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Archive for May, 2009

How to Make Money With Google Adsense

Posted by admin On May - 24 - 2009

How To Make Money With Google Adsense – Earn Passive Income Online With Adsense

Almost anybody can easily learn how to make money with Google Adsense. Before we enumerate the steps, let us understand how it works first. Every time a keyword is typed on Google, the search results page will also display paid advertisements by website owners through another Google program called AdWords.

This comes out as the “Sponsored Links.” Once you sign up for Adsense, the same advertisements are allowed to be placed on your website for free and you will receive a portion of the income each time a surfer will click on the link.

Now to make money, start off by filling up the Adsense application form and confirm the email automatically generated by Google. Afterwards, Google checks your website if it has potential to bring in traffic with which access to the account will be activated in one to three days.

If you don´t have a website, you can still set up a blogger account and created a blogger blog, fill it with some unique content post and then apply for Adsense through it.

Original content can be tracked by Google, and make sure that your website is worth catching attention. Put yourself in an unbiased shoe and ask yourself: if I did not make this website, will I even be browsing this page?

The content need not be literary awarding winning pieces but it should read well and simple to understand. Plus, it should provide some useful information for the searcher.

Once approved, you can now log in your account and carefully read the terms and Conditions. There are several ad layouts you can choose and just paste the ad code in your website´s page.

Properly evaluate which ads are relevant to your content and which ones have the strongest possibility of bringing revenue. Strategize the location of each ad. Having that fixed, also focus on your content and make it look professional.

Not all topics pay out equally as well. To make money in adsense, you need to develop content for high paying adsense keywords such as mortgage, loans, insurance etc.

Learn how to make money with google adsense. Check out the best tools and services that can help explode your adsense income.

Article Source: How To Make Money With Google Adsense – Earn Passive Income Online With Adsense

Top MBA Employers

Posted by admin On May - 24 - 2009

Here are the places where B-school students most want to work, according to a survey by research firm Universum, for an exclusive Fortune.com list. Not only are these top 15 employers popular, but even in this economy most are looking for talent.

1 of 15


1. Google

Google

% of MBAs who want to work there*: 20.67%
Headquarters: Mountain View, CA
Hiring plans: The company’s job postings seek MBAs for marketing, people operations, finance, advertising, sales, general management, partnership development and other openings.
What they’re looking for: “Talent and intelligence, group spirit and diversity, creativity and idealism,” according to its website.

The search engine giant tops the 100 Top MBA Employers list for the third year in a row and it’s not because of the fitness classes and free massages, or the fact that lunch offerings like Thai beef salad and grilled wild king salmon are on the company’s dime (although Google has cut back on perks like its annual all-expenses paid ski trip and complimentary dinner service this year).

Rather, one fifth of all B-school grads strive to be “Nooglers” (new Google employees) because of the company’s stellar reputation and innovative work environment, says Claudia Tattanelli, CEO of Universum North America.

Getting in the door is no easy task, though. Google doesn’t have a hiring program specifically geared toward MBAs. And applicants must endure a phone interview, problem-solving assessments and at least four interviews with managers and potential colleagues, the company’s careers site says, adding: “Yes, it takes longer, but we believe it’s worth it.”

How to Get a Job

Posted by admin On May - 15 - 2009

How to get a job

It’s brutal out there. But the people getting hired aren’t necessarily the most connected – they’re the most creative. From food diarists to Twitter stalkers to candidates tapping the “hidden” job market, here’s what’s working now.

(Fortune Magazine) — Rob Sparno recently did something that 12.5 million Americans would kill to do. He did something that has never been attempted by this many people at once in the 60 years the government has been keeping records. He did something that’s getting only more difficult with every day.

He got a job. A really good job. A ‘pay the mortgage and still be able to pay your kid’s private college tuition’ kind of job.

