Showing posts with label Website Reviews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Website Reviews. Show all posts

Friday, April 30, 2010

PrizeLive - Play, Win, Enjoy!

If you're looking for a new way to whittle away the time while you're online, drop by Prizelive.com. Play games, win prizes and earn some cash in the process. Not a bad way of marking the minutes as you do your other tasks on the Web.

Everything you do on Prizelive earns you points which you can use to play premium games and contests or swap for cash. The other good thing about Prizelive is its members. The Prizelive community is very active with everyone contributing to help out a Prizelive fellow. Build your buddy list and connect with old and new friends as you continue to build up your points and game credits.

So go and hang-out at Prizelive -- Where it pays to have a good time!

Tuesday, October 2, 2007

A Need for Speed - Where to Test Your Internet Connection's Speed

"Incoming!!!"
My wife sent me a text message earlier today asking me which "speedtest" I use. Apparently this new compound word, while non-existent in any English dictionary, is fast becoming the direct term of choice to reference testing one's Internet connection speed.

A rough content analysis of search returns for the exact term "speedtest" nearly always refer to a program or measure of how fast a network connection is vis-a-vis the Internet. I predict "speedtest" will have a formal dictionary definition sooner than anyone might expect.

In the meantime, I replied to my wife the first thing that comes up for a search on speedtest. Ookla Net Metrics boasts of a free "Global Broadband Speed Test" service in Speedtest.net.


Unlike other Internet speedtests it doesn't ask for your Internet connection type. Perhaps its assuming that users read the title bar for the site which states quite clearly that its a broadband test. Theoretically however, it should work for any kind of Internet connection.

It automatically locates a user upon access, as the flash-enabled interface will zoom in on the world map to the country where the user is presumably accessing the site, most likely via IP address geo-location.

You are then asked to select the nearest servers, designated as blue and golden (suggested) pyramids, on the map. You may click on the suggested location or alternatively you may test how fast your connection responds with a server from the other side of the world.

As an online diagnostic application, it is sleek and fast. The interface is laid-out like a sports car dashboard. It also reminds me of that 80's juvenile movie "War Games" - with a world map etched against a black backdrop and projectile arcs shooting from pyramids onto populated cities.

It measures your "ping" echo, as well as download and upload speeds. You will be provided links to your speedtest results which you can post to your forum, website or blog similar to the image below.

You can do comparative tests for different country servers via "My Results" which will show you a results history for your IP address. The "My Summary" section will give you an overview of your IP address' performance including a Global Rank and your Country Rank.

Over at the "Global Stats" tab you can see the average speedtests for continents, countries and ISPs. You can even drill down the selection for the best ISP for a particular city, in case you plan to shop around for a better Internet service provider.

Got access to your web servers? You can host a "Speedtest.net Mini" as a free service for your website audience. You may even fully customize and re-brand your own speedtest by licensing Ookla's technology (see "Why License A Speed Test").

By the way, Japan leads in both broadband upload and download speeds. Which partly explains why Japan leads in blogging according to the Technorati April 2007 State of the Live Web report.

So there. Next time you need a speedtest, you know where to go.

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Stumped At What To Blog? Take Out Your Blogscope


UPDATE: The Blogscope project is over. According to the notice on their website their products/services are now commercially used by Sysomos.



You've had your morning coffee
, you've fed your pet goldfish, you've scanned today's headlines but still you can't decide on what to blog on. Look a bit farther off your immediate horizon but not with a telescope - use Blogscope.

Blogscope.net (Preview version) is a prototype research tool developed by the fine people at the Computer Science Department of the University of Toronto (wave to the audience and take a bow fellas!). You can use it to analyze and visualize trends in the blogosphere. Currently they are tracking over 12 million blogs and are offering a couple of widgets useful to bloggers young and old alike.


Summary Cloud

Below this site, you will see a live example of Blogscope's Summary Cloud which automatically collects keywords from your blog and displays it in what is more popularly referred to as a "tag cloud". Blogscope's summary cloud widget however does not require tags at all. Instead it crawls your site (fast, very fast!) and posts significant keywords which in turn links to blogscope's search results for that keyword along with its corresponding popularity curve and related terms.


Popularity Curve

The Popularity Curve can visualize to you how often the keyword was used within the blogging community over time. Red graph bars indicate "information bursts" which means something significant happened during that period related to the keyword. Clicking on the bars will give you a listing of blog entries specific to the keyword.

For example if you clicked on the red area at the Blogscope site to find out why there was a spike for blogging sometime during the end of August, you'd see that some nutcase repeatedly created a post over and over again - clearly a splog attack. It was also around this time that the Blogger trojan-spam was discovered.



Comparison Curve

The Comparison Curve is similar to the Popularity Curve except that, well... it compares trends between two keywords. Note below that the graph for the keyword "blogging" is above the graph for "sex". This means that blogging is more popular than sex and.. good lord, what is the world coming to?!

Information provided at Blogscope is limited to within 30 results (blog posts) for each keyword queried. Furthermore, Blogscope.net states that this public preview of their technology is just the tip of the iceberg for what Blogscope can provide for the blogging community.

If you want you can also check out their Demo screencast, because I sure didn't. It was loading too slow so I passed. Let me know if you guys think its Oscar material or just another home movie.

So the next time you need a push in the right direction on what's hot and what's not in the blogosphere, send your mouse a-clickin' over at Blogscope.net.





Summary Cloud





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