The Real Time Web Continues to Be Hot

The Real Time Web Continues to Be Hot

realtimewebThere is a new way to search the web, and boatloads of users who have experienced the real time web have been impressed with the results.  Traditional search engines rank sites based on relevancy.  Because of this, the results don’t change a lot; a search today will reveal most of the same sites and information that were there last month.  However, with companies like Twitter and Facebook having millions of users continue to post content and status updates – there is now real time content on the web which updates each second.  Search engines and startups have leveraged this information to offer internet users instant access to what is happening right now.

So, when breaking news happens, a real time search will instantly give you the public’s thoughts, opinions, and experiences in relation to the breaking news.  A search on Google news would give you links to articles written by people in the media, a real time search will allow you to sift through all internet users comments and thoughts.  There have been several startups which have launched search engines and tools to try and offer users a good experience in searching and navigating through the real time web:

Here is a list of three startups along with a quick overview of what makes each of them stand out:

1) Topsy.  What makes Topsy’s real time search engine stand out is that it is focused on real time links as opposed to real time content.   So, when you perform a search at Topsy, instead of seeing what people are talking about on the real time web, you are going to see what the most popular and prominent links are being shared on the real time web.  You can ever sort to see the most shared links over the past hour, day, week, or month.

2) OneRiot.  Rumors have been swirling all over the web in regards to a partnership Yahoo is discussing with OneRiot.  OneRiot offers users a real time search engine which can be sorted based on web results and video results.  OneRiot also announced in early October that it will be rolling out a platform for advertisers to pay for listings to featured content on their results pages. While most real time web companies have been focused on technology and traffic, OneRiot seems to be an early leader in the monetization of the real time web.

3) Sency.  Sency has built a free feed for websites and blogs .  The feed brings in real time content which updates automatically on the site or blog it is published on.  The site and blog owners are able to select which keyword they want the feed to scroll for.  So, a blog about sports, can for example, have automatically updating real time content anytime someone uses the word baseball or football shows up on the real time web

*this article was written by Guest Writer Evan Britton — Founder of Sency

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6 Powerful Search Tips and Tricks

6 Powerful Search Tips and Tricks

search-engine-marketingOne year ago Google claimed to have officially indexed 1 trillion pages in its index. The exorbitant number is supplemented with the estimation that approximately 1 billion new pages are being indexed on the web with each new day. With an astronomical amount of pages on the web, it can be increasingly difficult to find what you are looking for when searching.

Statistically about 80% of all sessions on the Web begin with a search. Simply typing a phrase into a search bar can often bring random, unrelated results. We have compiled a list of six tips and tricks that will help you find exactly what you are looking for on the web.

1. Learn helpful operator functions. Operator functions allow you to narrow down your search without using the “Advanced Search” options. Essentially, you are using the Advanced Search options through the regular search bar.

Helpful operator functions:

· Site Specific: Use the “site:” operator function to search for pages within a specific site. Example: The search [site:digg.com apple] will find ‘apple’ related pages only on Digg.

· Quotations: Use quotations to find exact phrases within pages on the index. Example: The search ["health care reform issues"] will turn up only results with this exact phrase. ["health care reform" issues] will find pages with the exact phrase ‘health care reform’ and the term ‘issues’.

· Exclusion: Use a dash to exclude certain terms from your search. Example: The search [web apps -apple -iphone] will turn up search results related to web applications that do not deal with Apple’s popular Mobile Apps platform.

· Wildcard: Use the asterisk to denote a wildcard in your search. The wildcard is helpful when you cannot remember a word in the complete phrase. Example: The search [never * give you up] will turn up the lyrics to the Rick Astley song you are searching for.

2. Use a niche search engine for research. Niche search engines cater to researching a specific topic or discipline. There are niche search engines for everything from movie reviews to obituaries.

Helpful niche search engines:

· USA.gov: USA.gov gives you access to all searchable information within the federal, state, and local governments. Example: Searching for [marijuana] will turn up results related to marijuana reform and information within the government.

· Healthline: Healthline is medical information resource. To ensure accuracy, the results are filtered by medical personnel. The engine will help you find information related to symptoms, treatment options and even doctors.

