WebProNews

Tag: Videos

  • Is Social Media Part of Your Corporate Culture?

    WebProNews recently spoke with C.C. Chapman, founder of Digital Dads, Co-author of Content Rules, and self-described Boston Media Maven. He says, "Social media has to be ingrained in you culture. All the tools in the world aren’t going to save you."

    "It doesn’t matter what the platform is that it’s being pushed out on. You want good content, and you push it out in as many places as you can, whether it’s written or video," he adds. "Social media ain’t new. It’s been around for a long, long time. The concepts aren’t new, the tools just get newer every day."

    Businesses struggle every day to find good social media strategies. There’s no one right way to do it. There are so many variables involved that it really has to come down to personal decisions on the part of management. Here are some tips to get you started

    When it comes to finding the right employees to put on your social media strategy, Chapman says, "So many companies are like, ‘oh, he’s a social media guy’ or ‘she’s a social media girl’, and at the end of the day, everybody in your company…doesn’t need to necessarily understand these tools and be responsible for it, but every time somebody goes out from your company, they’re probably socializing, whether it’s having a beer or hanging out on Facebook and Twitter, you want them to understand these tools…to understand that everything they say can be shared and whatnot. And you know, teach them these tools, so they can figure out and get it in your culture so you’re not scared of this stuff."

    "PR and marketing should not be separate departments anymore (I know the purists will yell about it)," he says. "Get ’em together, and…depending on the company, get legal involved…I mean, it depends on what you are…"

    "There’s definitely training companies…there’s nothing wrong with having blogging guidelines or social media guidelines," Chapman adds. "There’s nothing wrong with that, but don’t try to clamp it down. You know, if Bob’s angry, he’s going to go out there and start yelling about it, and you need to take care of it, but guess what: if you don’t have a listening strategy, and if it’s not part of your culture, you’re never gonna hear it either, so that’s the other side of the equation."

    You never know, you might be able to solve some internal problems by listening. 

    As far as finding a starting point, "Start playing," Chapman suggests. "Start small. I always tell people (I work with a lot of executives), I say, play on your own. You know, set up your own Facebook account for you, just so you can figure out the tools, and maybe you’ll start going, ‘Oh, I see how this could benefit, and how this could be used", because otherwise…until you start playing with it, you’re never gonna understand it."

  • Watch: Live at Facebook HQ – How Businesses Can Best Use Facebook

    Facebook has been running a series called "Building Social for Business". Past entries can be viewed here.

    Today, Kevin Barenblat, CEO of Context Optional, will be at Facebook’s headquarters at 3:30 Eastern (12:30 PT) to talk about how businesses can best use Facebook, and answer questions from the audience. 

    You can actually submit questions as well. 

    Watch live streaming video from facebookguests at livestream.com

    Context Optional is a social media marketing company (actually, they call themselves THE social media marketing company), which deals in social marketing strategy, creative design, application development, and community management for global brands and ad agencies. Its clients include Dell, Safeway, Chase, MTV, McDonald’s, Red Lobster, Kohl’s, Toyota, and Fandango. 

    I assume this guy knows what he’s talking about if Facebook is having him speak at their base of operations. 


  • Here’s What a Google TV Remote Looks Like

    Here’s What a Google TV Remote Looks Like

    ABC Nightline ran a story last evening about Google’s plans to take over the living room with Google TV. As you may know, Sony is one of the launch partners and will launch HD TVs and Blu-ray players supporting the service. 

    During the story, which has been made available by Hulu, a new Sony commercial for a Google TV HD TV is displayed, along with a remote control for that TV, which comes with a keyboard and directional pads (hat tip to Engadget). 

    It’s important to remember that the remote is just for one Google TV device. Google TV will come to different devices, which will have their own controls. You will also be able to use your Android phone or iPhone as a remote control. 

    One feature of Google TV that has kind of been overlooked is that you can use voice search to control it through your phone. Much has been made about the fact that you can control it with your phone, but as Google TV product manager Rishi Chandra demonstrates in the video, you can simply speak to search for what you want to watch. Just in case we weren’t lazy enough, sitting on the couch watching TV, we can somehow get less exercise during that time. 

