he says. “I think you have to be really, really big to be interesting enough to the ISPs.”

    On the surface, this could sound disastrous for third party CDNs, but we have seen time and again how competition can keep the marketplace robust and lower prices for the consumer.

    SEO news blog post by @ 12:04 pm


     

    November 22, 2011

    Welcome to NewTube – HTML5 + Sneak Peek Tip

    YouTube and Google have been update crazy this month. Apparently the Google engineers are doing more than growing facial hair and thinking about their tongues.

    New YouTube Start Page

    The image above is a sneak peek at the new YouTube start page. It wasn’t intended to be public but a single command can enable anyone to use it right now.

    This command will give you the cookie you need to see the new layout:
    javascript:document.cookie=”VISITOR_INFO1_LIVE=ST1Ti53r4fU”;

    To enter the command in Chrome, you can paste it into the address bar and if it removes/culls the “javascript:” part, just put it back in and hit enter. Now you’ll have the cookie and going to YouTube’s homepage will show the new screen.

    Optionally with other browsers you can get into the developer console and run the javascript command from there.

    If that’s not enough fun for you, HTML5 features are almost completely caught-up with Flash versions of the YouTube player, and in many ways it’s better.

    No tricks needed here, just head over to the YouTube HTML5 page and click on the ‘Join’ button on the bottom of the page.

    Once that’s done you should notice a much different menu when you right click on videos that support the HTML5 player:

    HTML5 Video Playback on YouTube

    One other “TIL” was the speed test pages linked from the HTML5 page:

    Performance tests on YouTube

    Performance graphs on YouTube

    And even a real-time streaming benchmark:

    Performance graphs on YouTube

    From the looks of things this could be the year that YouTube drops flash entirely, or at the very least makes it the ‘other option’ with HTML5 as the default. I’d personally love to uninstall flash and that would be one big hurdle down if YouTube switches completely. *fingers crossed*

    SEO news blog post by @ 10:53 am


     

    February 18, 2011

    Google Updates Social Search Algorithm

    Google announced February 17, 2011 on their blog that they were upgrading its social search algorithm to include posts from popular social networking sites of a user’s social network friends into its Internet search results.

    The new experiment on Google Labs called Google Social Search is an effort by Google to help a searchers find more relevant public content from your social contacts and feeds. This is an ongoing effort by Google to improve the relevance of search results with Google’s personalized search features.

    The idea is that if you do a local, personalized search for great restaurants, you should start seeing friends posts and tweets that are in your social circle. That is assuming of course they are posting somewhere that Google has access to. Google currently included content created by your friends on Twitter, Blogger, YouTube, Quora, Flickr, Google Reader and more.

    The new social search feature is currently only available in English. Google will not be displaying any social search results from Facebook, who has previously declined to share information with Google.

    Google began indexing links and social connections as part of their Google Labs program In October of 2009. Google then began making social search available in January 2010 to its users. They then added their social feed Buzz a few months afterwards.

    Google product management director Mike Cassidy and product manager Matthew Kulick said in a recent blog post:

    “Relevance is not just about pages; it is also about relationships”.

    “Today we are moving a step forward; empowering you to get even more information from the people that matter to you, whether they are publishing on YouTube, Flickr or their own blog or website” they said.

    Click here for more information about Google’s Social Search features

    http://www.google.com/support/websearch/bin/answer.py?hl=en&answer=165228

    SEO news blog post by @ 6:53 pm


     

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