Archive for the ‘Ripe web design - News’ Category

posted by Robert on Sep 10

A total washout. Eddie Thumbs Down.Eddie Thumbs Down

Ripe had a stand at the You & Your Money Expo held at the RDS (Dublin) on the 7th to the 9th of September.

These are our attendance estimations:

Friday (From 13:00 pm to 20:00 pm): 200 visitors.

Saturday (From 10:00 am to 18:00 pm): 1,000 visitors.

Sunday (From 10:00 am to 18:00 pm): 800 visitors.

Total attendance estimated: 2,000 visitors.

The ” You & Your Money” expo organizers had estimated a minimun of 20,000 visitors and Ripe asks where did the other 18,000 visitors go? It wasn’t the weather, the weather was perfect for an expo, just cloudy.

The entrance was fee was free.

Ripe felt extremely dissapointed with the attendance results to the show.

Are Irish consumers not worried about their money or their investments? Of course they are, so why didn’t more visitors attend the expo?

We believe that the show was a total marketing failure and its not that they didn’t put enough money into it, but simply speaking the message didn’t get accros to the consumer.

We hope that the “You & Your Money” expo organizers will come up with some good answers and solutions for those who have made a total loss of this show.

The main thing about “You & Your Money” is how to wisely spend or invest your money and what people got instead was a Rip off.

We would also like to highlight our dissapointment in relation to the quality of stands attendance of non related to “You & Your Money” issues.

The busiest stand was the “Coffee Shop”.

Please feel free to leave your impressions of the expo.

Thank you all.

Ripe Web Design

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posted by admin on Aug 21

We have just updated the look of our blog. Please feel free to leave any comments.

Thanks

Ripe Design dept.

posted by Robert on Aug 10

Today at the Google Blog, product manager Dan Crow formally introduced the “unavailable_after” meta tag, which can be used to identify a temporary page with a set shelf life.

read more | digg story

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posted by Robert on Aug 10

The Flash Player has been installed on millions of PCs worldwide, making it an attractive way for web developers to present content to their site visitors.

read more | digg story

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posted by Robert on Aug 10

A Web developer’s life is hard enough without having to be constantly on the hunt for good web-dev resources. After using these, you may still have 99 problems, but developing ain’t gonna be one.

read more | digg story

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posted by Robert on Aug 10

Box Model, Floated Columns, Sizing Using Ems, Image Replacement, Floated Navigation and Sprites

read more | digg story

posted by admin on Aug 10

Here’s an idea sure to start some fires: Is it necessary to consider government regulation of search engines? Please hold your throwing-stones until the end of the presentation.

Scholars Push For Search Engine Regulation
Scholars Push For Search Engine Regulation

A technologically advanced century brings with it more (much more) complicated questions that may or may not be properly addressed by old arguments. Worse, the concept is still hazy in the minds of most, making it that much more difficult to address.

But the short version can be presented this way: The Search Engine Industry is one that controls access to the most valuable commodity there is in today’s society, and that commodity is information. Access to the commodity is controlled by a few key players, and mostly by Google. As there is potential for abuse, then the appropriate and necessary role of the government is to guard against that abuse.

A search engine can be defined as: an information retrieval agent; a value-judge (editor) of information; an information medium (i.e., press).

And that is troublesome. Indeed, Google steers away from whatever definition hurts it the worst in court, citing the First Amendment at times, and the Digital Millennium Copyright Act at others (i.e., our opinion is free speech, or, when necessary, we have no opinion as a an interactive computer service).

We talk about Google most because it is the dominant player, and some would argue the fairest one. On the whole, though, a natural oligarchy has developed whereby a few entities control what information is viewable to the public.

That’s not necessarily a bad thing, as long as the gatekeepers can be trusted. But there is an inherent possibility (and thus, temptation and motivation) that information can be manipulated to the benefit of the provider, or to the detriment of the competition.

We’ve certainly addressed this before. In 2005, I explored whether the search engines were politically biased. In that same year, searches on both Google and MSN regarding the infamous Kai-Fu Lee lawsuit revealed dramatically different results – both parties had vested interests and their results seemed to reflect that.

And earlier this week, my colleague, David Utter, dropped a new term on us: Search Neutrality. An interesting point was that Google argues (rightly, I might add) that the telecommunications industry cannot be trusted with the Internet without government oversight. Yet, Google maintains it most certainly can be trusted with our information because, well, “the company says so.”

