Um…
Year: 2007
Shameful: Search Engine Strategies Bidding on Affiliate Summit
Wow, this is definitely not cool:
“I was checking out the natural search results for Affiliate Summit on Google, as I do regularly, and I was surprised at one of the paid ads that was triggered.
There was an ad for the upcoming Search Engine Strategies conference in Chicago.”
There’s a general rule in the highly competitive affiliate space… don’t piss in the town well. Looks like SES is definitely doing that by bidding on Affiliate Summit’s name.
That’s sleezy in my book and won’t win SES any fans (or attendees if they realize what’s going on).
Thoughts on GMail IMAP

I’m incredibly excited that GMail now has IMAP.
Why? I’ve been a devoted GMail user since ’04 just after the launch and have gigs and gigs of emails and content locked up in GMail (bought extra storage to make due). While GMail has always allowed for POP downloads, IMAP is different.
Here’s why… with IMAP, you can have a more seamless email experience because IMAP allows you to sync your email where ever you access it from. So, for example you can interact with your email (read, label, etc) in Thunderbird or Outlook and see the changes in your GMail interface on the web. POP access doesn’t allow for this.
So, for those of us who prefer to keep webmail and offline mail nice and synced, this is a huge step forward for GMail.
There are even larger ramifications for people who have iPhones since the mail client there is heavily dependent on IMAP for sanity reasons.
Thank you, Google. You made my day.
GMail IMAP
According to my new ConvergeSouth pal Wayne Sutton, he’s seeing an IMAP option in his GMail account.
Oh please please please let this be true and spread quickly to my account!
Google’s Gmail has just integrated IMAP. However, its only appearing in a select accounts.
w4 network » Blog Archive » Gmail gets IMAP
Update: Looks like it’s official according to Techmeme! Hooray!
Update 2: I’ve got IMAP ON MY GMAIL!!
Promoting in a Flat Web
Sean Coon has a great post on the ability of laypersons (in this case musicians) to get their messages, voices and music out to an increasingly large number of folks from desirable demographics by leveraging web services and social platforms.
While Sean sticks to the music scene, his post certainly rings true for all of marketing (music is a form of marketing in my book) in general.
Recommended reading (especially if you like catchy diagrams):
What’s becoming obvious is that as more domains decide to make their APIs available in the public arena — to both independent developers and to the very same domains they compete with — our internet rapidly progresses from a linearly connective space to a multi-layered, inter-connected environment — more akin to a network — ripe with exposed hooks to latch onto and build upon.
The most powerful part of this equation? How about the fact that a great number of internet services — across numerous industries — have evolved to a point where Joe Layman can now leverage our internet’s many to many power of connectivity and discovery, yet never have to bust out one line of code in the process of doing so.
Yahoo (Still) Slipping Affiliate Links Into Organic Search Results
Yahoo’s redirection of links and its “Paid Inclusion” platform is nothing new or newsworthy. However, it’s always a good thing to shine a light on the process of how affiliate links are treated by the search engines (Google, Yahoo, MSN, Ask) in order to understand where the affiliate industry stands in its attempt to gain mainstream understanding.
Clearly, we in the affiliate marketing industry need to do more in the way of outreach and general education initiatives to let companies and individuals understand how the industry works and how concepts like affiliate links should interact with search engines.
In other words, not much new here.
(Thanks to Marshall Kirkpatrick for the link):
If you search on Yahoo, all of their organic results (not the sponsored links) are redirected through http://rds.yahoo.com. This is nothing new and they have been doing this for quite some time to record click metrics.
However, sometimes Yahoo gets sneaky and slips some affiliate links in those redirects. Don’t believe me? Let’s take a close look at the results for “cheap flights:”
Yahoo Is Dropping Affiliate Cookies
Nokia N95 as Mobile Journalism Kit
After having played around with my first Nokia device (the Nokia N800) for about a month now, I can say that Nokia makes some darn snappy gadgets.
The N95 looks like the real JesusPhone to me, and the thought of bundling it as a utilitarian device for the purpose of mobile journalism opens all sorts of future doors…
The rise of the cameraphone has certainly changed the face of journalism, and old-guard wire service Reuters isn’t about to get passed by — the company has entered into a long-term partnership with Nokia to develop new mobile reporting technologies, and the two companies have recently completed trials of an N95-based “Mobile Journalism Tookit” that takes moblogging to a whole new level.
New Design
I’ve been reworking to “rebrand” this site a bit as my homebase since I’m so scattered across the various social networks and places like ReveNews.
So, I wanted to give this place a little personality and spruce it up with a new look and feel. I’m a big fan of white space in design as you can probably tell.
Let me know if you see any bugs or have any problems!
A Better Way to Read the News
Dave Winer (early blogging, podcasting, syndication pioneer and all around scripting god) has put together a new disruptive (and better in my opinion) means of reading the New York Times.
Great stuff…
NY Times outline
NY Times outline
Online Marketing’s Greatest Strength is Also Its Greatest Weakness
There is an interesting piece in the NY Times today on the problem of web analytics. Briefly, the web might allow for radical transparency of authorial intention, statistical reports and click counting… but when you try to hammer down the attention value of individuals using or viewing web pages, it gets very murky.
This won’t get better until advertisers realize that performance is a much more accurate thing to measure than interaction or eyeball interaction.
But far from solving the squishy-numbers problem, the Internet seems to have added more confusion. Many advertisers pay Web publishers each time their ad gets an impression, meaning that it is viewed by a reader, but each company uses its own methodology to count impressions.
“One of them can be right, or the other one is right, but they can’t all be right,” said Jack Wakshlag, chief research officer at Turner Broadcasting System. “It’s interesting that people keep talking about it as much more accountable than other media, but we’re not finding that to be the case yet because there’s no agreement on metrics or accounting methods.”
Chicago Assyrian Dictionary’s Final Chapter
http://research.uchicago.edu/highlights/resources/media/roth_512k.mov
The Chicago Assyrian Dictionary is coming to completion (if that’s possible for a dictionary of this scope!) after 80 years of hard work:
Martha Roth, Ph.D., Professor of Assyriology, discusses the final volume of the Chicago Assyrian Dictionary, a comprehensive lexicon of ancient Akkadian dialects 86 years in the making. Roth has served as Editor-in-Charge of the project for the past 11 years.
Should Schools Require Shakespeare?
Um… yes.
I was fortunate enough to take a couple of courses on Shakespeare from the great Dr. John Cobb at Wofford College. Prof Cobb was beyond phenomenal and his presentation of Shakespeare changed my life and helped me understand the power of word, language and literature.
Evidently that’s not the case for almost half of NC college students (unfortunately):
According to a study by The John William Pope Center for Higher Education Policy study, 48 percent of North Carolina colleges and universities do not require English majors to take a Shakespeare class to graduate. The center is a Raleigh-based nonprofit.
CITIZEN-TIMES.com: Schools mixed on requiring Shakespeare-devoted classes
Thoughts on ConvergeSouth

ConvergeSouth Presentation: Affiliate Marketing and Web2.0
I’m presenting a workshop that’s sort of a “how to” on affiliate marketing and “web2.0” (blogs, video, etc).
You can see the slides from the presentation here:
http://docs.google.com/Presentation?id=ahndmmnhz3b_2475n7xvp
I Can Has Tumblr?

To Vaccinate or Not to Vaccinate
I was amazed at the last Buncombe County Democrats convention that there was such a strong presence of delegates who wanted to pass a measure stating that the NC State Gov’t should not require vaccinations of children based on fears of heavy metal poisoning, autism, etc.
I’ve followed some of Robert Kennedy Jr’s work in this area, but I have to tell you that I’m not convinced. Anna (who is a physician) and I have had many conversations about childhood vaccinations, especially since the birth of Mary Hudson. Sure there is some corruption by the big pharma companies, but in general, I’d rather have MH protected from such preventable things as the whopping cough (which seems to be prevalent here in Asheville b/c of the number of children that aren’t vaccinated by choice). Here’s a fun riff on the subject:On the other hand, pharma-funded think tank wingnuts say the real problem is baseless lawsuits by money-grubbing autistic kids. Either way, you just know the issue is screwed up when Mississippi and West Virginia come off sounding like the reasonable ones.
Crazy Hippies Pose As Jesusfreaks To Avoid Vaccinating Their Kids — Daddy Types
Journal of the Ancient Near Eastern Society is Online
JANES (Journal of the Ancient Near Eastern Society) is online at the Jewish Theological Seminary! Lots of fun Assyriology and Hebrew Bible material to dig through!
Thanks to PaleoJudaica for the tip.
JANES, the Journal of the Ancient Near Eastern Society, was founded in 1968 at Columbia University, and has been housed at the Jewish Theological Seminary since 1982. Over these approximately forty years 30 volumes have been published under the editorship of JTS professors Ed Greenstein and David Marcus.
Articles have been written on all aspects of the Bible and Ancient Near East covering areas such as art history, archaeology, anthropology, language, linguistics, philology, and religion. There are articles on Assyriology, Ugaritic, Phoenician, Hittite, and all areas of Hebrew and Aramaic and on almost every book of the Bible.
JANES at the JTS
The Church of Google
Since Google owns my email, feed reading, docs&spreadsheets, web history, attention data, calendaring, etc I could proclaim them as a deity as well (thanks to Larry McGehee for the link):
The Church of Google – Googlism – Proof Google is God!
We at the Church of Google believe the search engine Google is the closest humankind has ever come to directly experiencing an actual God (as typically defined). We believe there is much more evidence in favour of Google’s divinity than there is for the divinity of other more traditional gods.
» The Church of Google
Holy Bibble: Laban’s Signs
Holy Bibble is by far my favorite (web) comic. Today’s episode is great:
Laban’s SignsGooglization of Everything Book
Interesting new book-in-progress by Siva Vaidhyanathan with the subtitle “How one company is disrupting culture, commerce, and community – and why we should worry.”
This reminds me of Cory Doctorow’s excellent piece called “Scroogled” which supposes what would happen if (when?) Google goes evil. Fun stuff to ponder as I surf through my GMail and Google Reader and GCal and Google Notebook and Google Desktop and… well… you get the point:This blog, the result of a collaboration between myself and the Institute for the Future of the Book, is dedicated to exploring the process of writing a critical interpretation of the actions and intentions behind the cultural behemoth that is Google, Inc. The book will answer three key questions: What does the world look like through the lens of Google?; How is Google’s ubiquity affecting the production and dissemination of knowledge?; and how has the corporation altered the rules and practices that govern other companies, institutions, and states?
