Author: admin

  • Eric Holmlund responds

    There’s been some interesting debate and discussion in the comments here at duncanriley.com in relation to my trips inside the Joel Comm Made for Adsense program. I’m always suspicious when people go on the attack and don’t actually try to defend their products, which has been the case now for several days..however Eric Holmlund has responded in the comments and to be fair to Eric, he has a much different take on what they are doing. I’m not going to pass judgment on his arguments, but as he went to a reasonable effort to explain some of what they are doing, I’ve republished the comments below so Eric’s side is clear for everyone to use in making their own decisions, and thank Eric for at least coherently trying to explain what they are aiming at. Food for thought as they say….

    From Eric Holmlund:

    As I stated, the purpose of the templates is to help people build their own websites with their own content. My philosophy on PLR content is that it’s a viable media to use in the creation of unique content.

    We’re NOT encouraging people to upload the pre-built sites as-is. I knew this would be misinterpreted by some people (who havn’t bought the product), and for that reason, we contemplated not including the PLR content.

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  • Sharing the link love, or how nofollow has failed

    I’ve been reading with interest over the last couple of months bloggers, particularly in the SEO community, arguing that the link=nofollow attribute, the attribute launched with much fan fare a few years back as a solution to comment spam has been a complete waste of time.

    The main argument is that comment spam hasn’t decreased at all, and you know what: they’re right. It’s worse than ever.

    I also saw an argument some where (forgive me, I cant remember where…it is was you, let me know) that by using nofollow you are unfairly punishing people who participate in the conversation at your site….that it’s basically anti-community if you like, and in many ways this is a fair call.

    Then there’s Jeremy Zawodny from Yahoo, who wrote:

    Look. Linking is part of what makes the web work. If you’re actually concerned about every link you make being counted in some global database of site endorsements, you’re probably over-thinking just a bit. Life’s too short for that, ya know? Link and be linked to. Let the search engines sort it out.

    So hence today, as a bit of an experiment at least, and with comment spam under control here thanks to Akismet, I’ve installed this plugin that removes the nofollow attribute from my comments here at duncanriley.com. It’s only here at duncanriley.com at the moment, it’s not a b5media thing and I won’t be implementing it anywhere else (for the time being) until I see what the effect of this is, but please feel free to comment on the issue…because I’m sharing the link love again in the comments, and I’ll follow this up in a while once I see what happens.

  • Profile Peddling the new SEO

    Darren has an interesting article over at Problogger today on “Profile Peddling” which is setting up sites on services such as MySpace to drive traffic to your site. Now I’ve got accounts on most of these services, but to be honest I’d never really seen them as a way to drive traffic to sites (I just like playing with new stuff 🙂 ). The question is also raised: is this ethical? I like one particular commenter who wrote that it’s ethical unless you are doing it for unethical reasons! Food for thought.

  • Bloglogic relaunches as a blog news site

    I noticed an incoming link from Paul Short’s old blog network Bloglogic tonight, so I thought I’d check it out given I’d recently read the news that he’d given up Bloglogic to trade under the name of Gomaud Media…and I’ve got to say I was shocked!

    Bloglogic lives! as a blog news style site (I’m tempted to say Blog Herald style site, but well…you know, it hard to compare anything to my old baby).

    According to the Gomaud blog, Bloglogic has been relaunched as a blogging / tech / Web 2.0 news site.

    Best of luck to Paul, although I’m annoyed he didn’t drop me a line earlier to let me know about the changes: Paul, I’m still here! I’ve just added Bloglogic back into Bloglines after a fairly big break and I look forward to reading what Paul has to offer.

    Postscript: I haven’t posted this post yet as a type, but I wanted to add this: you can subscribe to the Bloglogic feed here. Paul’s a bloke I’ve got a lot of time for and who had a really bad streak of bad luck in 2005…and it’s great to see him back at the blogging game and creating new properties. Best of luck Paul.

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  • US Nuclear security is a circus: even clowns can break in!

    Now I think some of the things the US Government are doing at the moment to their citizens, in terms of spying in particular, are abhorrent, but it seems pretty clear that whilst they are busy spying on innocent civilians they are leaving their nuclear warheads unguarded…why you may well ask? Well The Register reports that three anti-nuke activists dressed as clowns broke into a Minuteman III facility in North Dakota earlier this week and painted pacifist slogans on the missile silo’s cover. Now imagine that these clowns were Al Quida operatives….makes you think doesn’t it.

  • CSS Reboot for Sale at SitePoint, SitePoint redesign

    CSS Reboot, an excellent resource of CSS beautifulness is up for sale at Sitepoint. I can’t remember whether this was once a 9rules or Paul Scrivens site…certainly there is mention of Mike Rundle on the main page…

    Also if you haven’t checked it out, the sales forums at Sitepoint have had a big makeover with a proper bidding system…very nice indeed, certainly in terms of tracking current bidding and whether a site is sold. It really takes the service from being just another forum (although a bloody good one at that) to being a proper auction site….look out eBay, the SitePoint boys from Melbourne are coming to getcha!

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  • News Corp on Media

    Want to try and understand Web 2.0 and the future of media, then read this. One of the best pieces you’ll read this year on where media is going.

  • Telecom New Zealand to split wholesale and retail operations, so why can’t the Australian Government do the same thing with Telstra?

    The Register reports that Telecom New Zealand has announced plans to create an independent wholesale operation to promote competition in the industry.

    These quotes are interesting:

    If successful, rival operators should be able to get equal access to Telecom’s wholesale network, giving them greater scope to compete and invest in broadband services.

    “The country expects world-class broadband services, and our decision to reorganise our business is one more step towards ensuring healthy competition exists to provide that,” incoming Telecom chairman Wayne Boyd said.

    So why can’t we have the same thing here in Australia, where Telstra arguably actually has a stronger market position than Telecom New Zealand does in New Zealand? World class broadband….now that would be nice wouldn’t it…real competition on a level playing field….ahhh, my utopian visions of the Australian telecommunications market, proudly kyboshed by the Australian Government.

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  • Finally, an Alexa tool for Firefox

    Spotted this one at the Search Engine Journal, Search Status, a Firefox plugin that integrates Alexa rankings (and naturally phones home to Alexa as well to track your page viewing habits) into Firefox, where as Amazon/ Alexa has never gotten around to providing something similar themselves. It also displays Google PageRank, all in the bottom right hand corner of Firefox….very nice indeed.

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  • Rocket Post, yet another blog posting tool

    Darren’s got a great big list of professional blogging links over at Problogger today and instead of doing the work I should have been doing I spent some time checking out a few of the links, and discovered yet another blog posting tool, RocketPost for Anconia. It certainly looked interesting enough from their page to download the demo version, and I was looking forward to perhaps finding the next step up in blogging software from my current blogging tool of choice, Blogware. Sadly however, I was disappointed once again, because despite some fairly nice WYSIWIG features, they just don’t get the image handling right, for example I cant copy and paste an image into a post, and as much as I can drag and drop an image from a page to RocketPost, it doesn’t save it in the post, it just shows it from the original page, which as all bloggers know is a no-no. Oh well, back to BlogDesk.

    Post note: no tags here, the feature didn’t work in RocketPost despite promising to.