Video: Central Arkansas Refresh 3
We had our third Central Arkansas Refresh Meetup last night at The Flying Saucer in Little Rock and it was awesome! Darren Huckey from MonstorGraphix spoke on Drupal CMS Framework and did an excellent job despite the fact we didn’t hold up to our end of the deal on the projector. Hopefully we will be a little better prepared this next go around.
Brant Collins from StationX also spoke about InnovateArkansas and all of the good work they are doing for startups in the state. I haven’t spoken to anyone who got an accurate headcount for those in attendance but I know that we ran out of swag shirts and dvd’s a lot sooner than I had expected. Will definitely do a better job next go around.
It’s great to see that this group is taking off, and just as we had hoped it would do, it’s bringing together some of the top web people from within the Central Arkansas area to network, collaborate, and share ideas. Our next session should just be a continuation of what we have going right now. We are going to be announcing speakers soon, we are likely going to discuss monetization, wordpress, and possibly touch on a little subversion-ing.
If you are involved with the web and live in Central Arkansas, it doesn’t matter if you are a part time hacker enthusiast or do it for a living you should definitely join our Facebook Group, here’s the link: http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=48929112127
We meet on the last Tuesday of each month and the meeting announcements are sent out via Facebook and Twitter. You can follow the Central Arkansas Refresh Group on Twitter, @refreshca and we utilize the #refreshca hashtag.
Here’s a funny video slideshow from our meetup, keep in mind that I am a webguy and yes, I ripped off the audio track, sorry about the quality…
Video: Central Arkansas Refresh 3 : Central Arkansas Refresh Group
Update: a few people tweeted this past week that they didn’t realize we now had a website for the group, the web address is: http://refreshcentralarkansas.org. Be sure to check out the website for news related to the group, etc. You can also follow us on Twitter, http://twitter.com/refreshca
Acxiom Knows All About You…
It’s almost scary how much Acxiom knows about you. Most people don’t realize that right here in the natural state there is a database holding 750 billion pieces of information about you. Information like, if you are right handed, and how many pets you have in your household.
I love it when Arkansas companies get publicity, that’s why I decided to repost this when I saw that my twitter friend, @akvalley posted this article about Acxiom. It’s amazing how much data Acxiom has at its disposal, but what amazes me more is how this data is getting put to good use by Fortune 500 companies around the world.
John Meyer is the man in charge of these sensitive details in one of the world’s largest consumer information databases: approximately 1,500 facts about half a billion people worldwide.
Surely I can’t be on there. I have nothing to do with Acxiom, a little-known, US-listed $700m (£500m) data gathering and marketing services company.
"Oh we do have you on our database. I guarantee you," Mr Meyer assures me. "Your name address, phone number. You have a cat. You’re right handed. That sort of thing." This is true. I’m not sure if it’s a lucky guess, but I’m impressed.
Mr Meyer, a brash, confident chief executive, explains that while the company has been nervous of promoting its activities in the past, he has no fear of a higher profile.
"We’re the biggest company you’ve never heard of," he grins, with a hint of Southern drawl. "In the past we were afraid of people knowing us, but I’m trying to get business awareness and if consumers have privacy concerns I want to know."
All information on the database has been given away freely by the consumer through anything from registering for services online, to questionnaires or buying magazine subscriptions, Mr Meyer claims.
This is how Acxiom, which had a turnover of $1.38bn last year, is able to supply clients with a list of female skiing fans from Georgia, or right-handed women from Leeds.
It is also the largest player in the credit card market checking customer loan history and it can confirm whether CVs tally with job histories for employers. With a 12pc market share, its nearest competitors are therefore not market researchers like TNS and Nielsen, but information businesses Experian and Epsilon.
Mr Meyer took on the job a year ago after spending 18 months commuting from Paris to his home in Texas as head of global services for technology company Alcatel- Lucent. Under his leadership, the smooth marketeer has rebranded Acxiom as a "global integrated marketing services" company, compiling databases to conduct marketing for clients from Gap to General Motors.
"Not spam," Meyer says emphatically, wagging his finger at me. "People bristle first and then we characterise what we do as limiting junk mail, not sending you junk mail. For spammers, you’re just an active email address, period. It’s not how to market if you don’t want to be hated."
To help soften the anonymity of cold contact, the company makes sure that the marketer at the other end of the phone or email is as close in age, class, gender and interests as possible to the consumer.
One newer use for consumer information is verifying that online exam candidates are the right student by asking four personal questions, such as: where was your father born? What breed of dog do you own? "If you answer them correctly, statistically, you are who you are," Mr Meyer says with certainty.
Smoothing down his bright yellow tie, he tells me of another technology on the cusp of becoming a highly desirable tool: location marketing
"When I walk by a Starbucks, I could get an ad for coffee to my phone," he tells me. "But most of the phone companies thought: ‘That’s going to scare the consumer. Now they physically know where I am, everywhere I am’." But Acxiom has developed a cunning way of using location-based marketing in public places.
"We did an opportunity with a casino, that wanted to develop a relationship with their big gamers."
When the punter checks in, many give out their mobile numbers to get messages about special offers.
"They have a private network inside the casino, so when you’re leaving the casino they’re giving you a special offer to bring you back in."
But isn’t that still a form of tracking movement that some people could find slightly creepy?
"You as a consumer benefits. The casino benefits," Mr Meyer explains. "But it will be limited to individual forums. It’s because of that fear. Are you being tracked?"
He is keen to distance the business from Phorm, the targeted advertising company that has been fiercely criticised for taking data from people online to store anonymously. Acxiom, Mr Meyer says, has a dedicated privacy officer and spends time consulting with consumer watchdogs before launching new products.
But Mr Meyer believes the future of direct marketing is in high-tech data services, predicting that the company’s next acquisition will be technology related to interactive television or the internet.
It has recently conducted three pilots into the uses for product placement on US television, where the consumer can select a product, request details and buy it.
People will soon think of these forms of marketing based on information gleaned from a variety of sources as a natural, Mr Meyer argues, especially as the current tech-savvy generation grows up.
"You’re using Facebook to say all kind of things that you wouldn’t say in public," he says. "My grandmother thought that the phone was an intrusion into her life. Why would this person call rather than knock on the door? Now we just accept it."
Acxiom: the company that knows if you own a cat or if you’re right-handed – Telegraph
What is Innovate Arkansas?
Innovate Arkansas works with new, technology- based entrepreneurs to turn inventions and high-tech concepts into viable businesses. Our goal: Create high-paying Arkansas jobs in the knowledge, technology, and information-based industries. The result: A rise in Arkansas’ per capita personal income.
We are hoping to have a little bit more about Innovate Arkansas tomorrow night at our Central Arkansas Refresh Group meeting but here’s a video to kind of explain what the group does… (oh, and kudos to Brant Collins at StationX.com for the video job)
If you are interested in learning more about Innovate Arkansas, you can checkout their website: http://innovation.arkansasbusiness.com/
Central Arkansas Refresh Group
We have a Refresh Meeting scheduled for this next Tuesday, April 28th at The Flying Saucer in Downtown Little Rock. We are changing the venue up this time around since we have pretty much outgrown our previous location.
Our past meetings we have seen upward of 30 or so members. This week we are going to have speakers from within our group talking about some familiar frameworks and social media as well as emerging technologies.
The meeting is open to everyone. If you are a web developer, graphic artist, blogger, or member of the media, please feel free to join us, the cost is free and the networking is awesome! Here’s a map to the Flying Saucer…
Also, don’t forget to join our Facebook Group to stay in the loop, http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=48929112127
Google Set To Change Algorithm
It looks like blackhat seo spammers have finally forced Google’s hand and they are in the process now of making adjustments to their ranking algorithms to counteract the manipulations.
For the record, few people outside of Google, if any, are going to really know right off the bat how this algorithm change is going to affect Google’s overall search product until the changes actually go into affect.
My advice, just keep writing good content and do what is recommended by Google and the other Search Engines for getting good search engine positions and don’t try to fool or break the system, it just doesn’t pay off in the end. Be patient…
Google is set to make changes to its search ranking algorithm to combat the spate of links leading to malicious web pages appearing at the top of Google’s search results, according to an inside source.
Over the past few months, cybercriminals have been using blackhat SEO techniques to manipulate search rankings. When it first began, they were marginally successful at following Google Trends to find buzzy search queries and elevating a newly created targeted webpage.
