Archive for the 'Reviews' Category

Electrovaya Power Pad External Battery Review

Wednesday, December 12th, 2007

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For me one of the main limitations of a laptop based office/lifestyle is battery life. Manufacturers advertise battery life spans of 3, 4, and 5 hours or more. However what they don’t tell you is these times have very very little to do with real use conditions. Now I imagine there are people who use their computers without wifi or a Verizon card constantly on. They also don’t run multiple applications like iTunes, Firefox, and Photoshop all day kicking the CPU utilization up fairly high. I don’t know any of these people but I’m sure they exist.

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Electrovaya Power Pad External Battery Review »

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ProBlogger Job Board vs Craigslist

Wednesday, July 11th, 2007

Recently I started working two projects where I needed to hire some bloggers. After exhausting my friends network (I’m in ur address book stealin’ ur contacts) I was still short people. So I turned to the paid job listings boards Craigslist and ProBlogger Job Board.

ProBlogger Job Board vs Craigslist »

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Sponsored Review SEO Spyglass

Friday, June 1st, 2007

The following is a sponsored review of SEO Spyglass

Sponsored Review SEO Spyglass »

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Sponsored Review ZacJohnson.com

Thursday, May 31st, 2007

The following is a sponsored review of ZacJohnson.com

Sponsored Review ZacJohnson.com »

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Esca Review - Dinner with Dave Pasternack

Thursday, April 19th, 2007

One of the highlights of my trip to SES in New York last week was going out to dinner with Todd, Jonah, Greg, Barbara, Dax to Esca and having dinner with the REAL Dave Pasternack.

Esca Review - Dinner with Dave Pasternack »

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Sponsored Review Younanimous.com

Sunday, April 8th, 2007

The following post is a sponsored review for Younanimous.com

Sponsored Review Younanimous.com »

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Merchant Circle Has Reputation Management Issue

Sunday, March 25th, 2007

So after reading Rae’s review of Merchant Circle, I headed on over and checked out the SERP for Merchant Circle and what I saw wasn’t pretty …

Merchant Circle Has Reputation Management Issue »

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Adwatcher.com - Review

Tuesday, February 27th, 2007

The following is paid review of AdWatcher.com a new program designed to help you manage, track, and analyze CPC campaigns.

Adwatcher.com - Review »

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Text-Link-Ads.com Review

Tuesday, January 9th, 2007

The following post is a paid review of Text-Link-Ads.com.

This first review I gave of Text Link Ads was back in June of 2005, and since that point in time my relationship with them has grown deeper and stronger. I am customer, client, and affiliate of theirs. If they weren’t offering good service I don’t think I’d still be with them a year and half later.

Text-Link-Ads.com Review »

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SoloSEO Project Management Software Review

Friday, January 5th, 2007

I was asked to review SoloSEO project management software. I had heard of the software but to be honest didn’t really know much about it before starting this review so here’s a look at what I saw and thought.

SoloSEO Project Management Software Review »

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Search Engine Glossary Review

Friday, December 15th, 2006

SO I was asked to take a look at Aaron Wall’s Search Engine Glossary over on SEOBook.com Search Engine Glossary Review »

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Internet Marketing Tools Review

Friday, December 1st, 2006

Jim Boykin and the crew over at WeBuildPages have been pretty busy working on a redesign and fine tuning some of their tools, and Jim asked me to take a look at a few of them. Internet Marketing Tools Review »

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1and1.com Internet Web Hosting Sucks

Tuesday, October 17th, 2006

They are by far the worst hosting company. They make it impossible cancel and account, and if you don’t do it correctly they will keep billing you. Think you’ll be ok when your credit card expires don’t worry they will keep billing you and eventually refer you to collections. When you call to speak to a supervisor and tell them to cancel an account you aren’t using anymore and is in collections, they still won’t cancel it. They will however keep sending you an email to an address that no longer is in existence and refer you to their online web form.

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1&1 Hosting Reviews
Reviews of 1&1

1and1 Web Hosting Sucks
1and1 Hosting provider sucks
1and1 Hosting Sucks
1and1 Internet Web Hosting Sucks
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1and1 Internet Inc FAQ SUCKS
Reviews of 1and1
1and1 Hosting Reviews
1and1.com sucks

If you have a scraper please feel free to reproduce this post in it’s entirety and if you need help building one so you can republish this post let me know I’ll help in any way I can.