    The video claims that when Google unveiled Google TV earlier this year, they had little more to display than a cartoon-like experience, but that’s not exactly true. They did have a cartoony demo video, but the company demonstrated much of Google TV’s functionality live at Google I/O. It was quite impressive. 

    Read here for our thoughts on why Google TV has the opportunity to make a huge impact on the web, and why that means big things for your business. 

  • Mark Zuckerberg Talks Success After Dropping Out of School (on The Simpsons)

    Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has been in the press a lot over the last couple of weeks. Ok, he’s been in the press a lot all year, but particularly as The Social Network approached its theatrical release Friday. 

    Zuckerberg also announced a $100 million donation to public schools and the launch of a new foundation called Startup:Education. Some considered the move little more than a PR tactic to improve his image as The Social Network paints it as one who betrays, (at least to some – the beauty of the film is that this is very open to debate). Others simply praised the gesture. 

    Either way, Zuckerberg displayed a sense of humor about the topic of education in a voice-over he contributed to The Simpsons, which aired last night. 

    In the clip, Lisa Simpson asks Zuckerberg to talk about how education was instrumental to his success. To this, he reponsed, "Well, the truth is, I dropped out of Harvard."

    "Better earnin’ than learnin’," declared the character of Nelson. 

    "Hell yeah! I’ll get the best kind of degree…honorary baby!" exclaimed Zuckerberg. He then pointed to Bill Gates and Virgin Airlines’ Richard Branson as other dropouts. A janitor steps out and says he hasn’t done too well for himself, and proclaims that he graduated. 

    The Social Network topped the box office over the weekend. Read our review here

  • Is Bing More of a Threat to Google Than Facebook or Apple?

    According to Google CEO Eric Schmidt, Bing is its main competitor – not Facebook or Apple. He sat down with Alan Murray of the Wall Street Journal, who was kind enough to post an embeddable video of the conversation. 

    Do you think Bing is Google’s biggest threat? Share your thoughts here.

    "What’s interesting is we think of neither [Facebook or Apple] as a competitive threat…our competitor is Bing. And it’s interesting, for years, people have asked about Microsoft and everyone has forgot about Bing."  

    He calls Bing a "well run, highly competitive search engine". He doesn’t get into Bing’s partnership with Yahoo, but that clearly has to be considered a big part of Google’s headache in search competition.  

    When asked about being more concerned about Bing 5-10 years down the road, he said, "Facebook is too early to tell. Facebook is a company of consequence, and they’re doing an excellent job building a social network." He also says that people forget Apple is a partner of Google. 

    Schmidt talks about a number of other topics, such as privacy, China, his thoughts on the "web is dead" article, President Obama, social media, and more. 

    (HT: SAI)

    Who should Google be most concerned about: Google, Facebook, or Apple? Somebody else? Tell us what you think.

  • Watch: Facebook News Event (Location Feature Announcement?) Live

    Facebook will be hosting a live news event this evening at 8pm Eastern (5pm Pacific). While the company has yet to confirm the news, it is widely expected that Facebook will announce its location features.

    Facebook has provided us with the embed code for the live video of the event for you viewing pleasure:

    Watch on Facebook Live to chat with other viewers

    Kim-Mai Cutler at InsideFacebook speculates that the launch will be connected with the auto-suggest feature spotted on Facebook today, adding,  "The company has reportedly partnered with location-focused business directory Localeze, the same company that powers conversion of addresses or coordinates into named locations for Twitter. Facebook could use Localeze’s directory to match addresses, and coordinates coming in through the API with businesses that have Facebook Pages."

    We’ll find out what’s really going down soon enough. Keep your eyes posted on the video above.

  • Twitter Tests In-Stream Photos and Videos

    Twitter Tests In-Stream Photos and Videos

    You may soon be able to post more than just 140 characters on Twitter. Twitter is testing a new feature that allows users to post videos and photos in their Twitter streams.

    Some have spotted the feature, while most probably never had it. Twitter gave Mashable the following statement:

    "We’re constantly exploring features and settings. What you saw was a small test of a potential consumption setting for inline media. We show inline media on our own iPhone and Android (Android) apps."

    The description that accompanied the "Tweet Media" setting on those accounts that had access to it said, "By default, you’ll only see images and videos shared by people you’re following, and reveal those by people you’re not. Check this box to see media from everyone on Twitter."

