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sense: search
Common Sense Approach to Search Engine Optimization - Prudent Press Agency (Prudent Press Agency)---Most web surfers start their sessions at a search engine or a web directory. There are a number of different methods you can use to capture their traffic and drive it to your site:
in Search Engines
via Prudent Press Agency @ 21:16 10th Nov
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A reader asked that I revisit my dismissal of Ticker Sense’s blogger sentiment poll so here’s a chart to see if we can once and for all decide if this has any value to analysis of stock market
in Blog Watch
via Seeking Alpha @ 21:42 27th Oct
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Search engine giant Google is launching a new tool called SearchWiki that promises to help users make better sense of search results as well as personalise them to their individual needs.
in Search Engines
via UTalkMarketing @ 18:46 21st Nov
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LONDON: England may have recorded a significant victory for common sense by leaving in the wake of the Mumbai terrorist atrocity.
in Cricket
via New Straits Times @ 1:01 30th Nov
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Just a little over a week ago, voters elected Democratic Sen. Barack Obama as the country's next president. In this week's BackTalk, hear more perspectives about Obama's win. Also, find out how a recent segment on Michelle Obama's sense of style has some voters playing fashion police. Also, listeners weigh in on the gay marriage debate brewing in California.
in Blog Watch
via NPR @ 13:10 14th Nov
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age of empires, closure, ensemble, halo, microsoft, pottinger, profitable, surprise, warsEnsemble closure “doesn’t make a lot of sense”
in Computer Games
via Develop @ 17:25 19th Nov
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snydeq writes "Powering down servers to conserve energy is a controversial practice that, if undertaken wisely, could greatly benefit IT in its quest to rein in energy costs in the datacenter. Though power cycling's long-term effects on server hardware may be mythical, its effects on IT and business operations are certainly real and often detrimental. Yet, development, staging, batch processing, failover — several server environments seem like prime candidates for routine power cycling to reduce datacenter energy consumption. Under what conditions and in what environments does powering down servers seem to make the most economic and operational sense, and what tips do folks have to offer to those considering making use of the practice?"
in Web Developer
via Slashdot @ 20:49 30th Oct
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Obama quotations are going around nowadays. Here's a good one: "A good compromise, a good piece of legislation, is like a good sentence, or a good piece of music. Everybody can recognize it. They say, 'Huh. It works. It makes sense.'"
in Blog Watch
via Platts @ 22:34 11th Nov
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Here’s another example of how Apple’s application approval process for the iPhone doesn’t make sense. One of the big rules is that Apple (NSDQ: AAPL) doesn’t allow companies to use undocumented APIs to develop applications, and in Google’s latest application release, it used one. CNet confirmed today that Google (NSDQ: GOOG) used an undocumented API in order to add a nifty feature, which allows the phone to sense that you want to conduct a verbal search, rather than using the touchscreen. The reason that developers shouldn’t use the APIs is fairly legitimate—Apple won’t ensure that these features will work when it upgrades its software. CNet said Google may be forced to rewrite the code for Google Mobile or change the way the application uses the proximity sensor if Apple decides to enforce the terms of the SDK.
in Handhelds
via MocoNews.net @ 10:26 28th Nov
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Here’s another example of how Apple’s application approval process for the iPhone doesn’t make sense. One of the big rules is that Apple (NSDQ: AAPL) doesn’t allow companies to use undocumented APIs to develop applications, and in Google’s latest application release, it used one. CNet confirmed today that Google (NSDQ: GOOG) used an undocumented API in order to add a nifty feature, which allows the phone to sense that you want to conduct a verbal search, rather than using the touchscreen. The reason that developers shouldn’t use the APIs is fairly legitimate—Apple won’t ensure that these features will work when it upgrades its software. CNet said Google may be forced to rewrite the code for Google Mobile or change the way the application uses the proximity sensor if Apple decides to enforce the terms of the SDK.
