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Jeff Pulver Knows How to Party in Chicago

What can I say? Good food, awesome music and great conversation with NXTCOMM folks. You can throw a party for me anytime! 😉

Liz Strauss says that Jeff is looking for ways to describe “The Herding Cats”. I’d say an “exhilarating and uplifting rock power trio” from my days writing at Musicfrisk.com.

Jeff – Based on watching The Herding Cats, I think you’d really like this band Red Wanting Blue check them out the YouTube video below. They are at the Lion’s Den in New York City on August 3rd. I’d be only too happy to make the introduction to the lead singer so you could attend as a guest.

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In Case You Missed It…

Patrick Schaber at The Lonely Marketer tagged me on his post that highlighted some of his older posts. The idea originally came from Matt McGee’s post.

Here’s my list of some of my older posts:
Blogging
Fixing Askismet Comment False Positives
Why Executives Are Like Blog Readers
Mobile Search
Mobile Search and Content Needs Flexible Revenue Models
Nokia N800 Convergence Product Manger Interview Victor Brilon
Search Engine Marketing
Building Chinese Walls for Search Engines and Advertising Agencies
Microsoft Executive Departures
Hiring/Recruiting
Hiring from Outside Your Industry is Smart
Customer Service
Comcasted (my Mom’s guest post on a Comcast customer service problem)
NRA Show Danny Meyer of Union Square Cafe NYC on Enlightened Hospitality
MBA Ranking Metrics
Chicago GSB Named #1 MBA by Business Week – 10 Metrics to Redesign

Lastly a local Chicago story, I predicted that Marshall Field’s Sentiment Has Blogosphere Legs. Over a half a year later, Macy’s rebrand has failed, people still protest and there is considerable blog and forum conversation on Marshall Field’s.

I’ll tag:

Matt Cutts

Mike Sansone

Frank Gruber

Liz Strauss

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Newly Relaunched Ask.com Glimpses of Greatness and Some Problems

Searchengineland, The Ask.com Blog, TechCrunch, John Battelle, The New York Times, Scoble and others apparently got an advance memo and briefing regarding Ask’s new product. Their reviews focus on the interface changes instead of the actual substance, mine will focus on the actual quality of the search data I experienced.

Not surprisingly, Gary Price of Ask has the most detailed coverage. I’m not going to go through each item as you can read his post. It’s great to see them being scrappy and innovating – it looks like it is a fun time to be working at Ask as they’ve clearly decided to not stay with the status quo.

Let’s start with what I love about the changes:

– Blog search is featured on the front page! This is one of my wishes for all search engines. If they added an option to aggregate News and Blogs together that would totally rock as a next step.

– With Google’s recent home page redesign, the simple interface which resembles the old Google layout can’t be categorized as a ripoff. Awesome timing for this change to be made. Props.

OK, what is weak then? Well let’s start with the fact that at SES Chicago last year, Ask City, was launched. When someone inquired as to why I hadn’t blogged about it, I told the senior person that I had not received the memo, advance notice and was not invited to the Ask City launch party so I had no basis to write anything. That person told me that I would be added to the list to receive future communications and he took the time to introduce me to an Ask publicist who obviously has not followed up on that promise as of the six month mark. It is a shame because I’ve loved all my interactions with the people from Ask when they have occurred.

I didn’t spend a lot of time on it, but here are my first three concerns that need attention before I’d consider playing with it much deeper on a regular basis.

– Ask’s search bot doesn’t index my site regularly and it’s not indexed thoroughly and completely enough. According to my stats in May the Googlebot visited 812 times, MSN/Live visited 899 times, Yahoo! visited 2030 times. Ask’s bot? It visited a mere 63 times. Sigh. Ask still isn’t asking my site for enough data to index it fully.

– A word about that blog search, it’s nice that you have my feeds. It’s nice that you show relevant links to me and comments. However at the moment a search on my first and last name in the post section doesn’t show my posts! Yikes.

