Whitehat SEO Tips for Bloggers

Meta tags? Title? Sponsored links? What the heck?

There are few people in the world that know more about how Google works than Matt Cutts, and he’s here to help us separate the wheat from the chaff in the wild and wooly world of search engines.

Session Leader: Matt Cutts

WordPress blog: Gadgets, Google, and SEO

Bio coming soon. On other topic, if you are searching for a nursing program, checkout Nursing Degrees in North GA for more details.

Word Camp 2007

This weekend is the 2007 WordCamp conference at the Swedish American Hall in San Francisco, CA.

I will be doing blogging while down there, although I may do like summaries of the day. I will have my camera with me, so depending on my ability to find time, you might be interested in checking out my Flickr photos during the day. I might update them during the day, if not, I’ll definitely try to get them updated in the evening/night. However, as there is free wifi being provided, you can be guaranteed that I’ll be keeping my Twitter up-to-date with everything that’s going on. And of course, there’s plenty of places to find WordCamp coverage this year.
So here’s to what will be sure to be a great weekend! Also, remember that I am going to interviewing Matt Mullenweg at the end of the day!

Sources: Apple set to grow iPhone family pre-holidays

Apple Inc. this fall plans to accelerate its assault on the 1 billion unit worldwide cell phone market with a second incarnation of its iPhone handset that will likely appeal to an even larger audience, AppleInsider has learned.

 The move is believed to be part of a broader, all-out blitz on the consumer electronics sector this holiday shopping season, in which a staggering array of gadgets from the Cupertino-based firm is expected to leave would-be rivals confused and unable to react.

Extremely reputable sources have told AppleInsider in recent weeks that the company’s iPhone roadmap for the 2007 calendar year includes not one but two distinct models, the second of which is set to turn up just months after the first.

According to one source, development of the second model has followed so closely on the heels of the inaugural iPhone that it was making its final pass through engineering around the same time that today’s model hit the manufacturing lines back in May or early June.

Conceived as a scaled back, lower cost alternative to today’s iPhone, the second iteration of the handset is presumed to marry iPod functionality with rudimentary cellular capabilities. More resource-heavy Internet browsing and e-mail capabilities are not expected of the device.

In providing the first visual descriptions of the handset, long-standing industry sources — who’ve continually been in tune with Apple’s future music directions — have dubbed the device “an iPhone nano” because they say it best describes the the handset’s overall form-factor and aesthetic.

Pricing of the new handset is expected to fall significantly below the $500+ asking cost of today’s iPhone models, these sources say, but not so much so as to pinch sales of an upcoming revision to the iPod nano.

Like today’s iPhone, the new model is expected to sport a revolutionary user interface, clues of which may have recently been revealed in a trio of patent filings.

The filings published earlier this month detailed telephone and text entry interfaces for a cellular-capable device via a virtual rotary click-wheel. One in particular described segmenting a click-wheel’s circular shape into various regions to enable quick phone dialing by sensing which region was touched.

(The near-simultanious appearance of these filings, ensuing scuffle amongst Wall Street analyst over the prospect of an iPhone nano, and the notion that a corresponding device is actually flirting with manufacturing ramp, all appear to be part of an eerie coincidence at this time.)

In a move that would stand in stark contrast to the June 29th iPhone launch, where supplies were exclusive to Apple and AT&T stores, there’s also some informed speculation amongst sources that the new model would be immediately available through a larger network of Apple third-party retailers and AT&T partners.

Further details will be published if and when information becomes available.

Sync your iPhone with Microsoft Entourage

I must admit I’m a bit surprised that this slipped past me, so I hope I’m not the only one that didn’t realize Entourage can sync with the iPhone via its oft-forgotten ability to play well with Mac OS X’s Sync Services. According to this Apple support doc, switching on the preference you see above in Entourage 11.3.5 or later will break down the barriers between Entourage, Address Book and iCal, allowing iTunes to unite your iPhone and Entourage in beautiful synching harmony (however, as far as I can tell, iTunes won’t be able to sync your actual email accounts from Entourage).

If anyone has been using their iPhone with Entourage, please sound off on how this setup’s been treatin’ you.

Sync your iPhone with Microsoft EntourageSync your iPhone with Microsoft Entourage

Apple Universe/ Word Camp Schedule

Hey everybody! As readers of my blog know, Word Camp is this weekend and I decided to make some changes to the schedule. On Saturday, I will be interviewing Matt Mullenweg for Episode #23. On Sunday I will record a recap episode of Word Camp called Episode #24. I will try to get my friend Douglas Bell on the show, if he accepts, but we will decide later! If you have any special requests, please email me at daniel.brusilovsky@gmail.com!

Apple iPhone Review

So here is my review of the amazing Apple iPhone!

So after spending most of my Friday night at the Apple Store, I’ve finally been able to spend part of the last 2 hours or so playing around with the iPhone and, yep, it pretty much rocks.

There are of course much better and earlier reviews than mine so I’m not going to go into a lot of depth, but here are the top 10 things that I like about my new iPhone.

1. The battery life seems to be very strong. I listened to music for about 45 minutes on the way to work this morning. Made a few phone calls, watched a few YouTube videos, took some photos, added a few entries into the address book, etc. and all of this activity doesn’t seem to have made a dent in the battery. I have a feeling that even with very heavy use you are going to be able to keep a good charge on this thing.

2. I love how you can set a photo to person in your contact book and then a huge photo of their face pops up when caller ID identifies that it is them.

3. The photos from the camera a very useable. I’m not trading my Canon 5D in anytime soon, but for a camera in your pocket both the picture taking process and the results shine.

4. The phone synched really well with my Mac. All of my contacts from my address book are now on it and my 5 star rated songs are moved over.

5. I love how responsive it is to touch. the iPhone seems to get this really right. Pinch the screen and it gets bigger or smaller. slide your finger across the screen and it moves up or down.

6. The screen is amazingly vivid and bright. Visually it’s a delight.

7. The phone is amazingly intuitive. I gave it to my 5 year old son William and he was quickly able to navigate it. The single button design to return you to the homepage just feels right and the sliders are natural.

8. Great having touch volume controls on both the interface and on the side of the phone. As an iPod it works really well. Great volume. While driving I could easily reach down move the volume up and down by touch.

9. Great speaker quality. I wouldn’t say that listening to music outloud on the speaker is how you’d use this phone mostly, but the sound quality is very strong for a tiny phone. Songs kind of like a.m. radio, but definitely doable.

10. High quality YouTube videos. Of course much of this is copyrighted material, but the selection quality is high (I just finished watching Johnny Cash’s “Hurt” video), the videos seem to stream over Edge just fine but sometimes do take longer to load.

What don’t I like? Well besides the hated activation process, the internet and Google Maps do feel a bit slow. I played around on Zooomr with it for a little while which was cool, but I’m not sure I’d ever have the patience to be a heavy iPhone internet user.

I’m also not crazy about the keyboard. I’m sure I’ll get used to it, but I seem to make a lot of errors when typing. The keys feel really small and with the touch screen it seems pretty easy to mistype characters.

All in all though this is the best phone I’ve ever used. I would recommend this phone to anyone who might be considering it.

Piper Jaffray has an analyst report that’s making it’s way around the internet that says 95% of iPhone buyers in San Francisco, New York and Minneapolis purchased the 8GB model. Apparently over 500,000 of them were sold over the weekend.

 

Thanks for everybody’s patience for waiting for this amazing review!