Christmas Day


A fine Christmas Day here in our cozy little world of nice food and family, presents and cheer.

Yet I hope we will all choose to reflect now and into the future about how to better meet the needs of those in this world less fortunate than us, especially the millions who live in abject poverty. Most are victims only of the circumstance of their birth in nations challenged by corrupt rulers, natural disasters, and poor infrastructure.

Edison suggested “There is a better way – find it!” I think…I know…we can.

Being Santa


Tonight I helped the Access Food drive in Medford by dressing up as Santa while food donations were collected on a street whre every house is beautifully lit with Christmas lights. The neighborhood has made it it a tradition there and the event, which gets many thousands of cars over several nights, raises thousands in food and money for the needy. When the guy came in for the next shift and I gave him the suit and he took over, I noticed how I’d passed the celebrity on to him the moment he stepped out, and realized how being Santa, even for just a few hours, was really something special.

Being Santa is a very unique experience, especially fun with the kids who are about 2-4 who think “wow, this is REALLY Santa Claus”. Most of the kids have seen enough Santas that they are polite and enthusiastic, but the look from those few little ones who figure you really are the big guy himself are absolutely priceless. Also nice is the friendliness of almost everybody who drives by, old and young, waving back and wishing Santa a Merry Christmas.

HO HO HO, MERRRRRRRRY CHRISTMAS!

Anagram Server


I was going to skip posting today but ran across this clever little tool – The Internet Anagram Server. Type in your name or any other word combination and get a huge number (all?) possible variations on the letters.

How far are we from an advanced crossword completer? My most excellent mother-in-law Rhoda and friend Devora insisted you could not use Google to complete any but a simple Crossword. I disagreed but when they sent me a NYT I was stumped very quickly.

I’m hoping this is a step in the direction, since I always root for the machines to win over we humans.

Signed,
Junes Hips Honk

To Squidoo or not to Squidoo, that is the Question …


I’ve been testing two new ideas in search: Yahoo Answers and Squidoo.com.

Yahoo Answers shows a lot of promise – it allows users to post questions, answer questions, and score points and eventually perhaps payment for participation. However I’ve been disappointed in the low quality of many of the answers to my test questions and other questions I’ve reviewed. Projects like this need people to take the project very seriously or it won’t have quality.

SQUIDOO is a very interesting idea – basically a variation on the ABOUT.com concept where experts offer high quality articles about all sorts of topics and are ranked and paid as users interact with the information.

I’ve been testing it a bit and developed a “lens”, or Squidoo web page, for Las Vegas. The system is easy to use, but I kept getting the feeling I was just setting up Squidoo to make most of the money from work better put to use on my own websites. Their total claimed revenue share payout is a pitiful few hundred dollars to what must be hundreds and hundreds of “lensmasters”.

Unless Squidoo has some great way to optimize for search engines (and I doubt they do), the articles there are probably no more likely to get good ranks than, for example, a blog at Google’s blogger.com on which the publisher can run adsense.

Since Squidoo has financing by a major VC firm with a bunch of heavy hitters like Marc Andreesen, a large percentage of the value will flow to them and not publishers.

Verdict so far: Squidoo doo is a no do.

TIME Magazine – RIGHT ON. Bill and Melinda Gates and Bono as persons of the year.


Time’s choice of Bill Gates, Melinda Gates, and Bono as persons of the year could not have been more on the mark. While concern in the mostly mindless newsrooms of national TV swirls around celebrity crime, sex, party girls, politics, drugs and glamour (did I get the order right?), Time’s reporting some real news about people making huge positive change in a challenged world.

Newsweek, for example, had a good Gates article but relegated it to the “Society” pages and wasted too much ink about their “royal treatment” rather than what may eventually rank as the accomplishment of the century – the Gates foundation which has already saved over a MILLION lives! In the modern death math since 9/11 that’s THREE HUNDRED Trade Centers filled with people…saved!

Bravo Time – you got this exactly right – though I do fear this story, and the thousands of other stories about how those who have almost everything are working for those with little in extremely effective ways, remains lost on the many seriously math-impaired journalists and fine fellow Americans.

This helps me retain my respect for at least some aspects of modern, market driven journalism. Seeking catchy hooks and entertainment value has trumped story significance, but not …. this …. TIME.

Kilauea Lava Falls are … cool.


Mahalo, Kilauea!


Recently Kilauea on the island of Hawaii created a spectacular (Dec 2005) lava fall …. cool, and I was there in April. I’d wanted to see lava up close since Geology classes at UW Madison but this was my first trip to Hawaii.

Lucky because they closed the area I was walking around in June due to the danger of … what wound up happening.

I’m pretty sure I was standing just south of the massive fall shown here, on

the very cliff that fell away in early December: My picture (below) of the area is far less dramatic but I did get to see a “small” but still awesome lava fall in the distance – you can make it out as a tiny stream off the cliff to left in my picture (below) though it was probably about 1-2 feet in diameter. The new falls is about 6 feet in diameter and already busy extending the Hawaiian shoreline.

For more of my lava pix click here.

Google’s Got Mail and it isn’t going to be pretty…..


I’m skeptical of the information pouring in about the AOL Google deal.
If the NYT version is true, however, this is very alarming indeed.

If Google’s effectively taking on search optimization for AOL, as the article suggests, then Google has begun to sell their soul, which was purity of search results. This seems unlikely though stranger things have happened in the wild web west, always changing at the speed of cash.