But after a short period of time, these same gangs appear to have become disturbingly effective. Last week, when researching a news story, I found the top five results all led to fake scareware pages.
Obviously if Google fails to do something about this manipulation, users will lose trust and the good ole days of Google will be over fast. A Googler speaking on condition of anonymity told WebProNews a ranking change is pending that tackles spam of this kind. Once the change goes live, users shouldn’t see it “nearly as often.”
A report from security company PandaLabs identified over a million links targeting malicious webpages ranking for auto part searches. Google noted that many of the phrases mentioned in the report were rare. A phrase like [1989 Nissan Pickup Truck Engine Check Light Troubleshooting], for example, only appears on attack sites set up by spammers, which explains why Google brought back so many attack sites in response to it and similar queries.
Google’s response seems also an admission of how difficult it is to provide fresh, timely search results while simultaneously combating spammers. Part of the appeal of Twitter to many people is the platform’s ability to provide real-time information; the live Web works remarkably well there so far because Twitter’s set up isn’t very conducive to spam (yet). At least Twitter has to some extent control over accounts.
Google, on the other hand, cannot control for content appearing on the Web at large, and historically its famous algorithm performed better than any other at weeding out spammy webpages and malicious results. Unfortunately, that was a version of the Web that was more static. The live Web presents entirely new challenges manifesting as the first major weakness the search engine has faced.
The company naturally didn’t have a comment on the recently pondered “link velocity” ranking factor. Search engine optimization experts have identified the speed at which organic links appear as a possible important influence.
Link velocity therefore aids in explaining how blackhatters were able to manipulate search results by dropping enormous amounts of link spam into comment and discussion areas of social sites. The freshness or buzzy nature of a query also aided in this pursuit, and cybercriminals merely have to follow Google Trends and Google News to know which keywords and phrases to target.
Should Companies Restrict Social Networking?
I ran across this article today on Webpronews.com and thought that it was worth sharing. Obviously for news and media people Twitter can be one of the handiest tools for leads on breaking stories.
Often times news breaks on Twitter 30 minutes to an hour faster than it does on conventional media outlets, for this reason I don’t think that employees for companies like USA Today and Gannet should be restricted in any way. But then again, that’s my opinion, and opinions are like… you know how that saying goes.
Update: The orginal title of this article was "USA Today Publisher Restricting Employees from Using Social Networks?" USA Today called WebProNews requesting a change because it made it look like USA Today itself was discouraging social media use, which is apparently not the case.
"I can’t speak for the posting on Gannett Blog, but I can say that we at USA TODAY have been working extensively on our social networking efforts," says USA Today Communications Manager Alexandra Nicholson. "USA TODAY was the first national newspaper to offer reader comments, and we continue to expand our community tools by allowing readers to communicate with each other directly, add ‘friends’ through USATODAY.com and through social networking tools like Facebook Connect. Additionally USA TODAY has recently launched a series of moderated communities targeted specifically to our readers, this includes a recent MMA community launch.
Alexandra says that USA Today sees social networking as "a growing effort" on their part and one that they’re "taking on enthusiastically."
Incidentally, Alexandra found our article while doing routine "Twitter surveillance."Original Article: The controversy never ends when it comes to newspapers and online news. It’s amazing how many debates there really are within this industry.
You’ve got the bloggers vs journalists debate, the fair use debate, and the should social media be used as a source debate to name a few. That last one is apparently even an internal debate within some news organizations.Valleywag is pointing to a post from a blog (unofficial) about Gannett, publisher of USA Today. The post shares a memo from an editor with the company that is restricting access by employees to social networks. This example is not really about the legitimacy of social networks as credible sources. It’s more about social media in the workplace. The memo says:
It has come to my attention that some staff members are spending a lot of time on Facebook, Twitter and other social networking sites during work hours. Also, some staff members apparently are spending work time on Fantasy baseball research and other personal recreation activities.
This is not appropriate. It is not part of the job. Occasionally it will be necessary for staff members to visit these sites for work purposes, but please reserve social networking and recreational pursuits for your private time.
Is the editor wrong? Probably not entirely. Unless employees are using fantasy baseball research for actual stories, there is probably some misuse going on. But is restricting access to social networks the way to go?
