Google, Yahoo, and Microsoft varied so much over a three-year study period that researchers found none of them consistently rated best at updating their indexes.
Random Musings from BlogWorld
Yesterday saw the real first day of BlogWorld–the previous day was an extra entrepreneur and corporate day–and 1500 bloggers descended on the Las Vegas convention center. Despite a few teething problems–poor audio at the keynote, not enough session moderators, and few microphones for audience questions–the conference was a success.
Random Notes – Vanessa Fox, Blog Tools and Other Things
I’ve been playing in MyBlogLog today (we will probably try the image widget out on Monday) and you can just about lose yourself in there if you aren’t careful… Here are some things you may have missed that could be worth your attention. Speaking of MyBlogLog, judging solely from today’s indoctrination, if they leverage some […]
Blogging: Random Thoughts & Predictions
Citizen journalism, word of mouth marketing, not to mention good old-fashioned seditious libel, mark some of the more prominent aspects of this generative beast we call the blogosphere.
Random Thoughts at New Communications Forum
Sitting here today, as I came down on Caltrain (pretty fast ride) to do a podcast with Brian Oberkirch with other PR bloggers, and then sit and attend today.
Web 2.0 Conference – Random Rants
Found someone’s notepad at the Web 2.0 conference… One thing that’s different this year is talk of infrastructure.
Generating a Random Number in PHP
Sometimes you need to generate unique random numbers if you want to assign IDs to your members or assign unique values to your shopping cart items.
Random Numbers
Random numbers are important for computers. Aside from making games like Solitaire more interesting, the use of randomness in generating passwords and encrypting data is critical to security.