When Sparno, 55, a longtime salesman, lost his position at Oracle (ORCL, Fortune 500), he knew the search wasn’t going to be easy. He had friends who were out of work and struggling to find jobs. He knew that getting back in the game would require every skill he’d spent his career honing. Methodical by nature, Sparno made a trip to Staples, where he bought a black hardcover lined notebook. He vowed to record every day what he did, whom he talked to, how he felt, how many miles he ran. He even wrote down what he ate.

0:00 /2:46Wall Street is hiring

To keep his spirits up (another must if you’re in the persuasion business), he organized a group of seven other executives – including a former COO and CFO – who also lived in his community of Princeton, N.J. They got together every few weeks on Saturday morning in the back corner of a local diner and shared tips, like what to do in a second-round interview and how to gather job leads. And by 9 a.m. each morning Sparno and another jobless friend would call each other and check: Okay, what are we going to do with this day.

Rather than blast out resumes, Sparno drew up a list of about 15 former colleagues who were now in leadership positions – his prospect list, in sales parlance. Then he sat down to write them e-mails. One note was to someone he hadn’t talked to in years, an old colleague from Netscape who now worked at Salesforce.com. In his e-mail Sparno wrote that he was looking for the “next new thing.” Minutes later he got a text message from his contact’s BlackBerry with two words: “Call me.”

As every salesperson knows, getting prospective buyers to meet with you is just the first step. The key is figuring out, What do they want? What keeps them up at night? Sparno read every story he could find on Salesforce.com (CRM). He watched YouTube videos of CEO Marc Benioff being interviewed by reporters, all the while taking notes. (”It was just like cramming for an exam.”) To organize his thoughts, he assembled a five-slide PowerPoint presentation going through exactly how he would approach the job and what he would accomplish in the first 30, 60, and 90 days.

By the time he went for the final interview – his seventh – he had his pitch down perfectly. Halfway through the meeting, Sparno and the manager started discussing how to target a client Sparno had worked with before. The manager went up to the whiteboard to throw out some ideas, and Sparno leaped up to join him, until the two were standing shoulder to shoulder, markers in hand, batting strategies back and forth.

Two-and-a-half months after leaving Oracle, Sparno got the job. All it took was a scheduled daily pep talk, a fraternity of out-of-work neighbors, voluminous research, seven rounds of interviews, a bout of inspiration at the whiteboard, and, of course, a food diary.

You may have heard – it’s rough out there. Not only is the unemployment rate the highest it’s been in 25 years, but the situation is deteriorating fast. This is not your run-of-the-mill recessionary job market. If unemployment hits 10% next year, as some economists expect, the country will have seen the fastest rise in joblessness since the 1930s. What’s more, as you’ve no doubt noticed from talking to neighbors and friends, the phenomenon is hitting a broad swath of the population: The unemployment rate of college graduates, 4.1%, is the highest on record since the government started keeping track in 1992. At this pace, economists at the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute estimate that in 2010 fully one-third of the U.S. population will at some point in the year be unemployed, or working part-time when they’d rather be full-time.

It’s enough to drive the average job seeker to distraction. Like just about every unemployed twentysomething, Jamie Varon, 23, had her heart set on working at Twitter. She had already applied for a position through the company’s website. And asked a contact at Google to put in a good word for her. And showed up at the company’s headquarters with a bag of cookies in an attempt to charm a recruiter into talking to her. But she still hadn’t landed an interview.

What Varon did next made her feel a little crazy. But then, it’s a crazy time to be looking for a job. She created a website called twittershouldhireme.com, including her resume, recommendations, and a blog tracking her quest. Within 24 hours the company contacted her. She had a lunch meeting set up at Twitter, and in the meantime got two job offers from tech companies that had noticed her site, which has even spawned imitators: googleshouldhireme.com and facebookshouldhireme.com.

Getting noticed is a big accomplishment: Many companies have so many applicants that they’re leery of advertising open positions. Just four hours after the Phoenix Coyotes of the National Hockey League posted a position for an assistant on Jobing.com, a manager called the site pleading for the ad to be taken down; the company had already received 180 resumes. UnitedHealthcare, for instance, asked Fortune not to disclose the number of jobs it has open. The spokesperson said he feared an onslaught of job seekers, citing a recent incident he had heard about where 700 people applied for a janitorial position at an Ohio school.