· Simply Hired: Simply Hired is a dedicated job search engine that catalogs hundreds of thousands of new jobs every week. The easy-to-use site maps jobs based on location and industry.

3. Use the right-click shortcut. The latest versions of the most popular browsers allow you to select text, right-click, and then search for the phrase. If you are on the latest version of Mozilla Firefox, Internet Explorer, or Google Chrome, select some text from this paragraph and right-click to see a quick search option.

4. Hunt Twitter for time-sensitive material. Twitter is not only popular for its micro-blogging roots, but a lot of the hype that surrounds it is for its “real-time search” capabilities. Despite all of the blather to weed through on Twitter it is still a great resource to find news on time-sensitive issues. The search bar was recently added to Twitter’s home page to enable users to faster access real-time Tweets. The recent Iran election controversy is a prominent example of how Twitter can be used to find information in real-time.

5. Search straight from the address bar. Skip out on the step of going to a search engine’s home page by typing your search phrase or keywords straight into the address bar and hitting enter. Most updated versions of popular browsers already have this feature enabled. If your browser does not have this functionality enabled, consider installing a toolbar for quick search access.

6. Utilize a multimedia search engine via LeapFish. At times you will need to visit multiple search engines to find exactly what you are looking for. You can take advantage of all the major search engines at the same time by utilizing a multimedia engine that will crawl sites, videos, news, images, and blogs. LeapFish is a great example of a light, easy-to-use multimedia search engine.

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The Mobosphere, Web 2.0s Ugly Side and Top 10 Personas

The Mobosphere, Web 2.0s Ugly Side and Top 10 Personas

Mobosphere Attacks

Web 2.0 is fantastic, but clearly it has an ugly side. The same blogs and social sites that give life to the constructive conversations that serve as the ingredients to what we value from Web 2.0, also give life to those who use blogs as vehicles to attack others.

Its quite easy for nearly anyone to setup a blog these days and there is nearly no oversight out there to monitor, control and remove defamtory content. Blog owners themselves are the oversight and so companies and individuals are left to the devices of each blogger.

Responsible bloggers are careful to check, review and edit their statements before posting to ensure the integrity of the material they post. However, there is a percentage out there that not only lack responsibility but also prey on companies and people that may be of use in extending their traffic, reach and popularity. When you combine that with the viral capabilities of the web, you get the mobosphere element.

A recent example was when someone posted that Steve Jobs had a heart attack. It was clearly false but the rumor spread, snow-balled and went viral to a point where Apple Inc took a 10% stock plunge that day. In fact there was no heart attack, yet the social and viral aspect of web 2.0 coupled with the fact that there was no oversight allowed for this rumor to have very real and substantial impacts on the business of topic. Plenty of sites wanted to benefit from the traffic potential of such a juicy piece of “news” and as more and more folks wrote, the more reason there was not to check the facts.

This is an emerging problem with quite a bit of rumors, lawsuits, suicides and death threats all eminating from this lack of oversight. John Dozier of Dozier Internet Law, a leading law firm grappling with this emerging problem, has a published the top 10 personas belonging to those that make up and contribute to the mobosphere.

Top 10 Mobosphere Personas That Give Good Bloggers a Bad Name.

Visit Dozier Internet Law here.


Pickpocket

This is the guy who used to wait on street corners for elderly ladies to pass. He enjoys attacking defenseless people and stealing covertly using deception. This type of blogger will steal your copyright protected content, have the search engines push your prospective clients to his site, and then run ads and otherwise direct the traffic to your competitors. He could be an affiliate marketer for a competitor getting a share of the revenue, or he could simply be running Google or Yahoo ads on his site. Pickpockets also take great pleasure in stealing your trademarks…surreptitiously using your mark in hidden tags, meta tags, hidden redirect pages, or through a myriad of search engine optimization techniques, all in the hopes of re-directing your prospects to a competitor and taking money from you.

Wacko

We usually identify a wacko situation quickly. There are distinctive characteristics of his communications. The wacko is usually a “follower”, someone looking to gain attention and recognition, but escalates what may have started as fair criticism into more and more outrageous claims. Most sophisticated business people immediately view the poster as a “nut case”, particularly when an excessive amount of time or energy disproportionate to the merits of the subject is expended. But it is not easy for the typical browser on the web to see the pattern, usually spread over multiple web properties.