The line between ISP and search engine, then, are effectively blurred – both act as gatekeepers to information and therefore should be, in some way, regulated to protect the people’s access to this unprecedented information availability.

You may not have heard of Frank Pasquale III, but you won’t find a more impressive résumé. Summa cum laude, Harvard; Marshall Scholar, Oxford; Coker Fellow, Yale Law.  That’s my ham-fisted way of saying the dude’s pretty smart.

Pasquale and colleague Oren Bracha recently published a 60-page argument in favor of some kind of search engine regulation, overseen by a “Federal Search Commission.” Note, if you take the time to read it all, that though they make a persuasive and intuitive case in favor, Pasquale and Bracha were unable to detail how, exactly, this would be done.

They begin this way:

Though rarely thought of as a “mass medium,” search engines occupy a critical junction in our networked society. Their influence on our culture, economy, and politics may eventually dwarf that of the broadcast networks, radio stations, and newspapers. Located at bottlenecks of the information infrastructure, search engines exercise extraordinary control over data flow in a largely decentralized network. Power, as always, is accompanied by opportunities for abuse, and by concerns over its limitation to legitimate and appropriate uses.

Indeed, it seems only a matter of time before powerbrokers with vested interests begin leveraging. Cases in point: Google veep Tim Armstrong and his other company, Associated Content; Aaron Wall’s detective work revealing Google Checkout’s intimate relationship with GolfBalls.com.

And from the other side as well, as the big brands buy up high-ranking sites in order to appear multiple times in the top ten results.

So we might say, “Where’s there’s smoke, there’s fire.” People on all sides are gaming the system, and it is seemingly inevitable, once Google gets further and further from its utopian ideals (remember China?), that the ability and incentive to manipulate results in their favor will exist and be acted upon.

Even if Google says that won’t happen.

And yet, and yet, to quote one of my heroes, Jorge Luis Borges, there is the free-market economy debate, which has failed to win in the face of telecommunications realities, that says the market will ultimately decide and punish businesses that would abuse their positions.

Pasquale and Bracha don’t think so and argue that personalized search, the proposed answer to search result manipulation, will merely provide better targets for which to manipulate.

They fail, however, to address another rising and powerful tide in the information economy: social networks. Unless I missed it within those powerfully presented 60 pages. I think it may be argued that the populist, uncontrollable world of social networks may act as a nice counterbalance to potential engineered algorithmic abuses – so long as the corporate owners don’t actively seek to censor their users, which is also a likelihood.

Now you may commence to stone-throwing. (Sorry for all the parenthetical references.)

posted by: Web Design Ireland

source: webpronews.com

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posted by Robert on Jun 13

OK, if Google knows so much about me, why is it giving me all result pages in Spanish this morning and taking me to Google Mexico? After all, the cookie on my machine hasn’t been erased. They have all my history. Have I ever done a search in Spanish? No. Have I ever translated something from English to Spanish? No. Have I ever visited Google’s Mexico site at http://www.google.com.mx ? No.

So, why, when I want to go to google.com, does it redirect to google.com.mx and give me everything in Spanish?

Hey, Matt Cutts, can you tell the various teams around the world to PLEASE pry into my privacy details somehow and figure out that I speak English, that I want to go to the real Google site (search results are different on the Mexican site than on the English one)?

Oh, and Google isn’t alone. Yesterday I attended a workshop where they were using MySpace. It switched to Spanish too, even though the computers were all setup in America and had English operating systems loaded.

Same thing happened when we were in Germany and Switzerland too.

Source: http://www.webpronews.com/

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posted by Robert on Jun 9

Ask.com has stepped up its game, launching a new multi-faceted search interface that sets it apart from other search engines and aims to give users a legitimate reason to give Ask.com a try.

The new version of Ask.com has been dubbed “Ask3D” for its three-paneled search results representing the three stages of each search: type a query, review results, and click through to content. While other search engines tend to treat this process as a step-by-step undertaking, Ask3D is presenting all three steps on a single page, to align more closely with the way people actually search, according to Doug Leeds, VP of product management at Ask.com.