Still, hiring has not stalled entirely. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, while 2.5 million people were laid off in January, 4.4 million new workers were hired (bet that’s a number you missed amid all the depressing news). But with the ratio of job seekers to openings at 3.9, vs. 1.7 at the start of the recession, the tactics that might have worked when the economy stalled in 1991 or 2001 simply won’t cut it anymore. Just finding openings is a project in and of itself. “When you’re in a recession and employers are all going stealth, you’re probably looking at 90% or more [positions] being in the hidden job market,” says David Perry of executive search firm Perry-Martel International and co-author of Guerrilla Marketing for Job Hunters.

Meaning a job seeker must be part detective, part consultant, part salesperson. Rob Sparno and Jamie Varon were willing to do whatever it took. Are you?

WHERE THE JOBS AREN’T

It’s hot inside the National Capital Region Job Fair in Falls Church, Va., and it smells like sweat. Hundreds of nervous job seekers are navigating narrow hallways and waiting to talk with recruiters. You know it’s bad when even the line for Freddie Mac is long.

Lisa Hamm, a recruiter for consulting firm Booz Allen Hamilton, takes a swig from her Aquafina bottle. It’s all she has time for between talks with job hunters. People are waiting as long as an hour for just a few minutes of her time. The more impatient give up and simply plop their resumes onto a pile and walk away. You get the sense they’re just buying an extra lottery ticket.

When Fortune called Hamm after the job fair, she reported that Booz Allen had received 250 resumes that day, but only four people were immediately asked in for interviews. In other words, those fair attendees might as well have played the lottery. “The thing to avoid is thinking that by sending out a ton of resumes, you’re looking for a job. You’re not,” says Steven J. Greenberg, publisher of Jobs4point0.com, a website targeted at job seekers over 40.

That was a lesson Alfred Garcia, 43, learned fast. At the end of last year he found himself job hunting for the first time in his professional life when he had to shutter his Internet startup after funding fell through. “I came out of law school in ‘89, ‘90. You didn’t so much look for a job as a job found you,” he says.

The jobs he saw online were far below his experience and pay grade. So he hit the phones, calling about 40 former colleagues. A month into his search he reached a contact from his days at AOL who had started his own firm, Perfect Sense Digital, which helps companies manage their online strategy. As they chatted, it emerged that the CEO did know of some opportunities – at his own company. He hired Garcia as a contract consultant and a month later brought him in full-time.

Garcia had an enviable contact list at the ready. That’s the best-case scenario. But what if you don’t know a soul?

Jonathan Kooker, 31, graduated last spring from Georgetown’s law school, and by his own admission he wasn’t the glad-handing type. While his fellow students schmoozed at bars with big-firm recruiters, to Kooker “it felt like a hazing ritual.”

So instead of embarking on a job search, Kooker went on a mentor search. He found the website of an immigration-lawyers group and started cold e-mailing. Kooker explains, “I’d e-mail, ‘I’m interested in how you developed your career because I’d like to have that position in 20 years. Would you let me come interview you?’”

Before a meeting, Kooker would smooth out his curly dark hair and put on a suit, and he always arrived with ideas on how firms could attract more clients. He once walked into a meeting with the head of a firm’s immigration department, and the woman said she would have to cancel because she was inundated with clients dealing with a new compliance rule. Kooker immediately responded, “Well, it’s my opinion that this is a good thing, because I see it as an area to home in on for business.” The attorney agreed to give him 15 minutes while she ate a sandwich at her desk. They ended up talking for 45 minutes, and by the end she basically said, “You’re incredible. We’re going to have to find you a job.”