    It’s unclear whether or not Twitter will go forward with making this a feature, but it would not be surprising. It may mean bad news for other third-party apps that let users post photos and video, but it wouldn’t be the first time Twitter released its own functionalities that compete with its own ecosystem.
     

  • YouTube Users Have a New Selection of Music to License for Videos

    YouTube has announced its support of a site called FriendlyMusic from RumbleFish. The site lets YouTube users purchase a lifetime license to edit songs into their videos.

    A user can find pre-cleared music for YouTube on the site, then purchase an mp3, and use it in videos.

    In a post on the Official YouTube Blog, the company says:

    Since its launch, YouTube has pioneered ways for users to get professional music into their videos while respecting copyright — and generating revenue and promotion for artists, songwriters, and music companies. Through Content ID and a series of unprecedented deals with music labels and publishers, we’ve turned user-made music videos into a business opportunity as well as a form of expression. With Audioswap, we built a library of songs you can drop right into your existing YouTube uploads. And with countless artists, we’ve hosted DIY music-video contests and film festivals.

    To be clear, many of the FriendlyMusic tracks are still available for free in Audioswap. What’s new is that the FriendlyMusic store offers you up-front reassurance that specific songs are pre-cleared for your video — plus the ability to edit those songs in your own video editing tools, at the point of creation. This marks the first time a music company has offered YouTube users a direct license. We’re excited about it and we hope you are too.

    YouTube Partners with FriendlyMusic

    According to YouTube, once a user buys a cleared song from the site, it is licensed for unlimited views. Unfortunately the selection is quite limited. Hopefully that will change in the future.

  • YouTube Streams Twilight: Eclipse Premiere

    Update: MySpace is streaming it as well.

    Original Article: YouTube announced that it will be streaming the red carpet footage of the Twilight: Eclipse premiere this evening. It’s that big a deal.

    "The scene from Hollywood may look nothing like Forks, but all of your favorite vampires and werewolves will be there giving live interviews and greeting fans," says YouTube’s Thomas Henry. "Many of these Twilight faithful have been waiting for up to three days in order to catch a glimpse of their favorite pale-faced friends."

    The coverage starts at 5:30 p.m. PT tonight. Watch it here.

    If you can’t tune in live (and you still actually want to see it), you will still be able to watch the footage on the Twilight YouTube channel.

    Learn about some online marketing strategies they’ve been using for this film here.

  • Middle Men: Another Internet Story Coming to the Big Screen

    It’s looking to be the year of Internet stories penetrating mainstream cinema. You’ve no doubt heard about "The Social Network", David Fincher’s upcoming film about the founding of Facebook. The poster for that was just released the other day.

    Another film, which hasn’t received as much press is Middle Men, based on the true story of (as the tagline puts it) the guys who "brought the XXX to the WWW." The following trailer for the film was recently released:

    Here is the synopsis according to IMDB:

    In 1995, everyone had a VCR, music was sold in record stores, and the world-wide-web was a new found discovery. Businessman Jack Harris (Luke Wilson) had the perfect life a beautiful family and a successful career fixing problem companies. Then he met Wayne Beering (Giovanni Ribisi) and Buck Dolby (Gabriel Macht), two genius but troubled men, who had invented the way adult entertainment is sold over the internet. When Jack agrees to help steer their business, he soon finds himself caught between a 23 year-old porn star and the FBI all the while becoming one of the wealthiest entrepreneurs of his time. Witness a story so outrageous, you won’t believe it’s true. A story that proves business is a lot like sex getting in is easy, pulling out is hard.

    Middle Men features Not only Wilson, Macht, and Ribisi, but James Caan, Kelsey Grammer, Robert Forster, Kevin Pollak (who WebProNews interviewed a while back), and this guy:

    The movie hits theaters August 6th. Here is the IMDB page for the movie, and here’s the official site.

  • B.J. Novak Roasts Google, Apple, Facebook at Webby Awards

    B.J. Novak Roasts Google, Apple, Facebook at Webby Awards

    B.J. Novak of NBC’s The Office and Quentin Tarantino’s Inglourious Basteds hosted the Webby Awards last night.

    In his opening monologue, he talked about how great Pandora is, how Apple should stop updating iTunes "for two days", unreliable Google Maps time estimates, the New York Times accepting an award from the Internet, Facebook privacy, and more.