“Google and other search engines, including Ask.com until now, have looked at search as a linear process, where one step follows another in a strict progression. What we actually know is that it’s not linear at all,” Leeds said. “People will type a query, review results, click through, then come back to review results, refine a query…it’s an iterative process.”

By putting information needed for each step in the process on one page, Ask3D makes it easier for users to search in that manner, and gets users to the information they’re looking for and off the page faster, he said.

That strategy, as a pure search play instead of a portal strategy, is what will help Ask.com differentiate itself as the one search engine alternative to Google, Leeds said.

“Outside the industry, when people think about search, they think about Google. Yahoo ceded that territory to Google, and it shows in the way Yahoo has built its products. People don’t go to Yahoo to search. They go there for e-mail, news, finance - these are all loss-leaders that can be monetized with search,” Leeds said. “The only other search brand that’s anywhere on the map is Ask.com. We’re positioning the brand as the place to go for search.”

The quirky, attention-getting billboards proclaiming that “The algorithm killed Jeeves,” or “The algorithm is from Jersey” have been stirring up conversation in the industry, not all of it positive. While some have praised the billboards, and the ensuing TV campaign centering on the algorithm, for piquing user interest, others think that some of the billboard messages, such as “The Unabomber hates the algorithm,” go too far.

The edgy campaign was created by the Ask marketing team and ad agency Crispin Porter + Bogusky, best known for its “Subservient Chicken” campaign for Burger King, and its recent “Un-pimp Your Ride” ads for Volkswagen. The goal of the campaign is to get non-tech users to wonder what an “algorithm” is, and ask their tech influencer friends, who will hopefully say good things about Ask.com, Leeds said.

“The idea is to stimulate discussion, and to reach a group one step past the tech influencers,” he said. “To people in the industry, the message doesn’t resonate because they know what an algorithm is. But if you don’t know what it is, you’re basically substituting the word ‘technology’ for ‘algorithm,’ and asking someone you trust. For them, it has a very different flavor.”

The attention-getting campaign is merely the first step in a long-term strategy to position Ask.com as the only legitimate alternative search engine to Google, and become a brand people know and associate with search, Leeds said. The launch of Ask3D will give searchers that are already familiar with the brand a reason to give it another try.

The results in Ask3D go beyond Web pages to include images, video, news, weather, and other data. While Google’s recent Universal Search release intermingles the various siloed search results into a single ranked list, Ask3D keeps those siloes separate, and only shows a certain type of media if it’s relevant to the query.

For example, a search for rock band U2 returns Ask.com’s usual Smart Answer at the top of the center column, followed by two sponsored listings and then organic search results. The right-hand column adds results for video or image searches, links to MP3 files from iLike, event listings from AskCity, and encyclopedia results from Wikipedia.

A search for Boston brings up a map of the city atop the center column, and results for image search, news images, a local music guide from AllMusic, a Wikipedia page, and weather.

You’ll find a thorough look at the new features in today’s SearchDay, Ask.com Launches Major Updates.

Source: clickz.com

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posted by Robert on Jun 9

Adobe Acrobat 8, which shipped two months before the January release of Windows Vista, can now run on Vista and Citrix 64-bit systems. Acrobat and Reader version 8.1 enhancements will download with Adobe update notifications and can be found at Adobe’s Web site.

With Acrobat 8.1 installed, a new tab appears in Word 2007.

With Acrobat 8.1 installed, a new tab appears in Word 2007.

There’s also new integration with Microsoft Office 2007, such as the capability to create a PDF file by right-clicking the mouse from within supported applications. Microsoft Outlook 2007 can now preview multipage PDF files within e-mail messages, just as it already displays Office documents. And Mac users will be able to view Flash movies within Adobe Acrobat and Reader 8.1 instead of using QuickTime.In addition, a “Send to FedEx Kinko’s” button for remote printing is being added to Acrobat Reader 8.1 this month. This feature would allow, say, a business traveler en route from the airport to a client meeting to send a PDF file to Kinko’s while waiting at baggage claim, and then pick up the printed pages at the shop nearest the destination.

The file menu in Reader 8.1 has a Kinko's printing option.

The file menu in Reader 8.1 has a Kinko’s printing option.

Hopefully Adobe’s updates will fix some bugs and make the software run more smoothly. Acrobat Reader may display some lovely looking documents, but opening the program can still be a clunky and intrusive interruption to Web surfing.

Source: http://news.com.com/

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