She referred him, and the next day Kooker received a call from another firm, which turned into his first offer. Another lawyer with 13 years’ experience proposed a joint venture with Kooker. He even got an offer from a firm in Israel for some of its caseload – a job that Kooker took on. After contacting 60 lawyers and talking with 25, Kooker found it difficult to stop networking because he was learning so much. “They’re all potential mentors, and although they may not have a job now, in four years they might. And they’ll remember me,” he says.

If you need to fill out your network quickly, one of the easiest moves is to join a professional association. David Stevens sensed he was on the verge of losing his job selling ads for two radio stations, so he joined his local chamber of commerce in Santa Clara, Calif. In the span of three months, while still working, Stevens forced himself to attend as many events as possible. Anytime he met someone at an event, Stevens would add him as a contact on LinkedIn, the social-networking site aimed at professionals. “When the time came, he says, I updated my [LinkedIn] status to ‘I’m up for grabs – who wants me?’” Soon after, the CEO of the Santa Clara Chamber of Commerce called. There was an opening at the Mountain View Chamber of Commerce. Within a week Stevens, 28, was at his new desk.

Another way to build new contacts is to volunteer. Robin Palchus lost her job as a senior HR director at a national accounting firm last March, so she started spending more time working with a career-networking support group at her church. One evening she was paired with a man who needed help tweaking his resume and preparing for an interview. She gave him some tips, and within two weeks he sent her an e-mail saying he had a job. He thanked her, then offered to refer her to his new company, Booz Allen Hamilton. A few days later Palchus received a call from a recruiter there, and after 11 interviews she joined the company as a senior associate.

Now a caveat: Nobody has a free hour to hear your sob story. You have to make a compelling case for busy people to clear time for you. “Just meeting people to network in the industry broadly – no one has time for that now,” says Lisa Rutherford, president of tech startup Twofish, which supports transactions in online games and social networks. You’re best off coming with a referral and having a very specific request. “For example, if someone said to me, ‘I’m looking at all the different mobile payment gateway providers, and I’d love to understand your perspective on these competitors,’ obviously I can help with that,” explains Rutherford.

One surefire way to grab people’s attention is to offer intel on their competitors. David Perry, the headhunter, advises gathering such tidbits whenever you go on an interview. When the hiring manager asks whether you have any questions, Perry recommends saying, “Yes, as a matter of fact I do. I understand your five competitors are such and such. What is it about ABC Company that makes you guys nervous?” Take notes, and when you get to your car, pick up the phone and call those competitors: ‘I just left an interview at XYZ Corp. Apparently you’re doing this and this, and it’s keeping them up at night. Do you have time for coffee?’”

It’s hard to know how aggressive to be these days. Allen Wright and his son were just digging into their pancakes at an IHOP restaurant in Gainesville, Texas – they were coming back from the annual Texas-Oklahoma football game – when Wright spotted Larry Nichols, the CEO of Devon Energy, walking through the door with his wife. Wright was looking for a job after leaving Koch Industries to move to Oklahoma City, and Nichols was on his list of people to contact. Despite being unshaven and wearing a T-shirt and shorts, Wright caught Nichols and set up a meeting for the next week. After several more follow-up phone calls (about one a week), he eventually got the job as director of public affairs and employee engagement at Devon, the country’s largest independent natural gas and oil producer. So being a bit of a noodge worked for Wright.

But Sara Laschever, co-author of “Women Don’t Ask” with Linda C. Babcock, an economics professor at Carnegie Mellon, points out that for women especially, the pushiness required in this job market may be tough to pull off. “When men are being aggressive or being forthright or focused, we think, ‘He’s very goal-oriented,’” she says. “And when a woman does it, it’s ‘God, who does she think she is?’” Like it or not, says Laschever, their research shows that “for women to be persuasive, they need to be perceived as likable. Men just need to be perceived as confident.”

WILL YOUR RÉSUMÉ EVEN BE READ?

On a recent morning in Columbus, Ga., 19 Aflac employees were seated around a table, discussing some IT positions they needed to fill. Aflac has never had layoffs in its 54-year history and is now in the enviable position of attracting more talent than it has room for.