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Understanding Adsense Patent Review

Wednesday, May 24th, 2006

Eric Giguère of Make Easy Money With Google Adsense published an Adsense Patent Review and sent me a copy to review. Now I’m not a big fan of overly technical documents or patents but they are something we have to deal with in this industry, so you’ve either got to learn to read them and slog through or wait for someone else to do the dirty work for you. This one is little different than most patent reviews, mainly because it’s not free, it costs $14.95 to download.

Understanding Adsense Patent Review »

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Art of the Start Review

Monday, March 20th, 2006

I had never heard of Guy Kawasaki until earlier this year when his blog posts started finding their way into digg, delicious, and the posts of other bloggers. After the fourth or fifth post he made his way into my subscriptions and is one of my favorite bloggers. My buddy Todd recommended “the Art of the Start” and that was enough for me.

Art of the Start Review »

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Constant Contact Review

Saturday, March 11th, 2006

In an earlier post (see Bridging the Gap Between Email and Blog Marketing) I mentioned how I’m trying to use email marketing to bring some customers to my sites who weren’t yet up to speed with reading RSS feeds. I looked at few solutions and decided on Constant Contact, because it seemed to offer the most features for the cheapest price.

Constant Contact Review »

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Review of Box.net

Tuesday, March 7th, 2006

I was asked to take a look at Box.net a new company who is offering online data storage and backups. While I think I do a pretty good job of backing up my data in house and storing them in a fire resistant media safe, my off site backups are non-existent. This is something I really should address, since I my house is within 2 blocks of water in three directions and I live in a flood zone (hasn’t flooded in 12 years knock on wood). So I was pretty interested in looking at this product.

Review of Box.net »

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AdBrite Review

Tuesday, February 28th, 2006

While I had heard of Phillip Kaplan and F**kedCompany.com before, I hadn’t heard of AdBrite until Pubcon in Las Vegas where Phillip spoke one morning. I spoke with the nice folks at the booth and decided to give it a shot a few months later.

AdBrite Review »

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Newsvine Review

Saturday, January 7th, 2006

I recieved an invite to preview Newsvine.com which is a new service that allows you to read, interact and write about news stories. I knew the service was similar to Topix.net but aside from seeing a few news stories here and there I really didn’t know that much about the service. Newsvine Review »

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Constant Content Review

Thursday, September 15th, 2005

I first heard of Constant-Content.com through Aaron Wall’s blog (selling content articles). I’ve linked to them once or twice but hadn’t really tried using the service ( see long term content and content spam). I was contacted by Chris from constant-contact who asked me to review his companies services. After he agreed the “articles would stand on their own”, he gave me $100 in credit, and I took a look at the service.

First Glance

When you first visit the article category page you’ll see there are about 50 different categories to choose from, including popular SEO topics like finance, dating, real estate and travel. If you are looking for articles about other topics, you can submit a request to have a new article written for you. I will admit coming into this I fully expected the articles to be similar to the ones you find a free article websites, little more than thinly veiled shameless self promotions.

Selecting Articles

When you start browsing through the categories you’ll see articles listed like the one pictured below. The things to notice are the title, the author, the date, the number of downloads and the two prices.

Title:
This just helps you judge if the article is about the topic you are looking for. At the basic level you can’t change anything including the title. We’ll talk about the levels later on.

Author:
If you’ve used the service before or seen articles on other websites you can seek out the authors you like and avoid those you don’t. It’s just another screening tool.

Date:
This is the approximate date the article became available. Personally I like newer articles more than older articles. The newer the article the less likely you are to find it being used or in some paraphrased version floating around on someone else’s website. If you’re looking for very niche markets you may have to be a little less discriminating with this criteria.

Downloads:
This is one of the fields I think you should pay a lot of attention to. This number tells you how many other people have downloaded the article to put on their website. The lower the number the less likely the content will be flagged as duplicate content. While “first discovery” is a good rule of thumb for the search engines it’s not the ultimate deciding factor. There’s some other factors at play as well. Let’s just leave it at the less downloads the better.

