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June 04, 2005

google sitemaps beta launched

[stream of conscious] 1) Don’t set your priority really high all the time. Google folks are not stupid. It will penalize you for making everything have a high priority. My advice is set everything at 0.5 and set a few high priority pages as .

Some slightly related from Technorati and Google.

http://eddyteo.blogspot.com [Ed, Edd & Eddy !!!] Silly Stuff: It didn't occur to us at that the tape records the images magnetically, and we could take the actual tape itself and get someone to put it in another holster until after we had thrown it out. I know it seems stupid now, and believe me I kick myself about it everyday, but you should have seen the apartment afterwards--the tape was not a high priority. AstroGlide, shit and vomit covered EVERYTHING.

there's beauty in the breakdownhttp://www.livejournal.com/users/ryokoblue [there's beauty in the breakdown] beware of flying monkeys: Oh yeah, and let's not forget all of those ideas floating around my cranium: post-apocalyptic fic, age-reversal fic, interhouse dance fic. And how could I ever forget that weird Parent Trap bastardization in which Harry and Draco accidentally stumble across a magical item which uses their essences to create two twins, Draco taking and raising one, Harry taking and raising the other, the kids eventually meeting up at Hogwarts, blahdyblahblah. Who comes up with stuff like that? Honestly.

The SEO Blog[The SEO Blog] Click Fraud: Detection, Analytics and Advocacy: As an issue, click fraud can be managed and perhaps even eventually tamed but that will require a high degree of cooperation between the search firms that sell the ads and the advertisers or their agents who purchase them. It is in the best interest of the major search firms to work with advertisers and their SEM agents to protect the integrity of the paid-advertising systems. Facing a number of paid-ad focused lawsuits, one of which is threatening to be granted class action status the search engines are being forced to be more open to the concerns of their consumers. With the advent of click forensic analytics and advocacy as a professional segment of the Search Marketing industry, a strong foundation for such cooperation is being built.

[TOTAL INFORMATION ANALYSIS] Italy censors indymedia Nazi Pope expose: PLEASE USE IMG FEED SEND TIPS PGP TIPS TOTAL411.INFO HOME GOOGLE WIRE 9/11... SNEAK COUNTERPUNCH CTRL CRYPTOME DRUDGE REPORT IMG DAVE EMORY FRIENDS OF LIBERTY NEWS GOOGLE... to be about how stupid the government was: If only they'd listened to one man, all would have been

http://bubbleheads.blogspot.com [Bubbleheads.blogspot.com] The Stupid Shall Be Punished: Since the first ASW exercises were run, submarine officers have been onboard the surface ships involved in order to provide a level of expertise on the various special rules that exist when working with submarines. Sometimes the submarine might want to pass a message to the submariner on the surface ship that he doesn't want the skimmers to see. To solve this problem, the Royal Navy and/or Canadian Navy invented the Dolphin Code. (The code I'm used to only had 80 options, so it's apparently grown in the last five years.)

Isen.com[Isen.com] isen.blog: "[T]hat is a completely inaccurate measure of the way the U.S. stands," Gallagher said. Those who promote this statistic, he said, "are doing a disservice to the innovative atmosphere at home." He said the United States had the greatest gross number of Internet users and broadband users -- by substantial margins -- and also leads the world in wireless "hot spots" and in the number of computers devoted to e-commerce. "This notion that the U.S. is 16th in the world is a disservice, disingenuous and just not true."So. The Bush measure of "universal affordable access to broadband" is the gross number of Internet users -- dial-up users included?

Jroller.comhttp://jroller.com [Jroller.com] Scraps from a Messy Desk : Weblog: Alex Winston has another blog entry about applying generics and functional programming concepts in Java: Strongly Typed Java Delegates. I think this is similar to some of the classes that I have in the swing package for event handling, but I need to study it a little more before I write anything concrete. It's always hard to read someone else's ideas when they're similar to your own without judging them through the lens of your own existing implementation, and Alex's ideas probably differ in some interesting enough subtleties that I want to make sure I'm reading what he intended.

[Blogs.zdnet.com] » Do no simple | Steve Gillmor’s Inforouter | ZDNet.com: It would be RSS, guys, not some less simple variant. This is the Do No Stupid moment for Microsoft, and yes, it really is the battle for Office 12. Google’s Fusion project is the real upgrade, Jeff, and you’re like the kid standing there with his hands over his eyes saying "You can’t see me." In a CNet interview about Office 12, Raikes talks about the rising tide of email, IM, and [my bold] other forms of electronic communication, not once does he mention RSS. To quote from the article: Microsoft is trying to develop software that can do a better job of sorting out the really important messages.

[Benramsey.com] Ben Ramsey » Blog Archive » Google Gulp!: The downside is that Google Gulp isn’t readily available to everyone. Like GMail, the drink is in its beta stages and is available by “invitation” only. However, to pick up a bottle of this refreshing drink, just beg your friends for a Gulp Cap (a Google Gulp bottle cap), and present the bottle cap at your local grocery store, who will then allow you to enjoy this outrageously brilliant drink.

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Posted at June 4, 2005 09:00 AM

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