The recruiters are doing a status check on several open positions. An IT manager, Octavio Herrera, who’s wearing a yellow tie with white Aflac ducks, says he’s found some candidates on LinkedIn for a systems security administration position. For another opening, LaShena Smith, the senior technical recruiter at Aflac, reports that she interviewed someone whose manner she found too aggressive for the position. The candidate was dinged. As Herrera later notes, “Technology can always be taught. [I want] great communication skills and someone who works well with others.”

Like many large companies, Aflac keeps a huge database of job applicants it can search for certain key words like “supervised staff” if the company wants someone with management experience. Anyone who applies online is funneled through this system.

Typically a recruiter will present four or five candidates to the manager, so perfecting your resume is critical. “The reality is we have a ‘no’ pile and a ‘maybe’ pile, and it takes four seconds to know where it winds up,” says Glenn Fox, AOL’s former head of recruiting and the CEO of BusinessElite, an invitation-only website for senior executives and those who hire them.

Always include metrics that describe your work: How many direct reports did you have? What was your budget? And be sure to mirror your resume to the description of the job you want. If the position is “product marketer” and you’ve done that kind of work before, actually use the words “product marketing” to describe your experience.

As for cover letters, recruiters and managers are split on how much weight they carry. Some advocate writing only a few compelling sentences, because no one has time to read a drawn-out letter. Others still recommend the traditional format of three or four paragraphs to show off your writing prowess. Kevin Donlin, president of Guaranteed resumes, advises clients to add a PS note at the bottom of a cover letter with a punchy sentence on why you’d be great for the job. People tend to read those out of curiosity.

Clever packaging can only take you so far, though. Peter Cappelli, a professor of management at the Wharton School, argues that since the 1980s there’s been a fundamental shift in the way companies hire. As with just-in-time manufacturing, in which companies lower inventory to reduce carrying costs, Cappelli says employers are adjusting to changing markets by plugging in perfectly suited workers from the outside when they’re needed, then dropping them when they’re done. He calls it the “just-in-time workforce.”

That is bad news for job seekers who are hoping to reinvent themselves in this recession. “You’re not going to change your career in this downturn,” he says. “Nobody’s going to hire you and say, ‘I know you were in finance, but we’re going to retrain you to be in marketing.’” Adds Neil Davies, a Microsoft staffing manager. “If we need five things, in the current market we’re not really moving forward on people who have four out of the five.”

Sometimes, though, even when you’re not perfect on paper, you can make a great case for yourself.

GETTING TO YES

“I have no reason to hire you,” said the hiring manager at SAS, the software company, when Pat Bennett walked in for an interview. Bennett, 52, had no background selling technology software. But she pitched herself as a perfect fit in a unit targeting financial services clients. Her last job had been at LexisNexis, handling high-strung attorneys every day. Surely she could deal with hedge fund managers too. In her second-round interview, Bennett gave a presentation showing how she’d approach the business in her first 30 days. She got the job.

In this environment, companies simply can’t afford to hope you’ll be able to do the job. You need to demonstrate it. “Gone is the time when you could have the first year to prove yourself,” says Juliet Flint, a partner at Kleiner Perkins Caufield Byers who advises the firm’s portfolio companies on talent and recruiting. “You need to have immediate impact in the first 30 days.”

Well before you’re hired, there are ways to show off your strengths. The CEO of tech startup AdaptiveBlue said the company just hired an engineer who found three problems in the software he’d be testing before he even came in for an interview.

Michael J.A. Ehrlich, laid off from his job in research equity sales at Oppenheimer, found another clever way to show prospective employers he would bring in new business. He persuaded one former client, a hedge fund, to let him use its office to conduct his job search. The boutique research shop JNK Securities Corp. was so impressed that it hired him less than three weeks later.