    Watch the video below (hat tip to Silicon Alley Insider):

    Special Achievement Awards included: 

    – Webby Lifetime Achievement: Vinton Cerf
    – Webby Person of the Year: Roger Ebert
    – Best Actress: Amy Poehler
    – Film & Video Artist of the Year: OK Go
    – Webby Agency of the Year: BBDO
    – Webby Breakout of the Year: ChatRoulette
    – Webby Artist of the Year: PS22 Chorus

    A full list of Webby Award nominees and winners can be found here.

  • New Video Shows How Google TV Works

    New Video Shows How Google TV Works

    Google has posted a new video showing off Google TV. Those who watched the keynote at Google I/O won’t see much new here, but it does show some of the different things you can do with it that previous videos didn’t show. It shows actual footage, rather than animation, anyway.

    Watch here:

    "This is cool but it’s not really new technology," commented one YouTube viewer. "It just makes things more convenient for avid TV watchers. I spend more time on my laptop anyway so this doesn’t do so much for me."

    It is actually the convenience that Google and its partners played up more than anything during the presentation of this product. At Google I/O last month, the world "seamless" was used more times than I can count. It may indeed be the convenience factor that makes or breaks the success of Google TV.

    Some (Steve Jobs) have already all but dug Google TV’s grave, but ultimately it will be consumers who judge, and once they get to try it, that’s when the picture will become more clear. Based on all we’ve seen, it has a lot going for it that could make it more successful than past web-tv endeavors. More on that here.

  • Watch an iPad 3G Get Microwaved

    If you’ve ever wanted to see an iPad microwaved, you can thank Dovetastic Microwave Theater for making your dreams come true. Dovetastic runs a YouTube channel, which provides videos of various items being microwaved, and the latest is an iPad – and not just an iPad, but the new 3G 64GB iPad.

    This is not the first time we’ve seen the destruction of an iPad in a YouTube video, but I haven’t seen one microwaved until this point. Some will call these people names like "imbeciles", but it is clear that Dovetastic takes its work seriously. It calls itself a "performance art website subsidiary of Perfectlymadebirds Co.

    In case you’re wondering what Perfectlymadebirds Co. is, it’s an eBay shop that claims to have "the largest selection of doll eyes on Ebay at low prices." They also have various Quizno’s kitchen equipment listed, and of course, the Microwaved iPad itself, which currently has 14 bids, and is up to $132.49.

    eBay listing for microwaved ipad

    Interesting.

    I think my favorite comment involving iPad and microwaving is totally unrelated to the microwaving of this iPad. @Daking75 on Twitter says, "The ipad needs to microwave burritos then I will buy one!!"

    On a related note, Apple has sold over a million iPads in a month. I’d be curious to know how many of them have been destroyed.

  • Google Talks Next Steps for Fiber Network

    Update: Google has posted some info regarding the next steps for its fiber network as the submission deadline approaches today. Product Manager James Kelly says:

    Over the coming months, we’ll be reviewing the responses to determine where to build. As we narrow down our choices, we’ll be conducting site visits, meeting with local officials and consulting with third-party organizations. Based on a rigorous review of the data, we will announce our target community or communities by the end of the year.

    Of course, we’re not going to be able to build in every interested community — our plan is to reach a total of at least 50,000 and potentially up to 500,000 people with this experiment. Wherever we decide to build, we hope to learn lessons that will help improve Internet access everywhere.

    Original Article: Google announced today that is planning to build and test "ultra high-speed" broadband networks in a small number of trial locations around the U.S. This means Google will deliver Internet speeds of 100 times faster than what most Americans have access to now, according to the company.

    Google says it has the following things in mind:

    • Next generation apps: We want to see what developers and users can do with ultra high-speeds, whether it’s creating new bandwidth-intensive "killer apps" and services, or other uses we can’t yet imagine.
    • New deployment techniques: We’ll test new ways to build fiber networks, and to help inform and support deployments elsewhere, we’ll share key lessons learned with the world.
    • Openness and choice: We’ll operate an "open access" network, giving users the choice of multiple service providers. And consistent with our past advocacy, we’ll manage our network in an open, non-discriminatory and transparent way.

