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Facebook, Twitter Make You Easy Prey

| August 27, 2009 | 1 Comment

Sigh. Here we thought Facebook, Twitter and all those silly little websites were making our lives easier. Not so!

British insurance company Legal & General recently published a scary-sounding report called ‘The Digital Criminal’ which asserts users of Facebook et al. are opening themselves up to disaster, like burglars.

You know, because burglars can see when and where you’re on vacation, then find your home, break in, steal your stuff, pee on your toilet seat and overfeed your fish. Then you come back and you’re shit’s gone, your toilet’s sticky, your fish is dead and you kick yourself, ‘Why did I tweet myself in the foot?’

Considering all the dangers lurking in — and, apparently, out — of the internet, Legal & General and other insurance companies are talking about raising rates for those who indulge in virtual networking. Still, they admit its not so black and white:

Malcolm Cooper, director of pricing and underwriting at Legal & General, said: ‘Its a challenging one for the insurance industry. Just because someone is burgled, you cant prove that its down to details posted on Facebook.

‘It could be that we start asking how many youngsters are in the home for example.’

Cooper obviously hasn’t heard that it’s not the young one who are responsible for the silly Twitter boom. It’s The Olds! Although, we admit, his rationale does make a good argument for selling one’s ingrate children.

(Via Gawker.)

Import Facebook Phone Numbers into Your Google Contacts

| August 24, 2009 | 0 Comments

Android users, iPhone users (anyone using Google Sync, in fact), and Google Contacts users in general with Facebook friends who list their phone number in their profiles will love this:

Brad Fitzpatrick offers a Greasemonkey script that exports those phone numbers to AddressBookr and offers to add/merge them into your Google Contacts. Even though this was posted last November, I just gave it a test run and it worked like a charm. Thanks, Nick!

AddressBookr [via Smarterware]

(Via Lifehacker.)

Do You Recognize These 21 Blogging Mistakes?

| May 29, 2009 | 0 Comments

Here are a few quick mistakes that I see new bloggers making (some of which mistakes I made myself). They’re listed in no particular order and I’d love for you to continue the list in comments below:

  1. Giving up too early – blogs take time to take off
  2. Putting off starting a blog – waiting until everything is just right before launching can mean you never do it
  3. Echoing what everyone else is talking about – say something unique and share your opinion
  4. Not blogging on your own domain – I know some swear by using hosted blogs but if you want ultimate control of your blog it is best to do it on your own domain and hosting.
  5. Irregular Posting – you don’t have to post every day but try to establish a regular rhythm of posting
  6. Being too apologetic – ’sorry I haven’t written for a while’ can end up being the most common type of post on a blog – yes apologize if you’ve messed up but don’t be too hard on yourself – keep investing your time into building your blog up rather than highlighting it’s problems.
  7. Focusing more upon Quick Traffic than Loyal Readers – there’s nothing wrong with a big rush of traffic from social media or another blog – but just as important as that is building reader loyalty. Sometimes growing one reader at a time is more fruitful than getting spikes of traffic that never returns.
  8. Clutter – too many buttons, widgets, navigation elements
  9. Great Posts but Terrible Titles – don’t short change yourself by investing hours into writing great content only to slap a mediocre headline/title onto it.
  10. Not Defining a Topic – the most successful blogs have a well defined topic/niche (or they target a certain demographic)
  11. Choosing a Topic you have no Interest in – for your blog to be successful you’ll need to blog regularly on your topic for years – if you want to sustain it choose something you have an interest in or love for or you’ll run out of steam.
  12. Too many Ads – I don’t have a problem with ads on a blog from Day #1 but when they overpower the content and push it down the page too far they hurt your chances of building a loyal readership.
  13. Being too Insular/Expecting Readers to come to You – many bloggers starting out fail to realize that the more you put yourself out there and interact with other bloggers the more chance you have of being read.
  14. Blogging about Making Money Blogging (as a first blog) – I’ve lost count of how many bloggers I’ve seen start blogs on the topic of blogging for money when they’ve never made money blogging. Start with something you know.
  15. Not Being Useful – blogs that meet needs and solve problems are blogs that people will keep coming back to and which they’ll spread news of to their network.
  16. Writing for Search Engines Before Humans – you can always tell when a blogger discovers Search Engine Optimization for the first time. Suddenly titles don’t make sense, keywords appear in posts for no real reason, links to other pages on the blog that are irrelevant to the post keep being used. Learn SEO – but keep your readers as your #1 priority.
  17. Becoming a Stats-a-holic - the lure of checking your stats is understandable and common to new (and older) bloggers – but it can become an unhealthy obsession that leads to distraction and depression.
  18. Link Baiting with Personal Attack – taking pot shots at other bloggers might get you some quick traffic – but hate breeds hate and the type of readers you attract and the culture it’ll breed on your blog could come back to bite you. Plus you’ll get a reputation that you might not want to live with.
  19. Not Knowing Why You’re Blogging – while most of us don’t really know what we’re doing at the start – the faster you can work out what the purpose of your blog is the sooner you’ll start moving toward achieving that purpose.
  20. Not Selling Yourself – one thing I don’t think many bloggers get is the power of blogs to sell yourself as a blogger. There’s nothing wrong with monetizing a blog with ads – but maybe a better long term strategy is to use a blog to advertise who you are and what you can offer readers.
  21. Thinking You Have to Know it All – one of the best things about blogs is that they’re a great medium for involving your readers in the process of learning. Leave space for others to interact, share what they know and contribute.

