Online tools for
insights, research, and intel.
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| Monday, 04 October
2010 15:08 |
Looking
for a way to syndicate your blog or RSS to Twitter or Facebook
without the name Twitterfeed? Here's a great alternative I've
recently started using- http://dlvr.it/.
Dlvr.it providers bloggers, publishers and brands, both large and
small, with a way to expand their reach on the social web and into
new channels.
Dlvr.it works by taking content from an RSS feed or any number of
other inputs and distributing it to audiences via social channels
including Facebook, Twitter...
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| Tuesday, 28
September 2010 00:00 |
Overdrive Interactive has a created a great reference guide into
the broad scope of search marketing and social media.

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| Wednesday, 22
September 2010 14:02 |
In the
character-limited web of micro-updates, instant blog posts, and
status messages, URL shorteners have grown from a simple utility to
a critical tool for a variety of reasons ranging from vanity URLs
to click-through statistics.
Popular social media dashboard tool HootSuite allows users to
update Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, and other social networks from
one web interface, and lets users shorten links using the built-in
Ow.ly URL shrinker. Using Ow.ly to manage URLs provides...
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| Monday, 20
September 2010 19:23 |
What is a URL
shortener
A URL shortener is an online application that allows the user to
enter a full URL for any specific web page, click on a button, and
automatically shortens a long wordy URL to a short domain name and
uses a 5 or 6 character code. When users are clicking on that short
links they are redirected to the original URLs just as if they had
entered or clicked on that.Where URL Shorteners are useful
First, it’s very useful for micro bloggers, such as Twitter users,
who like to...
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| Tuesday, 18 May
2010 22:15 |
By Scott Gilbertson
Dropbox, the free, web-based file backup service, has rolled out a
new API that gives developers a way to access, edit and save any
file in a user’s Dropbox account.
The Dropbox API works a bit like an Amazon S3 storage bucket except
that you, not the application in question, have control over your
uploaded files.
The Dropbox API uses familiar tools like JSON, OAuth and OpenID, so
web developers can essentially offload their user’s storage needs
to Dropbox. For...
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| Sunday, 16 May 2010
17:15 |
by Timothy James Duffy
Concerned about the security of your personal information on the
internet? We all are, and thanks to Mark Zuckerberg, we’re more
concerned than ever before. While having your Facebook profile show
up in search engines for anyone talented enough to Google your name
may be worrisome, it’s far from the worst case scenario. What if
there was a website that pulled data from all of your
social networking profiles, from Twitter to Flickr, and put...
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