If you dazzle a company enough, it might even create a position to make use of your talents. After Chris DeBrusk sold his consulting firm, he started kicking around an idea for a product to help financial services catch any ethical lapses by doing surveillance on their own trading activity. He took his idea to half-a-dozen companies, including Sapient in Boston, where he had worked eight years earlier. His presentations laid out the business opportunity, what kind of revenue upside it could bring, and when. Sapient brought him on in February. “In my experience most firms have open requirements,” says DeBrusk. “It’s about building the relationship first and then finding the job.”

So when you’re following up on an interview, don’t just send a pat thank-you note. Think about what you learned from the interview and show how it sparked some new ideas about the job. If you’re reading an article that seems relevant, send it along with some commentary. “Every so often I would send an article to a vice president to let him know I was thinking about the market,” says Sparno. “I’d write, ‘Hey, John, interesting article on market dynamics,’ just to show him this is a guy who’s thinking not just about a job – I’m someone who can think strategically.”

Even though the market is brutal right now, the worst thing you can do for your career is to take a job that doesn’t fit you. Not only will you not do your best work, but when the recession ends (and it will), you’ll be moving in the wrong direction.

“I didn’t want any job just to have a job,” says Jonathan Kooker, the law school grad, “because then, when people start hiring again in two years, I’d be stuck with experience I didn’t want.” Sure, he’s only 31. He doesn’t have kids or a mortgage. But he does have something 12.5 million people desperately want: an employer.

Stop Mobile Telemarketing Calls

Posted by admin On May - 13 - 2009

Get ready.  Telemarketing calls to your mobile phones are on the way.  YOU CAN STOP THEM NOW.  Here’s how.

Register online at https://www.donotcall.gov/
REMEMBER: Cell Phone Numbers Go Public next month.
REMINDER….. all cell phone numbers are being released to telemarketing companies and you will start to receive sales calls.

…. YOU WILL BE CHARGED FOR THESE CALLS

To prevent this, call the following number from your cell phone: 888-382-1222.
It is the National DO NOT CALL list. It will only take a minute of your time. It blocks your number for five (5) years. You must call from the cell phone number you want to have blocked. You cannot call from a different phone number.

HELP OTHERS BY PASSING THIS ON TO ALL YOUR FRIENDS… It takes about 20 seconds.

Additionally, you can register a phone number on-line at the following site: https://www.donotcall.gov/

Top 10 Twitter Apps

Posted by admin On May - 7 - 2009

Ok, twitter is going bonkers! Newscasters, grandmas, cops and corporations are all twitter-crazy.  Here’s the top 10 twitter apps to make your tweets more pleasureable.

Twitter has been a runaway success since the status message inspired web app launched about a year ago. Its rapid adoption, ease of use and extensibility resulted in a lot of excited developers taking Twitter’s best bits and mixing them up to their own ends. FranticIndustries and the Twitter Fan Wiki together present a comprehensive list of Twitter mash-ups and extensions. But what to try first? Here’s our selection of the most interesting and practical Twitters apps.

1. Twitter Atlas

Fresh Logic Studios has built an addictive Flash mapping interface, aggregating worldwide “Tweets” (Twitter messages). The screen refreshes every six seconds or so with a different Twitterer’s status report; and profile details are displayed on top of their location on a map. A toolbox allows you to toggle between views – and the Microsoft Virtual Earth graphics are stunning. Each of the Twitterers has their own lollipop on the map to note where they are, plus there’s (limited) language support. But the Atlas isn’t just a visualisation device for status junkies. There’s also a practical side: users can get directions, search for local shops and services, find out what events are coming up in places around the world, and even see where the most expensive petrol stations are around.

What’s it missing? The ability to get only your Twitter group’s tweets shown on the map.

2. Squawk

Those enjoying a Second Life have a few options for social network integration. One of the most impressive is Squawk, which links up your gaming application with services including Twitter and Jaiku. There’s an introductory how-to video for installing the service (note: you’ll have to find it as an object in the SL ‘metaverse’ and then configure it). There’s also a good social network devoted to tracking Squawk’s progress, letting those not in Second Life peep in on the locations of top squawkers.