News breaks on Twitter all the time. How would a writer get to it without spending some time on Twitter (or using some kind of Twitter app)? Then there is the fact that social networks are a way to contact potential leads and sources. They’re often easier to get through to people than by phone or email.
"As one reporter put it, ‘Facebook is a modern day Rolodex,’" says VW’s Ryan Tate. "Exactly, and if those infernal tele-phones had never been given out like candy to individual reporters, maybe newspapers would be in better shape today!"
USA Today does have a Twitter account, but seems to be pimarily following other USAToday/Gannett accounts. twitter.com/gannett on the other hand has not been updated once, but is being held on to by some guy named Mike Pratt who loves the outdoors
Should Companies Restrict Employees Use of Facebook, Twitter? | WebProNews
Hilarious! High School Musical Spoof
This is so hilarious…
Twitter API Wiki / Sign in with Twitter
Facebook Connect has definitely been a blessing for handling user authentication on various forms of web2.0 applications and websites. I have used Facebook Connect on several of my personal projects as well as things we develop for our clients.
With the popularity of Twitter, I figured it would only be a short period of time before users of this popular microblogging social netework would be able to carry their Twitter logins with them to the websites they visit. Here’s a little bit of information how the Twitter API works to accomplish this:
Sign in with Twitter is the pattern of authentication that allows users to connect their Twitter account with third-party services in as little is one click. It utilizes OAuth and although the flow is very similar, the authorization URL and workflow differs slightly as described below.
The normal flow dictates that applications send request tokens to oauth/authorize in Twitter’s implementation of the OAuth Specification. To take advantage of Sign in with Twitter, applications should send request tokens in the oauth_token paramater to oauth/authenticate instead.
The oauth/authenticate method will perform the following:
- If the user is logged into Twitter.com and has already approved the calling application, the user will be immediately authenticated and returned to the callback URL.
- If the user is not logged into Twitter.com and has already approved the calling application, the user will be prompted to login to Twitter.com then will be immediately authenticated and returned to the callback URL.
- If the user is logged into Twitter.com and has not already approved the calling application, the OAuth authorization prompt will be presented. Authorizing users will then be redirected to the callback URL.
- If the user is not logged into Twitter.com and has not already approved the calling application, the user will be prompted to login to Twitter.com then will be presented the authorization prompt before redirecting back to the callback URL.
This behavior is explained in the following flowchart:
Peter Denton has created a number of buttons to make this experience easy and beautiful.
This is something that I am likely going to devote some time to in the next few months so stay tuned for more information on this plugin…
WordCamp Dallas • 2009
I think that I am going to try to head over to Wordcamp Dallas this June. Wordcamp is a 2 day conference dealing exclusively with Wordpress. This years event will be held at the University of Texas at Dallas (Richardson, Texas).
The dates for the camp are Saturday, June 27, 2009 (9:30am – 5:00pm) and Sunday, June 28, 2009 (9:30am – 4:00pm). If anyone from Central Arkansas is going to be in attendance I would love to hear from you and meetup while there.
Over 250 bloggers and new media types from all over the Dallas/Fort Worth area and as far away as Germany made our first WordCamp a smashing success in March, 2008. Capitalizing on the energy and excitement of the event, we formed the Dallas/Ft. Worth Area WordPress Meetup Group that has since gone on to include nearly 200 members and is the 2nd largest WordPress Meetup group in the world!
This year, we’re moving WordCamp to the Richardson, Texas campus of the University of Texas at Dallas where we expect to have upwards of 300 attendees. The schedule remains to be finalized (Matt Mullenweg is sure to be there, though) and we’re still looking for sponsors and planning get-togethers around the event, but we are open for registration beginning today.
The cost went up some to $30 for both days, but you’ll get an official WordCamp Dallas 2009 t-shirt and be provided lunch both days. You’ll also hear from speakers with considerable WordPress and blogging experience provide information you can use to improve your blogs, and rub shoulders with like-minded people from all over the metroplex, all over Texas and all over the world.
If you’d like to follow us on Twitter or join the mailing list, you can be kept informed on more information about the event as it’s available. Also, please use the hash tag of #wcdfw09 if you mention us on Twitter or other social media outlets. kthnxbye.
Mark Martin on CMT Cribs
Recently Mark opened up his Batesville residence and let the crew in from MTV Cribs in to get an inside look. Here’s the video for those of you that missed it,
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