Price:
Here’s where it gets a little interesting, depending on how you are going to use the article the pricing is on a sliding scale. If you just want to reprint the article that is the lowest price (in this case it is $30). If you want full exclusive rights that is the highest price (in this case it is $50). At this point you have to decide what the article is worth to you.

Acceptable Usage
The FAQ page does a much better job of explaining how the content can be used, here’s a screen shot of what’s important:

So if you see an article with no downloads you can get it for the lowest price ( I saw articles ranging from $10 to $30), however someone else is going to come along after you and use the article. If you see an article you really like for a higher price you can use it on multiple websites and have it removed from circulation (I saw prices ranging for $30 to $50 dollars). Try to figure out how much revenue you think the article can generate for you in a 1 year period, decide if it’s more or less than the unique purchase price. In my opinion this is the best use and value for articles from this website. The final level is the full rights, I’m not sure why you would want to go to this level. You will have full ownership of the article can change anything and remove the authors name if you wanted to. The prices I saw for this level were much higher (starting at around $50 to over $100 in some cases). To me it just didn’t seem like it was worth it.

Before You Purchase an Article

Before you decide to purchase an article I’d do a little checking first. Go to the detail page and get a preview of the article, make sure it has a style and tone that will match your website, or to quote a line from Risky Business, “You don’t buy Sony if you want RCA“. If the style looks ok grab a section of text, put it in some quotes and search on the major search engines. You should always get one result from Constant Content. The number of other websites listed should match the number of downloads. I tried this on half a dozen articles and didn’t come up with any nasty surprises, but still better safe than sorry.

Finding the Right Authors

If you haven’t seen any of the authors work before, try looking for some free articles written by them (there weren’t many but there were few). If not find three or four of the most prolific authors in the category, and buy an article from them at the lowest price. Once you find someone you like, you can make more confident purchase at the unique and higher price points

Article Quality

Now to the real question, how good are the articles? As I said I wasn’t expecting too much here, however I was pleasantly surprised with what I got. The articles were reasonably authoritative, well written and interesting. Out of the 9 articles I ordered, I would classify one or two as average, with the rest being above average in my opinion. Now if you’re a person who looks for articles with an exact keyword density between X% and Y%, you aren’t going to find that here. THese are not articles written by SEO’s, these are articles written by authors or writers who approach the project from a narrative or storytelling angle, so you get different end results. That’s not to say the articles won’t trigger the proper ads if you are using them on pages with contextual advertising. I published the pages, and gave the media bot a chance to hit them, a day or two later the proper ads were showing. These articles give you the opportunity to really set yourself apart from your competition as far as quality content goes. This is really a bonus if the subject happens to have a high keyword dollar value, and is something you aren’t genuinely interested in writing about. The only bad thing I will say about the articles is you will have to do all of the HTML formatting yourself. After purchasing the articles you download them in WORD or TXT files, so you’ll have to put all of your own paragraph, bold, list, and other tags yourself.

Conclusion

I was pleasantly surprised by the quality of the articles I received. They were much better than anything I could have written myself. Additionally if you can find articles by authors you like, that have zero downloads, I would really recommend buying them at the unique level, to get the most value out of them. I feel the articles I downloaded were worth the price, and I plan on using this service again.

Added: Constant Content asked if I could add this bit of information
all content is checked for plagiarism and publication before it is accepted. We also have a strict acceptance policy and our reviewers don’t let anything slide.

Disclaimer I did receive free articles from constant-content.com valued at $100 prior to making this post. The free articles were not contingent upon a positive review or endorsement. No other compensation, occurred to influence this blog posting. For more information please see my advertising policy.

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Bye Bye Bloglines

Monday, September 12th, 2005

I don’t know about you but I’ve been seeing this guy over at Bloglines a little too frequently lately. Yes I know they’ve been fixing things that are broken or other wise making improvements which is a good thing. However if you want to be a service that people can depend on, you have to be dependable above all else. I read and write blog postings regularly, and in many cases for mission critical business purposes. Since reading my feeds lies on the critical path, not being able to read my feeds on demand is unacceptable. However dependability isn’t the only reason I’m switching, the reporting is also iffy. Following some common blogging models, I like to post updates to my business blogs between 8am and noon EST. So I’ll send out 10-20 new blog posts a day across a series of blogs. Bloglines isn’t finding many of them until 6pm or later, again this just isn’t up to snuff.

Since I’m an online feed reader kind of guy I’m switching back to Sage. This isn’t personal it’s just business, and I’m not opposed to coming back and looking at bloglines in the future, they’ll just have to keep the plumber a little less visible.

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Belkin IPod Mini Aluminum Case

Monday, September 12th, 2005


Choosing a case for your IPod is like choosing underwear. Everyone has their own idiosyncrasies, individual needs, and selection criteria. What works perfectly for one person may not work for someone else. Additionally just like you want more than one pair of underwear , you’ll probably want more than one case for your IPod.

As I said previously, Griffin’s ITrip was a really important add on for me, but it did limit my choice of cases. And as I said in my IPod Mini review, I was going to be schleping my IPod around into child filled environments. This meant my IPod hitting the floor from an unsafe height was not a matter of if, but one of when, so a hard case with some protection was a necessity. I looked around a little bit and settled on Belkin Aluminum IPod Mini Case (aff).

The case has a hinge located at the bottom and opens like a clamshell. Inside the case there’s a thin layer of black foam about 1/16″ thick. The foam gives the unit some protection from impact and keeps the IPod from sliding out of the open top. The bottom has a slot for a data cable to be plugged in. The aluminum case is about 1/8″ thick, and has a brushed finish, so small scratches wont show. Now why the manufacturers of IPod docking stations haven’t made designs that will accommodate units in their cases is beyond me, but I’ll say it’s annoyance more than anything else.

The case has a plastic window over LCD display screen, so you can read it without any problems. The one thing I don’t like is that the clickwheel is completely exposed. I know a thin plastic sheet might not have appealed to the stylish metrosexuals out there, but IMHO would have been a good idea. The case also has a post in the back with a detachable 360 degree swivel belt clip.

While I didn’t have a accelerometer and elevation contour map, I can confirm from empirical testing, that the exterior layer withstands the stresses and prevents your IPod from experiencing a catastrophic impact failure from height of approximately 1 meter under standard atmospheric and gravitational conditions. For the lexically challenged, I dropped it getting out of my truck, and the case kept my IPod from becoming a $200 pile of broken electronics and shattered plastic in the driveway, so $30 well spent.

IPod Review Article Series

IPod Mini Review
IPod Mini Case Review
Griffin ITrip Review

Apple IPod - Official Apple IPod Website
Belkin IPod Mini Aluminum Case - Official Belkin website
ILounge - Best site to read reviews about IPods, cases, and accessories

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IPod Griffin ITrip Review

Saturday, September 10th, 2005

If there is a killer add-on for an Apple IPod it has to be Griffin’s ITrip(aff). For those of you who aren’t familiar with the product it’s a small piece of hardware that plugs into the top of your IPod and allows you to broadcast the sound to a stereo receiver set at the proper frequency within range.

Out of the box the unit comes set to broadcast at 87.9 FM and will probably work for you without any problems. Now if you live in an apartment building or a college dorm where you are likely to run into other people who have IPod and ITrips and are broadcasting, you may want to install the software and choose a frequency other than the default setting.

So you get out to your car you plug your ITrip into the top of your IPod and hit play, you turn on car stereo set it to channel 87.9 FM and you’re listening to music or podcasts. You pull into the supermarket, pause you IPod pull out your headphones plug them into the top clip your IPod to your belt hit play and you’re back in business without missing a beat.

There are few things you should be aware of before you go out and buy an ITrip, you will need to have access to the entire top of the unit. I chose my case with that in mind, but this will limit your options for compatible cases. Secondly the ITrip sucks up power like nobody’s business. There’s a little red light on top that reminds you it’s on and using power. So if you’re going on a long road trip, remember to top off your battery before you go. Lastly with every type of FM broadcaster you will get a bit of static from time to time. If you’re lucky enough to have a car with an audio input jack, opt for that instead the sound will be much better

My mate Cal in the Netherlands tells me these things are illegal over there. Not sure what the reasoning is behind that particular bit of legislation, so Cal either make a comment or drop me an email and I’ll add that bit of info.

Apple IPod - Official Apple IPod Website
ITrip - Official Griffin ITrip Website
ILounge - Best site to read reviews about IPods, cases, and accessories

IPod Review Article Series

IPod Mini Review
IPod Mini Case Review
Griffin ITrip Review

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Google Sitemaps Review

Wednesday, August 17th, 2005

I launched multiple new websites in July (more than 2 but less than 10) and decided to give Google new Sitemap tool a try. To keep things as even as possible I put links to each of the new websites on different established website home pages, which had a PR of 4 or 5 (pagerank is broken and stupid, not dead).

The best place to learn about Google Sitemaps is directly from the Google Sitemaps Pages. Google gives away tools that run directly on the server (danger Will Robinson, danger!) and provides links to third part sitemap tools that run primarily offsite. I like the Google Sitemap Generator from Tarrant IT, it was easy to use and follow, but the others are fine too. It does have a limit of 750 pages but that’s not a problem for me. Once your website is live you have to generate a sitemap file and put it on your server. You then sign up for a Google sitemap account tell it where to go, and sit back and wait. Google picked up the file within a few hours, however it took between 4 and 8 days for the homepage to be indexed. The sites that did not use the Google sitemap had their homepages indexed in approximately the same time frame, so there was no benefit in the time to index. However each of the sites using the Google Sitemap were deep crawled and deep indexed. Yes 100% deep crawled and 100% indexed, in some cases hundreds of files. None of the sites without sitemaps experienced deep crawling or deep indexing. So if you have a site that is not getting pages listed in Google, the sitemap tool will probably help you out. One thing to be wary of is Google is probably monitoring for large increases in page counts (legitimate and auto generated), and this may trigger automated algorithmic penalties. These pages aren’t ranking for commercial, competitive, non competitive or even obscure terms at the moment. The only thing they rank for are nonsensical testing phrases like “magocracy peptide“. No that’s not the actual test phrase I used, but I do use unrelated words like “magocracy” and “peptide” that would never appear in the same document for testing purposes.

Disclaimer I do run Google adsense and adwords programs but other than that I’m not affiliated with Google. I’m also not affiliated with Tarrant IT or their sitemap program. No compensation monetary or otherwise was made for this posting. Please see my advertising policy for more details.

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Review of Text Link Advertising Services

Monday, June 27th, 2005


A few weeks ago Nick over on Threadwatch blogged about people selling text link advertising on Ebay, always on the lookout for good links especially on the cheap, I gave it a shot. Since I’ve used the other major text link advertising networks I figure this would be a good opportunity to give a review of the services.

Ebay
I can’t imagine there’s anyone who’s reading this who hasn’t bought or sold anything on Ebay so I’ll skip the mechanics. I bid and ended up buying three different links. The good part about it is they were cheap, dirt cheap. The bad part, two of the sellers never responded, and the third was pretty much worthless. Now I’m sure there are some legitimate link sellers on Ebay, but I wouldn’t expect to find anything with a lot of power or quality here.

Text Links for Sale on Ebay

Linkadage
I’ve been using Linkadage for a while now, and I met John who runs Linkadage at the PubCon in New Orleans. Back when Linkadage started, prices were out of control, really out of control. Truth be told though, this is when most people believed Google Toolbar Page Rank ™ actually meant something. Thankfully prices have come down, way down. You can pick up some decent quality links for reasonable or bargain prices. Additionally the links here come from a really wide variety of websites and IP ranges. For the best results, look for sellers who have sold lots of links and/or have high ratings (they use a star system with 5 stars being the best). While most people using Linkadage won’t give out their URL’s, but they do have a metrics section for each auction, giving you an idea of what you are bidding on. Another advantage of Linkadage is you can buy your links auction style (ala Ebay), you can buy them for a fixed price, or they have a new link trading forum. If you’re new to the game, this is a great place to dip your big toe in and test the water, or if you’re experienced you can get some real diversity from this service.

Text links for sale at Linkadage

Text Link Ads
Text Link Ads is the newest of the big players in the text link advertising arena. Of all of the services, this is the most expensive. However there is a good reason for it, when you buy from them, you’re goi