    "Like our WiFi network in Mountain View, the purpose of this project is to experiment and learn," says the company says. "Network providers are making real progress to expand and improve high-speed Internet access, but there’s still more to be done. We don’t think we have all the answers – but through our trial, we hope to make a meaningful contribution to the shared goal of delivering faster and better Internet for everyone."

    Google is putting out a request for information to help identify communities that are interested. They’re taking responses until March 26. Then they’ll announce the chosen communities. We’re awaiting response from Google on the criteria for how communities will be chosen.
     

    Related Articles:

    > White Spaces Officially Cleared For Wireless Broadband

    > Google Sees White Spaces Filling With Internet

    > Google, Verizon Weigh In On White Space Test

  • YouTube Streams Tiger Woods Press Conference Live

    Most people I know are pretty tired of hearing about Tiger Woods, but the world is still apparently eager to hear what he has to say at his press conference today. Currently, "what time is tiger woods press conference" is listed on Google Trends, and "Tiger Woods" is a trending topic on Twitter.

    Clearly a lot of people still care. If you fall into this category, you may be interested to know that YouTube will be streaming his press conference today live at 8am PT at YouTube.com/citizentube."We’re experimenting with a live-streamed press conference on YouTube," YouTube’s Chris Dale tells WebProNews. "Anyone in the world can watch the Tiger Woods press conference."

    Citizen Tube

    Regardless of whether or not you will be tuning into the Tiger Woods press conference, the larger picture is that YouTube has simply become a legitimate news source (they do supply non-celebrity news as well). It has grown a lot since its launch. It used to be considered a great place to upload silly cat videos, and while it still is, it is also now a place to get breaking news as it happens.

    This is not the first time YouTube has offered live streaming of a press conference. For example, back in April, they offered an Obama press conference on his first 100 days in office.

    YouTube is the second largest search engine on the web, so a lot of people are bound to be watching Tiger’s words there. The more events YouTube streams live, the more people are likely to consider it as a go-to news source.

    It is worth mentioning that a variety of other sites will be providing coverage as well, but considering the size of YouTube’s user-base, I’d say it has an advantage.

  • How Many Spiders Does Google Have?

    How Many Spiders Does Google Have?

    Google has posted a short but interesting video to its Webmaster Central YouTube channel. A user asked the question, "How many bots/spiders does Google currently have crawling the web?" and Google’s Matt Cutts gave his answer.

    "It’s important to realize that it’s not really actual robots or actual spiders out there…instead, it’s banks of machines …at Google’s data centers who open up an HTTP connection and request a page and then get it back," he says. "So any bank of machines (even 50 machines) could easily be requesting a bunch of different content."

    "We try to refresh a large fraction of the web every few days," he adds. "So it turns out you really don’t need a ton of machines. Even a relatively small amount of machines operating in parallel and fetching pages in parallel can really be able to crawl of find new pages on the web in a very quick way."

    Matt says that Google doesn’t give out the exact number, but that it’s somewhere between 25 and 1,000. I’m not sure what you can really do with that information, but it’s worth hearing a quick rundown of how it works for those who aren’t real familiar with how Google indexes content.

    Related Articles:

    > Google Rolls Out Breadcrumb Display in SERPs

    > Google Makes it Easier to Tell Where Results Originate From

    > Get More Links in Your Actual Google Results

     

  • Google Sets Record Straight on Page Speed as Ranking Factor

    Google Sets Record Straight on Page Speed as Ranking Factor

    Late last year, in a conversation about the Caffeine update, Google’s Matt Cutts told WebProNews that page speed could become a factor Google looks at for ranking search results. His comments received a lot of attention, because Google has never taken this into consideration for ranking websites in the past. The notion that they would do so riled a lot of people up, because a lot of site owners out there simply don’t have incredibly fast sites. That could pose a big problem if it suddenly damages their search rankings.

    Do you count speed among the priorities for your site? Comment here.

    Despite the fact that Cutts never said that page speed would become any more important of a ranking factor than anything else, many around the web and Blogosphere jumped to conclusions. While many more have remained sensible about the concept, not expecting page speed to trump relevant content, Cutts has now provided a video setting the record straight. The video is a response to the following user-submitted question:

    Since we’re hearing a lot of talk about the implications of Page Speed, I wonder if Google still cares as much about relevancy? Or are recentness and page load time more important?

