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Danny Sullivan | searchengineland.com
Widely considered a leading "search engine guru," Danny Sullivan has been helping webmasters, marketers and everyday web users understand how search engines work for 15 years. Danny's expertise about search engines is often sought by the media, and he has been quoted in places like The Wall St. Journal, USA Today, The Los Angeles Times, Forbes, The New Yorker and Newsweek and ABC's Nightline. Danny began covering search engines in late 1995, when he undertook a study of how they indexed web pages.Authority Domains Internet Marketing Blog
Do you remember the images from storybooks you were read to as a child and the impact they had on you? Some of these memories are long lasting ones that you’ll be able to recall for many years. The reason behind this is because as we look at pictures, two areas at the back of the brain are at work. These lobes, called the occipital lobes, process images from the eyes and connect that information...Search Engine Optimization and Internet Marketing
I’ve been reading the various recent articles about women in tech bubbling around the interwebs with mixed feelings. I’ve seen a lot of these debates go by, and although I have strong opinions (I know, you’re surprised, right?), I usually choose not to comment here. There is only one thing that I find myself wanting to say publicly in this week’s resurgence of the debate, and that is: Thank you.
Adventures of an Eternal Optimist
Aviation officials have questioned the need for such a strong permanent police presence at airports, suggesting they were there simply "to make the government look tough on terror". One senior executive said in his experience, the officers were expensive window-dressing. "When you add the body scanners, the ritual humiliation of old ladies with knitting needles and the farcical air marshals, it all adds up to billions of dollars to prevent what?
Schneier on Security
Craig Burton
Online Aspect by Josh Fraser
I just read The Caging of America by Adam Gopnik in the New Yorker. It’s an informative article about the sad state of affairs in America prisions. It’s well known that we lock more people up in America than any other country. Blacks are incarcerated seven times as often as whites. People with money get good lawyers and a slap on the wrist, those without, get locked up for years.P@ Log — Patrick Chanezon about Google Platforms and Software Development
Two days ago I attended Waza , Heroku’s first developer conference, “a free developer event for the study of technique” (Waza means technique in Judo and Aikido). It was a very good event, held at Yoshi’s San Francisco , a wonderful jazz club/japanese restaurant. The choice of venue meant they kept the event small, I counted between 200-300 developers, but there were cameras everywhere, and all talks were taped, so I expect the videos from the talks to be published soon.In a pair of recent entries, Semantic web 101: Say what you mean and The long tail of the iCalendar ecosystem , I’ve begun to report on what I’m learning about the state of the iCalendar ecosystem as I work in parallel on the elmcity project and on the iCalendar Validator . Today I’ll focus on just one of a number of issues I’ve run into. Consider these two screenshots:

