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Jul 2, 2009

ShowIP, Show the IP address(es) of the current page in the status bar. It also allows querying custom information services by IP

Show the IP address(es) of the current page in the status bar. It also allows querying custom information services by IP (right mouse button) and hostname (left mouse button), like whois, netcraft. Additionally you can copy the IP address to the clipboard.






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Microsoft's Bing Now Includes 'Tweet' Search Function

Microsoft Corp. (MSFT) said Wednesday its Bing search engine will start including "tweets," short user-generated updates sent via the micro-blogging Web site Twitter.com, in its search results.

The first of the three major Internet search engines to include this functionality, Bing's move shows the importance Internet companies are attaching to "real time" blogging services like Twitter, and likely foreshadows an arms race as digital marketers try to make money searching through this content.

Starting Wednesday, Microsoft said in a blog posting on its Web site, search results from Bing will include "tweets" from some more prominent Twitter users.

Examples of "prominent Twitterers" Microsoft cited include celebrities like Al Gore and Ryan Seacrest, alongside Internet industry experts such as Danny Sullivan and Kara Swisher, a blogger for AllthingsD, a Web site owned by Dow Jones & Co., publisher of this newswire and a unit of News Corp. (NWS)

Real-time search, which is in its infancy, is regarded by Internet marketers as a promising source of future advertising revenue, due to the exploding popularity of services like Twitter Inc., a San Francisco-based startup.

These marketers believe real-time search will help them more effectively target advertisements to consumers interested in specific celebrities, breaking news events, activities or topics. Some forecasters have said real-time search could become a billion-dollar market.

Microsoft's search engine, formerly known as Live Search, was overhauled in May as part of a multi-million dollar push to win market share from Google Inc. (GOOG), the clear market leader. Although Google, which has around 75% of all paid clicks in the U.S., isn't seen as in any short-term danger of being supplanted, Bing has ratcheted up modest market share gains since its launch a month ago, according to multiple data sources.

The world's largest software company, Microsoft has for several years struggled to claw gains from Google, and its Internet business unit continues to lose money, despite years of investment.

Being the first major search engine to market with the ability to let users search "tweets" could win some consumer converts and help attract additional marketing dollars.

Marketers say that making sense of "tweets" efficiently enough to place advertising next to them and target it at appropriate users can be challenging. Traditional Internet search favors older Web pages, which have gathered credibility and large audiences over time. By contrast, "tweets" come out rapidly from users of unknown provenance. Parsing the relevance of the "tweet" and its source can be difficult for marketers.

Google and Yahoo Inc. (YHOO), the No. 2 search engine, are also both working on developing real time search, and all three search engine companies have spoken with Twitter about partnerships in the past.

Facebook Takes Off In Brazil and India leaving behind Orkut

In its quest for global dominance, Facebook lately is making inroads in Brazil and India -- countries where Google-owned Orkut is the leading social media property. The number of Facebook users in the two countries has doubled in the last two months after failing to gain much traction against Orkut previously.

The social network now has more than 1 million in Brazil and 3.2 million in India, according to new data from Inside Facebook.

Facebook is not about to overtake Orkut -- which has 22.5 million users in Brazil and 14.5 million in India as of May, according to comScore. But unlike Facebook, Orkut has seen its growth slow in those countries in recent months. The social site has added only about 500,000 users in Brazil since January and 1.5 million since then in India.

And given Facebook's potential to double in new countries every two to three months, it could just be a matter of time before it catches up. With 230 million active users worldwide, the site is still growing at the rate of roughly 600,000 new members a day.

"Brazil and India are far from the only countries where Facebook is fighting to claw its way to the top spot," wrote Justin Smith, editor of Inside Facebook, in a Wednesday blog post. "Nevertheless, Facebook continues to grow in almost every country we're tracking the company in, and in most countries, by double-digit percentages in total reach every month."

One country where Facebook has not seen explosive growth is China, the largest of the so-called BRIC nations that also includes Brazil, India and Russia. In April, Inside Facebook estimated the social network had only 300,000 users in China, out of a population of more than 1.3 billion. Less than a drop in the bucket.

The blog attributed Facebook's difficulties in China to various factors including an Internet culture there that prizes anonymity (because of close government scrutiny of online activity), the popularity of different social applications and games in China, and young users more focused on entertainment sites than social networking.

The infamous "Great Firewall" of China could prove a long-term obstacle to Facebook's expansion there. In June, the Chinese government blocked access to popular sites such as Hotmail, Flickr and Twitter in advance of the 20th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square student-led democracy movement. YouTube has been blocked since March.

And China no doubt took note of the role social tools like Twitter and Facebook played in helping to fuel protests in Iran following the disputed results of its presidential election. Without rapid growth in China, hitting Facebook's ultimate goal of 1 billion users will just take a little longer.

Jul 1, 2009

Beginner's Guide to Digg, How to use Digg.com to increase traffic to your site

If you have ever felt like you had to dig around the Internet for good content, you might want to look at something called Digg (digg.com). Digg is a site that will help you avoid the process of digging and instead, get exactly what others have dug up so you can see some of the great sites/stories/things out there on the Internet. Many people reading this might already know what Digg is all about so if you fall into this category, quit reading now and go elsewhere or you might feel this is a bit basic. If you haven't heard of Digg, read further and you can not only understand one of the more successful sites on the web these days but also get an idea of how you can leverage it for your business. Digg epitomizes the value of collective intelligence and community on the Internet in a way that not only brings value to its users, but also to businesses that are savvy enough to take advantage.

History

Digg was started as an experiment in October 2004 by Kevin Rose. The concept was to give people the chance to "dig" user submitted tech-related stories in order to get the most popular stuff in front of an audience that was interested in seeing the latest and greatest on the Internet. By December 5th 2004, the site was officially launched. After running for approximately a year, the site surpassed 100,000 users and as a result they were able to raise $2.8 million to help take the service to the next level. Shortly thereafter, digg.com grew to over 500,000 users and over 8.5 million unique visitors per month.

Overview

There are two main things that you can do on Digg. The first is to submit stories that you think the community will like and the second is to digg stories that you like.

A new version of the Internet browser Firefox was released

SAN FRANCISCO: A new version of the Internet browser Firefox was released on Tuesday, offering users more speed and privacy and greater compliance with new Internet video standards.

The release of Firefox 3.5 came as the open source browser is proving an increasingly formidable challenger to Microsoft's Internet Explorer 8, which once had over 90 percent market share.

In June Firefox has a 22.5 percent market share according to web metrics company Net Applications, behind Internet Explorer's 65.5 percent. Though Internet Explorer's share has been declining for some time, the slide has accelerated over the last year since Firefox released version 3.0.

Mozilla, the organization that distributes the open source browser, said the new version is twice as fast as the previous version, and also includes a "private browsing" feature, also called "porn mode," that allows users to hide their tracks when the option is turned on.

Other privacy options allow users to easily and selectively wipe their web history.

Mozilla claimed a world record for software downloads when the previous version was released a year ago. The organization said that even more users were downloading the new browser.

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