in Search Engines
via MocoNews.net @ 22:33 26th Nov
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During a time when American independent cinema either grunts elliptically under moody skies or chatters banally cross-legged on the living room floor, the purposeful, probing dialogue in Yen Tan's "Ciao" feels like a throwback to an entirely different reality. When characters talk in "Ciao," they aren't being elusive or withholding for a gradual or sudden reveal, they're honestly trying to make sense--and to help one another to make sense--of difficult circumstances and emotions. The filmmaker's faith in dialogue as crucial to narrative and character development as well as to personal recovery and romance may at first seem Clinton-era quaint, but it's really just plain effective. Nothing but cheap suspense is lost when information and honest feelings are exchanged in "Ciao," and what's gained is something more lovely, complicated, and tru
in Movie Reviews
via Indiewire @ 15:59 3rd Dec
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Earlier this year, we were somewhat stunned that prosecutors in Italy would be charging four Google execs with criminal charges, because some kids had posted a video of themselves taunting a boy with Down Syndrome on Google's Italian video hosting site. The execs in question obviously had absolutely nothing to do with the video. The kids who filmed and uploaded the video have been charged separately, and it makes absolutely no sense to then charge executives at the company that provided the tool. Why is Italy not also charging the executives of the company who made the mobile phone that was used to film the video? Or the executives of the ISP that was used to upload the video? Or the administrators of the school where the video was filmed? Any of those would make just as much sense as suing Google execs.
in Search Engines
via Techdirt @ 0:51 9th Nov
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The word "vulnerable" was mentioned several times by New Zealand dangerman Brendon McCullum on Tuesday ahead of their Test series against world cricket champions Australia.
in Cricket
via Yahoo! News Australia @ 21:03 18th Nov
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The word "vulnerable" was mentioned several times by New Zealand dangerman Brendon McCullum on Tuesday ahead of their Test series against world cricket champions Australia.
in Cricket
via Nine MSN @ 7:06 18th Nov
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s not a revenue stream for us. This means that the customer gets the functionality its business needs as part of the normal subscription cost."
in Open Source
via Computer Weekly @ 6:21 3rd Dec
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Hayden repeats ‘India a third world country’‘I signed the letter, took the cheque and walked out... it was over in five minutes’Malegaon: MCOCA slapped on accused, PM dials AdvaniI always rate Dhoni high as a captain: KirstenIndia beat England by 16 runs in Kanpur'What was Omar doing with Malegaon blast accused?'Flintoff rues failure to capitalise on good startGovindacharya: Advani was as weak as Patil nowAkram defends Sunny, slams RickyDeclined 'Dostana' for Abhishek-John's sake: Aishwarya
in Cricket
via Indian Express @ 20:43 20th Nov
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Small business staff should know how to troubleshoot basic technology problems without causing major issues. One of the biggest needs is for better training in the use of Microsoft Outlook -- if people don't know how to properly manage their inboxes, how to set up rules, how to use tasks and other features, time-management benefits are lost.
in Computer Security
via CIO Today @ 0:11 15th Nov
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CIOs can make considerable savings on IT projects by using open source products rather than commercial software
in Open Source
via Computer Weekly @ 13:37 4th Dec
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"In my life there have been some things I have known, and I don't know why," Drayson said in an interview. "I think there is a lot we don't understand about human capability."
in General Science
via LiveScience.com @ 12:13 17th Nov
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Alex Masterly is such a sharp and devious character, and the City cartoon strip in which he stars in the Telegraph is always so bang on the money, that one can't help feeling a touch disappointed by this revival of the stage show that bears his name.
in Arts & Culture
via Telegraph @ 12:16 27th Nov
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Ensemble Studios, the Texas-based developer which has built the $700 million-selling Age franchise, the upcoming console-only Halo Wars as well as a solid reputation, has reflected on Microsoft’s shock-decision to close the studio.
in Computer Games
via Edge Magazine @ 8:45 18th Nov
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A Valentine's Day card and a note requesting a bacon sandwich, "with a much needed rest from our friend the tomato", are two of the items in a collection of private letters Princess Diana wrote to her chef which reveal her fun-loving nature.
in Celebrities
via Hello! @ 17:45 11th Nov
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At times like this most of us in the cheap seats get a sort of vicarious thrill when we see bankers falling out with each other.
in Banking
via Telegraph @ 19:09 9th Nov
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Cricket is helping Mumbai to overcome the shock of last week's terrorist attacks, players and fans in this wicket-obsessed city agreed yesterday.
in Cricket
via Haaretz @ 23:49 3rd Dec
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