Tag Archive for 'Google'

Codename: Buffy

Back in late June of this year, mobile phone company HTC released the Status - touted as the first “Facebook phone.” The idea was to add a convenient Facebook button on the front of an Android-based phone to easily share one’s mobile life quickly. We almost completely forgot about these phones, as they were essentially a competitive flop in a world of super-smart smartphones. Consumers didn’t exactly rush to pick these off the shelves. The rumor mill is turning out a new theoretical gem, and this time her name is Buffy.

Codename: Buffy (yes- just like the Vampire Slayer... or iPhone Slayer), is the newest project that’s said to be brewing in the Facebook laboratory, alongside HTC. The newest reports come with more than just a codename that creatively proclaims itself the iPhone killer. A phone on its own, self-sufficient platform, Buffy would allow Facebook to be a fully integrated part of the mobile experience. It is said that its apps would all be made with HTML5 (the same coding that has brought you barrel rolls on Google, and some of the most creative digital projects of late), which leads to a range of possibilities within the software. On Android and iOS phones, there are still limitations to how far Facebook may integrate itself. Sharing has certainly been made easy, but imagine being able to add someone’s Facebook name to your contacts just as easily as you could add a phone number on a night out.

However, Facebook’s alleged attempt to enter the mobile market still seems risky. Although the phone arguably has been years in the making, reports say the phone is still a long way from hitting the market - possibly as long as 18 months. With Blackberry, Android, and iPhone competing for market share, why would Facebook want to attempt to join the clutter? Maybe its feelings were hurt when apple chose Twitter as its social-network-of-choice for integration with the new 4S. Or just maybe Facebook really does have some groundbreaking mobile ideas. After all, they did create one product already that has revolutionized the way the world works. Can they do it again?

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What's in a Name?

With the number of digital projects we’ve been working on, our fingers are sore from endless hours of SEO meta-tagging. Everyone realizes the importance of SEO, yet despite the in-depth focus that marketers put into it, there are often some obvious oversights that go unnoticed. Take for instance, the music landscape, where the single most important asset an artist can have, now, more than ever – is a name.

From an SEO standpoint, one would think that choosing common, non-unique words would lead to tenth-page banishment on Google, which is often the case for new artists. However, if you can make your band page rank in search engines as a #1 result with a simple name like “GIRLS”, your accomplishments are all the more impressive.

What any digital marketing team behind an artist could hope for, however, is an SEO-friendly gem. A term like “Lady Gaga” was probably never entered into a search engine prior to the release of “Just Dance” – and by that point, it was a guarantee you were going to find the Gaga you were looking for.

To create a name that can navigate the metadata quagmire of the Internet requires some creativity. It’s about finding an alternative way around things. Instead of making your moniker, The Weekend, try chopping out the last “e”. By these standards, The Weeknd has become a unique, and skyrocketing Internet sensation. By doing so, The Weeknd frontman Abel Tesfaye, was not only able to carve out his own unique corner of cyberspace, but to dominate the common term as well. (Typing, “the weekend” into Google, now returns the artist’s website as the top result).

Part of the reason an artist could achieve a presence like that, has to do with the introduction of Google’s “Panda” algorithm change. Panda aims to lower the rank of “low-quality” sites, in place of high quality content. “Quality” standards were established by a series of artificially intelligent tests, applied to thousands of websites that measured design, trustworthiness, speed, and likeliness to make a return visit.

While the launch of Panda has been followed by debate amongst webmasters, it seems that the algorithm must be doing something right. The Weeknd is driving traffic, a band named GIRLS can turn a top-result ranking (as can a band name CANT), and The Gorillaz have never been mistaken for the gorillas. We therefore put the onus of quality of the artists themselves. The final test of this point will be whether the buzzworthy Lana Del Rey can successfully erase all Google evidence of a first-attempt career launch under her birth name, Lizzy Grant. Perhaps then, we will discover the true power of a name.

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GOOGLE STREET VIEW

street view

Most people have experience using Google Maps with Street View, which takes video images at street level cameras 360 degrees to allow users to traverse and recognize simple view.

Sehsucht, a Germany design company, used this idea and combined Stop Motion, 2D and 3D Animation techniques to create really fantastic motion graphics.

The Street View offers endless possibilities, once again extending the infinite utilities and special features of Google. The pieces in this video were shot in many cities like New York, Canada, Berlin, South Africa, Australia and Taipei, my home country. Showing one of the major objectives of Google - involvement worldwide.

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iSpy: Analytics On The Go

Obsessed with keeping track of every click for a specific keyword from Firefox for every unique visitor on your website?

There is an app for that. The app store is flooded with paid analytics apps that are either too feature-rich for your needs or too skinny for the price tag on them.  iSpy , with its ability to hook up multiple Google analytics logins and do a granular analysis may well be the best free analytics app out there.

Its winning feature has to be the quick overview panel, which will highlight the percentage drop or rise in Unique visitors, unique visits and page views. This quickly gives you an idea of how well a site's metadata health is doing. You can drill down too–tap Referring sites and you will get a visualization as well as a running list of sites that drive traffic to your URL.

However, all's not dandy–load times are long and the interface is kludgy, but for what its worth, iSpy offers a ton of features for those not willing to part with their analytics. Ever. Must Download.

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