3. Twitticious

This little app from Alex Girard is about as stripped-down as you get – it doesn’t even have a GUI. But it’s a time-saver for those who’d like to link up their Del.icio.us bookmarks and their Twitter posts for later tagging and grouping. All the app does is take your tweets and route them to your Delicious account. With lots of Twitter networks set up specifically for this kind of link-sharing activity, this could be a golden life-hack. A word of warning though: there’s no turning off the service. Full marks go to Alex for making some amendments to the service, to allow your followers’ comments to also be added as links to your delicious account – as well as the Public Timeline’s, should you want that many links in your Delicious account!

4. Remember the Milk + Twitter

Alert and to-do service Remember the Milk has just combined its range of services with that of Twitter, meaning that if you include ‘rtm‘ as a friend in your Twitter network, your new task-oriented friend informs all of the web services that you’ve got synced up to Remember The Milk – and that can include iGoogle, Google Calendar and others. The smart bit is a series of commands that you can send to RTM via Twitter, using a few easy short codes. For instance, to get a list of these commands just type in ‘d rtm !tips‘ and you’ll get back a full command list. Once you get the hang of the commands, you’ll see how much time this can save, instead of flipping between devices or websites to update your lists.

5. Social Comic Book

It’s never going to win any prettiness awards, but the creative juices were flowing the day that Tim Wintle decided to mash up Flickr tags with Tweets. The idea is simple: enter your Twitter name, and the app creates a comic book of six panels – with your Tweets serving as the description in the panel and Flickr photos being pulled in that relate to your Tweets. Kind of like a visual Mad-Libs. Great idea – just a bit of a shame that some Tweets can’t find relevant Flickr photos to attach to them. Dust up the old design and it could be quite viral.

Another comic strip attempt is Tweetweet. Not quite as inventive as Social Comic Book, but still worth a look if you’ve got ten minutes to kill between meetings.

6. Twapper

Twapper hooks into your 30Boxes online calendar account and allows you to post tweets directly into your calendar from your mobile phone or online. It also allows you to see the Twitter activity of your network from within the 30Boxes environment. Another great feature is the ability to ‘roll your own groups’ of Twitterers. Whilst it helps to have a 30Boxes account to get the most from the integration, there are some features available to anyone.

7. Twit Bin

Why go to Twitter when Twitter can come to you? Twitbin’s a Firefox extension that nestles all your friends’ tweets into a sidebar. It’s configurable too, and the tiny ad at the bottom of the sidebar is something I can live with. BTW, it works just as well in Flock.

8. TwittyTunes

If you want to share what you’re listening to with the ease of Twitter, this is the browser plugin for you. It’s a sibling of the popular FoxyTunes extension, and supports dozens of players. So if you’re signed in to your Last.fm player, Twitty Tunes will let your Twitter friends know what you’re listening to. There’s even a social network devoted to the most recent TwittyTunes shout-outs, called Foxy Tunes Twitter DJ.

9. Twitterment

This one appeals to the statisticians and the buzz crawlers. This charts the ‘zeitgeist’ of what’s being Tweeted about across the globe. You can even see comparisons of one key phrase versus another, and what day of the week key terms pop up most frequently. For instance, here’s one that compares beer and sex. Not surprisingly, beer starts getting popular around Friday.

10. Flotzam

Flotzam started life as Flitterbook, a showcase mash-up of Flickr, Facebook and Twitter data – developed by Karsten Januszewski and Tim Aidlin for MIX07. It’s available only to PC users as a downloadable .exe or as a screensaver, but it’s well worth having a nose around. For Mac OS X users, check out some of the dashboard widgets collected in the Twitter Fan Wiki.

Setup a Mobile Marketing Campaign in 2 minutes

Posted by admin On May - 7 - 2009
Now you can setup a mobile marketing version of your website – in a few minutes.  TextMarks.com is site providing mobile messaging solutions for personal and business use.  There’s a trial version, with tons of ads, or you can buy the “pro” version with no ads.  Learn more at www.textmarks.com.

