Ironpaper Current: Web design, online marketing, internet news, security and business online
Ironpaper on LinkedIn



RSS: Ironpaper, Current
  • Ironpaper: Current

    Internet strategy, web design, web security, cross-platform and website technology, online business development and web campaigns, SEO, SEM and online marketing topics.
  • Featured Service

    Web design for business success.
  • Tags

  • Recent Posts

  • Archives

  • Other Ironpaper blogs:
    Design & Development Tips
    Ironpaper updates

    Archive for April, 2010

    Facebook Like Button Becomes New Design Feature

    Monday, April 19th, 2010

    Facebook has introduced a new design feature. It is replacing the “Become a fan” button with “Like” button.

    There is now more than one fan metric.  There is a new social graph metric associated with the page, displaying how many of your personal friends like the brand too.

    The purpose of the change was to strengthen the interaction between regular users and brands. Supposedly, the “Like” button has performed twice as well as the “Become a fan” button.

    Note: The news of this change first broke last month on Clickz based on a confidential letter to the press.

    Web Design: The Power Of Landing Pages

    Monday, April 19th, 2010

    A new article on CMS Wire discusses the declining use and dominance of the homepage for websites (Source: http://www.cmswire.com/cms/web-engagement/web-design-the-decline-of-the-homepage-007269.php). In 2003, 39 percent of the page views for an example research website was traffic to it’s  homepage, and by 2009 for that same website, the homepage page view decreased by 19 percent. More examples presented in the article showed the same results.

    Although, the article was not a broad and concentrated study in website usability, the point being made was fairly clear enough. Web users have clear ideas of what they are looking for online, and likewise web searches are increasingly niche or specific topic oriented. Also, many sites are becoming more comfortable with deep linking to relevant pages within a website. The article referred to the ultimate directive of a web designer / web marketer should be to make content quickly available to users rather than “present” a controlled message that follows a pre-set plan. The user wants to find what they are looking for quickly without hassles and the homepage is decreasing in importance as a result.

    Twitter’s Website Integration @anywhere Features Go Live

    Sunday, April 18th, 2010

    Twitter launched the @anywhere functionality which allows web developers to integrate Twitter functionality right into their own websites and web projects. Essentially the @anywhere functionality allows anyone to post a tweet from non-Twitter websites that use the @anywhere functionality. As part of this new functionality, developers will be able to place Twitter hovercards within a site using “a few lines of JavaScript.” The @anywhere functionality will also allow a remote sign-in system to work with external websites.

    The New York Times, Yahoo and MSNBC News have already begun using the @anywhere functionality as part of a live demonstration, which will allow public users to “follow” staff writers via the new hovercards that appear in their writer profiles.

    Microsoft Mobile Ad Deemed Inappropriate Removed

    Sunday, April 18th, 2010

    An ad for a socially networked cell phone called Kin was removed as many complained that Microsoft was promoting sexting along with it’s new mobile device. The ad featured a young man who takes a mobile photo of his chest from inside his shirt and forwards it to a young woman.

    Consumer Reports was one of the first to question whether the video encouraged sexting. Common Sense News @Twitter posted the question “Does the new ad for Microsoft Kin promote sexting to teens?” with a link to their analysis of the video. CNET responded in an article “Microsoft kills upshirt scene in Kin ad” that the whole debacle was a silly, over-reaction. “To those who come from other world cultures, it often boggles the brain how sweetly concerned many in the U.S. can be about sex and how touchingly tolerant they can be of violence, mutilation, aggression, and assault.” (Source: CNET Blog Network – Technically Incorrect)

    China Forms New Agency To Police Web Traffic

    Saturday, April 17th, 2010

    China has formed a new police agency, titled the Internet News Coordination Bureau, to monitor traffic in those hard to reach areas of the web– social networking, microblogging and video-sharing and the like. Social networking websites such as Facebook have proven difficult for China’s current monitoring capabilities. Over the past year, China has blocked service from sites they deemed subversive such as overseas video and networking giants like YouTube, Twitter and Facebook. Yet, China has promoted local competitors such as Sina.com and QQ.com, while blocking foreign rivals.

    The new agency, along with existing internet policing agencies, fall under the control of the State Council Information Office–including another bureau that is dedicated to regulating foreign news and information outlets that do business in China.

    Location Based Place Pages, A New Twitter Feature

    Friday, April 16th, 2010

    Twitter is adding a new feature: location-based place pages titled Points of Interest, which will allow users to click on a place name or location and view that place on a map. Next to the map, you will find comments about that location in a search results view.

    In addition, the Points of Interest tool will have an API for web developers and SEO pros, which will allow this functionality to be built into web applications.

    Is Your URL Too Long? Well Twitter Would Like To Help (Also)

    Friday, April 16th, 2010

    Twitter has announced that it plans to develop and launch it’s own URL shortening service to compete with the very popular services such as Tiny.url, Bit.ly, etc. The announcement was made by Twitter’s CEO, Evan Williams, at Chirp, the Twitter developer’s conference.

    Twitter’s URL shortening service will be the default shortener for the social website and official Twitter apps on BlackBerry, Android and the iPhone.

    Twitter purchased Twee.tt (the domain extension from Trinidad and Tobago), which will most likely become the root URL for the service. Many users may not be happy if forced to use the Twee.tt as a root since it contains one character more than Bit.ly and two more than J.mp.

    HTML 5 Gives Gmail A Drop Box

    Friday, April 16th, 2010

    Google is employing new HTML 5 attributes to give it’s very popular Gmail service drag and drop attachment functionality. The functionality will be available to users running Chrome 4 or Firefox 3.6.  The new tools will allow a user to simply drag a file from their desktop into a email window and Gmail will automatically attach the file.

    HTML 5, in the opinion of many in the web design industry, will herald major advancements in advanced web technology.

    Best Business Process Management (BPM) Software 2010

    Thursday, April 15th, 2010

    Garner released a list of it’s top picks for Business Process Management (BPM) software on the market. BPM helps improve enterprise performance and operational performance for organizations.

    According to Garner, the BPM must include:

    • Process execution and state management engine
    • Model-driven composition environment
    • Document and content interaction
    • User and group interaction
    • Basic connectivity
    • Business activity monitoring (BAM) and business event support
    • Simulation and optimization
    • Business rule management
    • System management and administration
    • Process component/registry repository

    Here are some of the companies that made it into Garner’s list: BizAgi, ICCM Solutions, Whitestein Technologies, PNMsoft, and Questetra.

    Web Based Social Doc Structure Referred To As Office Killer

    Thursday, April 15th, 2010

    The new Docs program by Google will feature social collaboration tools that many in the industry say will make Google Docs clearly an “Office killer.” The new Google Docs infrastructure allows it to look and act more like traditional word processing software, which having a distinct advantage of being web-based in that all types of collaborative possibilities are now open. Google is integrating some of the social technology used in Google Wave into the Docs application to make it work for team collaboration with live editing and conversation capabilities. This is certainly a new era from “office software.”