Druggie

Or, maybe “liquid courage” would be more appropriate. This guy is exactly what comes to mind. During the day this blogger is a normal guy, but at night he returns to the sanctity of his home, gets drunk or high, and goes out on the web looking for “hook-ups” and blogging on his “hang-ups”. This guy is hard to detect as a fraudster, and sometimes won’t recall what he said online the next day while under the influence. He posts aggressive, false and arbitrary attacks on whatever issue of the day (or night) catches his fancy.

Alien

No, not from another world. But from overseas. In a far, far away place, without any treaty with the US, in a country without an effective legal system and no notion of business or personal property ownership rights. Many of these types operate out of certain Russian provinces, but the blogs, postings and communications appear to be from the customer down the street. This individual usually has an ulterior motive, often working with the criminal discussed below. He has no fear, until he takes a vacation to Turkey and US federal agents grab him for extradition, which is exactly what happened on a case in the not so recent past.

Nerd

This is the guy who is scared to talk with a girl, but behind the keyboard, all alone, morphs into a Casanova. This empowerment of anonymity creates an omnipotent persona, and for the first time the nerd feels the effect of power and control, gets an adrenaline buzz when he exercises it, and he exercises it often, usually creating or perpetuating a volatile situation in which he feels he can outsmart the “opposition”. There is no principle involved. His blog postings are all about the adrenaline. It is hard to know if you are dealing with this type online…his posts are intelligent and on their face credible. But, once you identify the nerd blogger, he cowers and goes away, usually forever.

Rookie

Enjoy debating a thirteen year old? They are out on the net acting like adults, posting statements and play-acting like a grown-up. The challenge, of course, is that most people reading the posts have no idea these are coming from a kid. The tip off can be the utter immaturity of the posts, but most often the kids can sound credible criticizing, for instance, a CPA’s method of calculating RIO on REIT holdings, because they can mimic earlier posts. There is no insidious motive here; just kids having fun as the hormones kick in. But the readers of the blog posting don’t know that.

Sadist

This person attacks others, causes pain, and revels in the results in ways not worthy of mention. He loves to create, direct, control, and unleash a firestorm of criticism about a company just to create pain and damage. This type of person may often by the prime instigator of the online attacks, and tightens the noose by escalating the attack rapidly, almost as if in an obsessive state. You will find a sadist going to many sites and blogging, and he usually lets you know it was him because he uses his real moniker. He has characteristics of a stalker, and he is most likely to be the one that starts recommending direct physical violence against the executives of a company. This person is not motivated by money, but by the pure enjoyment of pain being visited upon innocent parties.

Bankrupt

No, not morally bankrupt. Actually bankrupt…no money, no assets, no prospects for work, and nothing to lose. These bloggers post without fear of the consequences or any regard for the truth because you “can’t get blood out of a turnip”, you “can’t get water from a rock”, and all these other sayings handed down, we surmise, through his generations. This is usually not a smart guy, but his postings are damaging and inflammatory. Many will own and control blogs without any concern about the consequences of liabilities that might arise through the perpetuation and “enhancement” of posts, and sometimes will post to their own blog and act like it was from a third party.

Criminal

Career criminals, no less. Like the convicted felon running a sophisticated extortion scheme against a very prominent business. Or the owner of an open blog avoiding service of process with guard dogs protecting his compound. The thieves and crooks of the world are online today; and the criminals often have both an organization and a highly effective and surprisingly coordinated operational plan in place to target a business. Rumors of $500,000 a year payoffs seem to promote this problem, which emanates from more of a “mobosphere” than the blogosphere.

Mis-Leader

This person is in no manner a leader. This blogger has a hidden agenda, but he just makes it sound like he is a totally objective commentator. He can create an appearance of authority and the casual visitor to his blog does not question the legitimacy. This type of persona is hard to figure out. One of the most pervasive practices is to control a blog and allow negative posts against all except his generous advertisers. Another common technique involves omission; not disclosing conflicts of interest or the existence of a business or personal relationship because the readers of the blog would totally discount the commentator’s posts as unreliable and biased.

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