From NYT:
….Google will also provide technical assistance so AOL can create Web pages that will appear more prominently in the search results list. But this assistance will not change computer formulas …

This sounds tame at first but anybody who knows Search Engine Optimization (SEO), knows that insider knowledge about the algorithmic ranking formula is everything. Ranking formulas are complex, fickle, often wrong, and always subject to manipulation. Google has always insisted they cannot reveal specifics about the formula to preserve it’s integrity.

Having Google insiders who could even get basic answers to questions about key ranking factors like keyword density, link values, filters, penalties, and thresholds would effectively give AOL the key to the Google search vault.

Also conspicuous was this quote from the NYT article, suggesting MSN refused to offer the same treatment.
Time Warner asked Microsoft to give AOL similar preferred placement in advertising and in its Web index and that Microsoft refused, calling the request unethical.

Earlier in the year I spoke with an MSN search engineer about this very aspect of search (stacking the results to favor paying clients), and he insisted that it was against the interests of search because the engines credibilility is at stake and thus the almost priceless aspect in the equation – market share – would suffer.

I agree with MSN. So will everybody else. Except maybe AOL.

Google is a fine company


OK, I think I’ve been too critical of Google lately.

Here’s why I think Google is indeed a superb company:

* Larry Page and Sergey Brin’s profoundly elegant approach to ranking the web using the linking structure. These insights led to “pagerank” (named after Larry not web “pages”). The Google Algorithm remains the best ranking mechanism on the web. Caveated thusly – Yahoo has pretty much caught up with the help of a lot of human editing and IBM’s “webfountain” is probably stronger at answering specific questions but isn’t even remotely scalable to Google traffic levels.

* Dr. Eric Schmidt, CEO of Google. I had the pleasure of meeting him very briefly at the Google Dance 2005 and he was gracious and friendly. In his Charlie Rose interview I found him to be clearly the sharpest technology leader among a very distinguished group. Having the brilliant triumverate of Page, Brin, Schmidt leading the Google juggernaut with loads of cash in the bank is already one of the great stories in global business, and probably has only to get more interesting as competition with Microsoft, Yahoo, and innovative companies yet to hit the scene heats up.

* Matt Cutts, the gatekeeper of Google search. With the power to kill even the some of the largest web projects on earth with a mouseclick, Matt is among the most feared and respected players in search. However, ask *anybody* who’s had the pleasure of meeting him and you’ll hear that he’s a great guy. I’ve enjoyed talking with Matt at the last two WebmasterWorld conferences and he’s always extremely helpful and very interesting. Google could not have picked a better public relations person if they’d …. picked a public relations person. Matt’s a top Engineer but makes complexity accessible and has done a huge service in keeping the web community informed via his blog and conferences.

* Google Parties. Man, Google knows how to throw a party. At the Google Dance 2005, a tradition for the past 5? years, they entertain a LOT of the attendees of Danny Sullivan’s Search Engine Strategies Conference at the GooglePlex in Mountain View. Ice Cream Stations, Shrimp and other munchables, beer and wine were great, but most important is the chance to talk to the excellent Google search engineers who are always courteous and friendly. In New Orleans they also had a great bash and also had stations to talk to Engineers – very helpful stuff to those of us who roam the online wild west.

* Google Engineers. What a fine group indeed. PhDs and wealth seem to have made many of these fellows more friendly, gracious, and hard working. You can’t complain about that.

* Adsense. Google helps feed my kids with their publisher revenue sharing paradigm.

Thanks Google!

A Google Nightmare


Jeremy! Oh no it’s happening ….. to …. me …..

I had a talk a few weeks ago at WebmasterWorld Las Vegas with the most excellent Mr. Jeremy Zawodny. We were concerned about the way people are starting to change their writing styles and subjects to comply with search engine preferences.

Today I noticed this happening to me as I was about to NOT POST this note critical of Google. I almost thought “hey, I’m beeing too hard on Google. They are a suberb company and the most excellent Mr. Matt Cutts, Google’s new uber blogmeister and global search guru, could not be a better spokesperson for the company as well as being a really great fellow.

Matt was also at Webmasterworld Las Vegas where he went out of his way to answer complex questions and treat everybody with great respect. I’ve talked with him at some length and Google should be simply thrilled to have him out and about making friends and keeping Google tops on the “coolest company/coolest people” list for many technology watchers.

BUT, greatness brings great responsibility, and here is where I think Google is falling short right now big time. So with apologies to the most excellent Googlers I’ve met I offer this in the spirit of constructive criticism:

My great fear about Google:

First, massive spam onslaughts cause Google to accept huge amounts of collateral damage for legitimate sites.

THEN, Google’s market share insulates them from the needs of the web community and makes them immune to criticism.

THEN, Google fails in their OBLIGATION as a MARKET LEADER to provide basic and thorough support for sites they have delisted or downranked.

THEN, People accept all this and fail to rant against it because people are sheep, sucking up to Google and thinking stupidly that search rather than content is what the web is all about.

THEN, even otherwise intelligent people often argue, in dumbfounded ignorance of historical precedent, that Google has no obligation to the community to work hard to identify the damage it has caused and to effectively deal with the problems it’s dominance has created.

Wait – this is not a nightmare – it’s happening RIGHT NOW!

Yes, Google has a new program to communicate with damaged sites but it’s weak and small. The support system does not provide access to problem solvers, rather to canned info.