    Matt’s answer is simply, "No. Relevancy is the most important. If you have two sites that are equally relevant (same backlinks…everything else is the same), you’d probably prefer the one that’s a little bit faster, so page speed can be an interesting theory to try out for a factor in scoring different websites. But absolutely, relevance is the primary component, and we have over 200 signals in our scoring to try to return the most relevant, the most useful, the most accurate search result that we can find. That’s not going to change." (emphasis added)

    "If you can speed your site up, it’s really good for users, as well as potentially down the road, being good for search engines," he says. "So it’s something that people within Google have thought about."

    It is interesting that anyone would ever assume page speed would become more important than relevance to Google, just because Matt Cutts indicated that page speed may become one of the many factors Google uses. If it were more important than relevance, Google probably would have been placing emphasis on page speed for a long time.

    That said, it is worth pondering just how big a factor page speed would play. If there are over 200 factors, where would page speed be placed within the ranking of ranking factors? On a scale of one to two hundred, where would Google rank the importance of page speed? That question might not be quite so easy to answer, particularly since Google isn’t real keen on the idea of giving away its secrets, and frankly, that’s probably in the best interest of the web.

    Just as with any other SEO tactic, it is up to individuals and the industry at large to speculate, analyze, and test. It’s no easy feat, but there are plenty of educated guesses out there about just what Google’s "over 200 ranking factors" are. Once you get into how much weight each one carries, it gets even more difficult to speculate.

    I think the real takeaway here is simply to make your site as fast and user-friendly as possible, within reason. If it means you have to spend less time producing relevant content that is likely to get you good search engine placement, then maybe it’s not worth it. However, if it means providing a better user experience on top of relevant content, and it’s within your means to do so, it will only have good implications for the future of your site.

    Google offers webmasters a lot of different tools to help them make their sites faster. In fact, they have a list of such tools here, and it doesn’t just contain Google tools. They also point to tools from third-party developers. It’s all part of Google’s initiative to "make the web faster."

    On a scale of 1 to 200, where would you place the importance of page speed? Discuss here.

    Related Articles:

    Google: Page Speed May Become a Ranking Factor in 2010

    Google Tracks User Data to Monitor Load Times

    Google Introduces Page Speed Tool

    Things to Consider if Page Speed is to Become a Ranking Factor

    Google Provides Tool for Speeding Up Web Pages

    Google Launches Site Performance Feature

    Google Announces SPDY Application-Layer Protocol

  • GoDaddy Back in the News for Super Bowl Ads

    Domain name registrar and web hosting provider GoDaddy appears to be really making a name for itself based on controversial Super Bowl ads. In fact, one could ponder whether or not the general public would have such a distinct idea of what GoDaddy even is, if it were not for its Super Bowl controversies. Something tells me that’s just fine with GoDaddy. The company seems to feed off this stuff.

    This year, GoDaddy says it has a new ad that was banned from the Super Bowl, even though the company finds it perhaps even less objectionable than some of its past ads.

    "Of the five commercial concepts we submitted for approval this year, this NEVER would’ve been my pick for the one that would not be approved," says Go Daddy CEO and Founder Bob Parsons. "This is about a guy who starts an online business and hits the jackpot. I just don’t think ‘Lola’ is offensive, in fact we didn’t see this one coming – we were absolutely blindsided!"

    The ad can be viewed below:

    "We’ve accepted we have to go with another option – one that’s been approved and one that is still 100 percent GoDaddy-esque," says Parsons. It remains to be seen just what that will be, but GoDaddy is not wasting "Lola", as it is promoting the ad heavily online.

    The company points out that another controversial ad with a political message, starring Florida Gators quarterback Tim Tebow will be airing. GoDaddy essentially says that its Lola ad is less controversial than that.

    One has to wonder if this is just GoDaddy just trying to get some attention, but if that is the case, it has worked. The company at least knows something about getting videos to go viral.

    Do you feel that the GoDaddy Lola ad is too offensive (or offensive at all, for that matter) for the Super Bowl? Share your thoughts below.
     

    Related Articles:

    > GoDaddy Makes Twitter Part Of Domain Registration Process

    > GoDaddy Gets Smart and Social

    > GoDaddy Auction VP Gets Slashdot Treatment

  • Google Analytics Annotations Now Available to All

    Update: Google has announced that annotations are now available for all accounts after a phased roll-out.

    Original Articles: Google announced a new set of features for Google Analytics at SES Chicago. New features include annotations, custom variables in advanced segments, custom variables in custom reports, a new analytics tracking code setup wizard, and a new version of the analytics API.

    The Annotations feature lets any user with access to a Google Analytics profile leave shared or private notes on the "over-time" graph. The idea is that staff can note certain spikes and dips in traffic that may be hard to explain when looking at the broad picture. For example, if the servers went down, a new campaign launched, when a redesign went live, etc. It’s just a way of keeping things organized and accounted for.

    "Building upon the concept of bringing Intelligence to data, Annotations complements existing anomaly detection by capturing the tribal intelligence of your company, which tends to be the most expensive and easily lost resource of all," the Google Analtyics team says. "A simple note from a colleague can save hours of real work (and frustration) for an analyst who is tasked to explain a usually dry set of numbers. This short video will show you how to use Annotations."

    Back in October, Google announced Multiple Custom Variables. Until now, the only way to view metrics on them was to open the "Custom Variables" report in the Visitors section. Now, you can create an advanced segmentation based on any key, value, or key-value combination of all custom variables.

    "In other words, if you’ve created a Custom Variable such as ‘Logged In Member’, you can also create an advanced segment based on that variable and see it across all of your reports," says Google.

    Custom Reports can also be created with any of the key or value dimensions assocated with any custom variable. You can see how a segment defined by custom variables behaves along any of the metrics available in Google Analytics.

    The new tracking code set-up wizard automatically generates tracking code according to the setup options you specify.

    Finally, the new Analytics API will feature support for advanced segmentation, and will include access to new data dimensions and metrics, including those in Google’s other recently announced features for Analytics. Google says there will be a separate announcement for the API later this week, so expect to find out more about what it has to offer soon.
     

    Related Articles:

    > Google Analytics Gets a Bunch of New Features

    > Correcting Your Web Analytics Mistakes

    > Google Adds Heavily Requested Features to Analytics API

  • Ford Shows You Can Have Your Office in Your Truck

    Ford Shows You Can Have Your Office in Your Truck

    As we discussed before, Internet-ready vehicles were one of the more interesting themes throughout the recent Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas. One vehicle in particular that WebProNews got an up-close look at was the 2011 Ford Super Duty, which the company refers to as a "contractor’s dream."

    Checking out the truck, it’s not hard to see why they would call it that. It has a computer in it running Windows-embedded software, built specifically for Ford by Microsoft.

    The software allows businesses to essentially carry their offices with them right in the truck. It has:

    – Internet connectivity
    – Word processing
    – Spreasheets
    – Bluetooth-enabled Keyboard and Printer
    – hands free, voice activated controls
    – It can send and receive phone calls

    That’s in addition to all of the actual truck-related features. Ford suggests that contractors can use the truck to print up invoices on the spot, and generally manage their businesses. Pretty cool stuff.

    This isn’t the first cool web-related effort we’ve seen from Ford, however. They’ve already been turning cars into mobile Wi-Fi hotspots. The company has also shown how web-savvy it is with its efforts in social media marketing, which Ford Motor Company head of social media Scott Monty discussed with WebProNews at another recent event.
     

    Related Articles:

    > Google Earth Makes Leap To Automobiles

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  • It’s A Watch, But It’s a Phone

    It’s A Watch, But It’s a Phone

    There were plenty of cool things on display at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas earlier this month. The Waveface stuff from ASUS was proof of that. Another example would be the cell phone watch from Kempler & Strauss – the W Phonewatch.

    According to the company, it’s the world’s smallest full-function GSM unlocked cellphone watch. It’s bluetooth-enabled, and works seamlessly with existing in-car and in-ear Bluetooth devices, but it’s optimized for use with the Kempler & Strauss Communicator, which is a micro-handset that can be stored in a shirt pocket or worn on the ear.

    The watch comes complete with micro-touch user interface, a micro SD slot, MP3 player, camera, and video recorder. It is of also a phone and a watch of course, and you can put your SIM card in it. It has a battery life of 3.5 hours talk time, or 100 hours on standby.

    It’s not available quite yet, but it is scheduled to ship on February 20, and they are taking pre-orders for it. It costs about $200.
     

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