LinkedIn is possibly the best professional networking site ever

Interesting Stuff No Comments »

I just signed up for a LinkedIn profile today and I already have 3 connections and 2 recommendations, with more pending. This website has a very high potential to boost my career and get me connected with people high up. I highly recommend that anyone who has a good job check this website out!

www.linkedin.com

Webmasterradio Talks About BOOMj

Interesting Stuff 1 Comment »

Today on Webmasterradio.fm there was a show called Rush Hour that talked about BOOMj. Our Search Marketing expert, Joe Whyte, was lucky enough to be part of this show.

Listen to the archived MP3

The explosion of social networks

Ideas and Development 3 Comments »

After witnessing the soaring popularity of social networks such as MySpace and Facebook, other companies are beginning to jump into the fray now. Ning, Eons, BOOMj.com, and many others.

I think the question we all should ask is, “How long is the social networking craze going to last?”

Obviously, humans thrive on socializing and interacting with other people. That will surely ensure the survival of social networking websites, but only the few who excel and make their application a “must-have.”

The market will become so saturated in the next few years with social networks of all varieties. To rise above the mediocre ones, someone will have to design a site that is far superior, in terms of visual appeal, ease of use, and content.

WebProNews features BOOMj.com in an article

Interesting Stuff 7 Comments »

I opened my MacBook upon returning home from a night out with friends and discovered an email waiting in my inbox from WebProNews. It was their daily newsletter for July 7th and it featured an article by Jason Lee Miller about Baby Boomers and our social network. Here’s an excerpt and if you want to read the rest of the article, it can be found here.

If you didn’t know there was a Generation Jones, you’re not alone, and those of this generation are not alone either – a new social network called Boomj.com aims to connect them, ridding them of the more ominous moniker, “the lost generation.”

Meta tags do not equal interweb Armageddon

SEO 19 Comments »

Adding metatags from within a CMS does not unleash Armageddon on your site, period.

This has been a friendly reminder and Public Service Announcement.

SEO: Does it do more harm than good?

SEO, Rants No Comments »

No, I’m not talking about search engine rankings going bad. I’m talking about SEO techniques making website functionality break.

If you take a plain-vanilla website that’s been built with only HTML and images, that’s an easy site to optimize for SEs. However, throw in things like dynamic pages, URL rewrites, redirects, and so on and it gets harder and harder to optimize your pages for the stupid search engines.

While I totally support most of the SEO methods, such as using meta tags wisely, using the alt tag, increased use of heading tags, and etc… I don’t agree with radically changing the website’s underlying framework for the sake of SEO. A line must be drawn somewhere.

Sure, if you went balls-to-the-wall on SEO, your pages would soar in search rankings. Tons of people would flock to your website. You might get rich off the advertising revenue. But what good is all of that… if the techniques cause your site to be modified to the point where it’s running poorly?

Some thoughts on this would be appreciated!

The importance of clean, well-structured XHTML

Rants 11 Comments »

You’ve seen the horrors before. You were browsing a site that had a really cool design, and you view-sourced it to learn about their underlying code.

But… it… was… a… disaster!!!

You cringe as you look at the code within the newly opened window. You look away, then back again. You can’t help it as you sit there staring incredulously. It’s like gawking at a car accident as you drive by. Nobody can resist doing that.

Are there any unclosed tags? Do they still use… *gasp* …tables?! Does the page even validate at all?

Coding nightmares like these often incur headaches of equivalent magnitude to one caused by a room full of screaming and crying five-year-olds.

All of that could be avoided altogether if everybody wrote clean, consistent, valid and standards compliant XHTML code. Unfortunately, that’s about as likely as pigs flying out of my ass while smoking a joint and singing Oops, I Did It Again.

Close your tags, use an efficient structure, convert to a tableless and CSS-based layout, and the world will become a little better. And you just might save several thousand coders from premature deaths attributed to stress and brain tumors (all caused by the headaches).

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