Coordinate group activities on the go

Group of people
  • Manage text alert lists.
  • Facilitate many-to-many text discussions.
  • Provide updates and collect feedback.
Get Started!

Mobilize web pages and applications.

Web to phone
  • Respond with live text from any web page.
  • Use variables for custom responses.
  • SMS-enable web applications with our API.
Get Started!

TextMarks is an early stage company focused on making text messaging more powerful and more accessible. We empower individuals and organizations to “text message enable” their information and their web pages — and to do so in a matter of minutes. If you like what we are doing, please contact us. We are looking for passionate and talented individuals to help us fulfill our mission.

Free Web Broadcasting Services

Posted by admin On May - 5 - 2009
High Quality Live Video Streaming service is now available. It’s called Procaster

  • Record And Play

    Record & Play

    We record directly in the streaming service so your shows are available immediately for on-demand viewing.

  • Broadcast Your Camera

    Broadcast Your Camera

    Use any camera or webcam connected your computer. Support for Firewire, USB and video input cards.

  • Broadcast Your Screen

    Broadcast Your Screen

    If it’s on your screen it can be a live stream. Powerpoint, web browsing, even video and audio!

  • Broadcast Your Game

    Broadcast Your Game

    Hook directly into DirectX and OpenGL to reproduce your 3D gaming experience online.

  • Easiest to Use

    Easiest to Use

    One click live broadcasting to all your players on the internet.

  • Highest Quality

    Highest Quality

    The best quality live streaming possible, supporting 16:9, HD, and auto-adapting framerate.

  • Chat

    Chat

    Fully moderated real-time chat in all your players.

  • Promote

    Promote

    Grow your audience by sending a tweet when
    you’re live.

  • Flash Based Player

    Flash Based Player

    Link to your channel page on mogulus.com or embed your player anywhere on the internet.

  • Solid Desktop App

    Solid Desktop App

    Get away from browser limitations and unleash the full power of your computer’s processor.

  • Mix in Realtime 2D/3D

    Mix in Realtime 2D/3D

    Mix multiple inputs like a professional TV studio. Includes picture-in-picture and real time 3D layouts.

  • 100,000+ Viewers

    100,000+ Viewers

Reach huge audiences over the massively scalable Mogulus network.
ive streaming is hardly new on the web. And a lot of startups are focused on it. One of them, Mogulus, now hopes to simplify the process, while upping the quality and adding new options.Mogulus’ is launching a new desktop application tonight called Procaster. On the front end, it’s a simple app that offers one-button streaming of video out to the web. But behind its simple exterior, the tool has the ability to stream high definition quality video that isn’t possible when encoding on the fly over its current web-based Flash player.

But much more interesting are the side features of the new app. With Procaster, you can easily do both screen and game broadcasting. With the click of a button you can share your desktop screen over the web and talk over it during a live broadcast. Other apps out there allow you to do this, but as Mogulus CEO Max Haot likes to describe it, Procaster allows you to do a “Steve Jobs keynote-like” screencast. That’s because Procaster has a nice feature which allows you to show the desktop screen while also showing a smaller screen of you talking about what is on screen. With the click of a button you can switch between this dual view to just the desktop or to just yourself talking. It’s all quite seamless.

You can also zoom in on any area of a screen to highlight it with the click of a button. And, Procaster features a chat window to allow you to better interact with those watching your stream.

Even more interesting may be the game-casting feature. This allows gamers to broadcast themselves playing a game like World of Warcraft live while talking over it. While you may not see much of a market for this, currently on Mogulus, they are already seeing gamers doing this by way of their own makeshift methods. And some of these streams are getting 20,000 concurrent viewers, Haot tells me.

With Procaster, all of this can be done using any standard computer. Hoat sees this as a potential “game changer for presentation technology.”

Procaster is being unveiled right now at the NY Video Meetup. It will be available to download tonight here. Right now it’s PC-only, but a Mac version is in the works. I took the screen capture below of Haot showing it off to me, live, over the web using Procaster.