There’s ALOT more to be said on this topic – what mistakes do you see new (and older) bloggers making?

(Via ProBlogger Blog Tips.)

Motion Detection Is an Effective, Dead Simple Security Camera App

| May 2, 2009 | 0 Comments

Windows only: Motion Detection is a free application that turns your webcam into a motion-sensing security camera in just a few clicks.

Assuming you’ve got a webcam hooked up to your computer, all you’ve got to do is run Motion Detector, set your preferences (Motion Detector can capture still images and/or movies complete with timestamps whenever it detects motion), and hit Start to run your new security webcam. Motion Detector’s sensitivity slider lets you determine just how much motion the app needs to detect before it starts capturing images. As you can see in the screenshot, triggering motion is indicated by the red squares.

For its part, the application works very well, it’s relatively lightweight, and it’s very simple to set up and use. We’ve always pointed to previously mentioned Yawcam for some quick motion-detection via webcam, and while it offers its own impressive set of tools, including FTP upload, I’d still call Motion Detection easier to use. Either way you go, both are great applications for having a little fun setting up a motion-sensing security webcam.

(Via Lifehacker.)

Yard Sale Treasure Map Plots Out Your Weekend Plundering [Sales]

| April 11, 2009 | 0 Comments

Yard Sale Treasure Map is a Google Maps mashup designed to help you find and easily get to Craigslist-posted yard sales in your area.

You enter a starting address, a driving radius, and select from Friday, Saturday, or Sunday. Yard Sale Treasure Map then queries Craiglist for your area, and returns a route that will take you to all the yard sales it finds. You can click on the markers for each sale to see additional information about the sale and delete them if you’re not interested. You can also add in sales that you find from other sources, like your local paper, by either putting the address in the left sidebar or double clicking on the map to place a new marker. This surprisingly elegant hack is free to use.

(Via Lifehacker.)

AddressBookSync Adds Facebook Friend Photos to Your Address Book Contacts

| March 2, 2009 | 0 Comments

Mac OS X only: Free application AddressBookSync pulls contact photos and birthdays from your Facebook account and syncs them with Address Book, so you’ll always nice photos assigned to your contacts (and hopefully never miss another birthday).

Once upon a time we covered a very cool app called FacebookSync that could sync all of your Facebook friends’ profile info—including address and phone number—into your Address Book. The folks at Facebook killed that app for violating their Terms of Service, but apparently AddressBookSync’s limited photo-and-birthday information pull is within the bounds of acceptable use. Since nearly everyone you know is on Facebook these days, AddressBookSync’s photo synchronization alone is a fun and worthwhile feature.

I was looking at an iPhone app earlier today called Photo Phonebook (iTunes link) that offers another seemingly smooth solution to this problem (it syncs Facebook profile pics with your iPhone contacts), but unfortunately it requires way more hoop jumping than it’s worth. AddressBookSync on the other hand is a simple, free download, Mac OS X only. Got your own, perhaps better method of getting pics assigned to your contacts? Let’s hear it in the comments.

(Via Lifehacker.)

Send Your vCard to Any Contact on Any Device Using BeamME Pro for iPhone

| March 2, 2009 | 0 Comments

beamme-logoiPhone apps designed to make sharing contact info easy are a trendy category in the app store (think Dub, Handshake, and SnapDat). All of these apps are trying to solve a common problem that most of us have. BeamME Pro, from Rmbrme, is the latest and greatest addition to the group.

At $4.99, BeamME Pro isn’t the cheapest option to exchange your contact info, but it might be the most convenient. Since BeamME Pro integrates with any user’s existing address book on any device, and you and your vCard recipients don’t need to create usernames and passwords, it’s a fast and efficient way to send and share your information from your phone.

beamme pro

Once you have BeamME Pro installed you can customize your vCard and start sending it via email or SMS to new or existing contacts. The app also lets you share  the contact info of anyone in your address book (not just your info), which makes it painless to introduce friends or help a contact reach out to someone they may not have in their address book.

BeamME Pro also comes with a few extra features that you might like, including a contact feed for a complete history of all sent cards and the option to geo-tag new contacts for contact mapping.

A scaled down free version is also available in the app store.

(Via Mashable!.)

Lighthouses vs Waves

| January 29, 2009 | 0 Comments