– Longtime readers of my blog know that my title used to start with David “Dsquared” Dalka. As much as I love that nickname, I dropped it in the blog title sometime in late 2006 because it was driving a ton of one page visitors from Italy that were clearly looking for something else. (BTW, anyone know what that means there?) OK, so Dave what does this have to do with Ask? The entry for my blog on a web search on Ask still contains the old title. If Ask indexed my site regularly this likely would not be the case.

The good news is that I’m confident these a issues are easy to fix with a little attention. I look forward to seeing progress on these issues shortly and hearing from Ask on these issues.

UPDATE: The Ask.com blog didn’t accept my trackback. Why?

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6 Reasons Google Did Not Need To Acquire Feedburner

Congrats to all the people I know at Chicago based Feedburner on the now official Google acquisition, but in all reality this deal didn’t have to happen! Let’s see why…

1. Google had already acquired the color orange when they bought Blogger!

2. Feedburner’s symbol is fire, which some folks relate to hell. If you believe this, Google will actually be acquiring evil.

3. Eric Olson of Feedburner (along with Frank Gruber and others) organizes Techcocktail, a tech community quarterly networking party in Chicago. Google could come to Chicago and throw a party all by themselves!

4. Google already had all of Feedburner’s IP because Rick Klau, VP of Publisher Services uses Gmail and Google Docs & Spreadsheets for all business deals! (Second source: talk at ABA TECHshow2007)

5. Google already has had adsense for feeds for a long, long time.

6. Once Google has access to the keys of legitimate RSS sources it will be able to determine the original source blog if it is using a Feedburner feed. When combined with Google Blog Search, Google could likely better control splogs in it’s blog search index which will reduce (MFA) made for Adsense site revenue!

Hey what is done is done though, I hope that funding for many more Chicago startups is now available!

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Technorati Suffers Major Data Accuracy Loss

My link count was 262 last night, this morning it’s 220?

This is just plain wrong as I did not have a major linking event 180 days ago. I’m emailing this to David Sifry and Adam Herst and expect a quick resolution of this issue and a restoration of my ranking along with an explanation as to how it occurred.

Technorati is rapidly becoming unstable. It’s losing data or not reading certain blogs while double or triple counting the links of other blogs.

UPDATE: This link was not counted this morning.

UPDATE #2: Adam Herst has contacted me to say they were doing a test of a new feature they are testing and did not know it was going live.

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Google Experimenting With Blogs Button in Main Search Results

As you know, I strongly advocate blog search being a top level option on all search engines. Now with selection of category on the top bar, there is even less excuse not to do this on a permanent basis. Now Google is showing signs of experimenting with this via universal search on a case by case basis depending on the search term. Before I go on, I feel that I should disclose that I’m an undecided voter in the 2008 Presidential election.

Barack Obama, Mitt Romney and Hillary Clinton now show Web, Images, News and Blogs in their search result selectors!

Ron Paul, the candidate with tons of video viewing activity now shows Web, News, Blogs and Video. This shows a customization that is occurring, either video submission or video viewing trends to change the view to video from images. It would be interesting to see the Ron Paul supporters reaction to this.

One result that puzzles me is that of Dennis Kucinich, the search results only show Web. This is odd to me because I know he has active blogosphere results and has had a trend of increased video views. It makes me ponder whether Google might have something against Dennis Kucinich? Is there any history here? Or is this just some random event? I look forward to seeing your posts on this.

A result that baffles me more is that of Matt Cutts. When I think Matt Cutts, I think blogs, yet his results show only Web and Video! Strange indeed.

There is clearly other things going on as well. A search on the Rolling Stones currently returns Web, Music, News, Images, Video and yes even Groups.

Again, Google should act to add blogs permanently to all search results so they are not perceived as favoring the mainstream media. What do you think of these variations? What unique examples can you find? I appreciate your thinking about these complex issues and joining the discussion via a post of your own on these issues.

Screenshots: