These are my links for February 24th through February 27th:

  • Low-Hanging UX Fruit, How a Well-Designed “Thank You” Inspires Community Uptake – The Carsonified blog Think Vitamin is a fantastic read, it's all about web design and usability, which to a non-techy like me is hugely understandable and engaging. Their case studies are well worth studying: this one on improving a conversion goal (increasing prospective students to join a Facebook page) showed a massive 1000% uptake. I've always been sceptical about usability claims for conversion (surely if the content and message is the same the effect is more-or-less the same?), from this evidence I'm prepared to seriously rethink my point of view.
  • Italian privacy: Google officials convicted in video bullying case – For once, I actually feel sorry for Google. This case, where Google employees have been convicted for hosting a video depicting a crime on Google Video, is 'PC gone mad' and could have serious implications for those of us working in creating spaces to allow user generated content.
  • Sellaband Not Quite Dead Yet, Waiting For White Knight’s Signature – The great dream of online music services replacing traditional labels directly with audiences…seems to have bitten the proverbial. Sellaband, one of the VC-funded leaders in this space are borderline bankrupt, and this artists critique of her treatment: http://www.mandyleigh.com/sellaband/ seems to suggest all the same problems of days of old: focused too much on profit, not enough on A&R (probably less so than most indie labels), and limited support for marketing and promotion.
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These are my links for February 7th from 14:01 to 15:59:

  • Six Pixels of Separation: Stop lurking and step it up on social networks – There aren't a lot of great videos about digital strategy (hmm that gives me an idea…) but this one by Mitch Joel to promote his book Six Pixels of Seperation is really great and focus on the 'why' of digital strategy, rather than asking about the 'what' (the tools and technology). Spot on the money, and I'll be developing some further thinking on developing the 'how' through my clients and on this blog during the year.
  • Perfecting Keyword Targeting & On-Page Optimization – I loathe the 'science' of search engine optimisation (or 'snake something oil' as a social media person I knew called it), but I'm realising in work I'm doing currently that it's actually still quite critical as a low-cost way to get the traffic to your site that you deserve. I'm recognising a growing gap between the 'being good' (aka 'built it and they will come') social media 'evangelists' and the web science as commerce SEO people (whilst I think both approaches alone are flawed, it seems hard to get these two groups to work together). This Aug 2009 is priceless, and could probably be described as 'the only SEO article you need to read ever'. It explains what the most crucial on page elements are and how you can optimise copy for them, but intriguingly contains a chart that reveal that on-page copy only accounts for a horrifying 15% of a web page's success. It's all about reputation, time in market, and link juice – thus showing that we need social marketing to make sites work.
  • Behind the scenes of a travel feature – pt 1: transparency and the trouble with top tens – Travel writer Fiona Cullinan's blog is an experiment in crowd-sourced journalism. This 4 part article on how she used web 2.0 tools to crowd-source a top 10 article on romantic destinations was particularly interesting to me as I spent nearly 5 years editing a travel website (www.pilotguides.com) and wrote quite a few top 10 articles for magaznes too. The process is largely subjective, but Fiona tries to put some scientic approach to opening out access and reviewing the data. The verdict: crowd-sourcing takes nearly twice as long, with larger margin for off-the-mark content, but perhaps makes editorial richer and more diverse.
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These are my links for February 5th through February 7th:

  • Charlie Brooker | iPad therefore iWant? Probably. Why? iDunno – Probably the only post to read on the storm-in-an-iT-Cup that is the launch of the iPad, yet another shiny-shiny gadget from Apple which has made the elusive marketing leap from a gizmo to a life-changing-experience. As someone who just doesn't do Apple at all – and prefer proleterate and less expensive devices like the PC and Nokia, this speak to me. "It's an iPhone for people who can't be arsed holding an iPhone up to their face. A slightly-further-away iPhone that keeps your lap warm."
  • BBC – Media Literacy – I came across this BBC microsite whilst watching the BBC's new 'soap bubble' online drama E20 (a spinoff from Eastenders). The site gives a few video based resources for younger people to undertand the idea of media literacy – including clips from Screenwipe an a interview with teen digital ambassador 'JellieEllie' (I met her years ago, not really sure what to make of what she does now). E20, the BBC are hyping as a 'game changer' as being a significant budget online drama. I disagree – it's a great piece of drama, but as the Controllers interviewed say, the rules of storytelling are the same on the web as TV. I'd like to see the BBC invest in a REALLY innovative interactive drama that does make use of the online medium – E20 is just telly on the web, designed to be packaged back to be telly on the telly. The videos aren't event commentable and embeddable. Channel 4 do some more interesting content for teens in this space like Smokescreen.
  • Tories challenge BT and BBC as part of ‘100MB broadband’ pledge – Zip. Pains me to type this, but here's another very good electioneering policy from the boys in blue: they want to speed up broadband to 100Mb by 2017 by breaking up BT monopoly, which puts crippling prices onto accessing broadband at super high speeds. As far as I'm concerned, this couldn't happen sooner.
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These are my links for January 17th through January 18th:

  • Technology Review: How Google Ranks Tweets – The news that Twitter results will be included in Google has come as a cheer to those of us working within the social web. This article suggests that 'popular' Tweeters (i.e. those with a lot of followers, whose followers have high follow numbers) will rank higher in search terms, as 'followers' are akin to links in how Google calculate Page Rank.
  • Howard Rheingold interview – USA – Lengthy BBC interview with online communities and education expert Howard Rheingold discussing how virtual communities have developed and are evolving.
  • 5 Ways Foursquare is Changing the World – Foursquare, the mobile game that rewards location activity attending real-world places, is the latest phenomena in social gaming, but also offers means of retail spaces to reward customer loyalty.
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These are my links for January 15th from 00:21 to 10:49:

  • Bespoke CMS – bad news for you, good news for your agency – A one-sided but strong argument as to why using an agency's own CMS system instead of commercial systems or open source options (like WordPress, which this site is built on), to increase the potential to upgrade, get additional features, and not get locked-in. Makes sense to me, but I'd be interested to get the views of agencies who develop bespoke sites.
  • Jaron Lanier Is Rethinking the Open Nature of the Internet – Interesting NY Times article about Jaron Lanier, a digital thinker and musician, who believes the free-for-all download culture is killing both culture and creativity: “Creative people — the new peasants — come to resemble animals converging on shrinking oases of old media in a depleted desert.” A lot to question about here (e.g. referring to Google as a 'lock in' technology, I would seem them as a service provider) but shows that many of the earlier pioneers of the 'information-should-be-free' ideology of late '90s are now having second thoughts on the viability of maintaining a spirit of culture economy within it.
  • French 3 Strikes Group Unveils Copyright Infringing Logo – Most amusing, the French body to prevent copyright infringment online is being sued…for copyright infringement. That 1 of 3 strikes before they are offline. And shows it's incredibly difficult to keep within the complex rules of copyright – more so for an individuals.
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