Tuesday, 29 April 2008

Promoting small websites or finding out about large ones

In doing some poking around to research the background behind a domain, I came across three websites which all offer similar tools. Depending on how you choose to use them, they can either be used to carry out some background research on competitors, or to promote your own small website or blog.

AboutUs.com



AboutUs asks you for a domain or website URL, and then wanders off and retrieves information from the site. It analyses the site contain, and pulls back a summary, related domains, other sites linked to, and information about the domain itself.
The interesting thing about this is that AboutUs presents all this information via a Wiki, which can be edited and update by the site owner, or by visitors.

Check out this example page for Finance-Portal.co.uk

DomainTools.com



DomainTools uses a whois lookup to pull back registration information about a domain, as well as the server it's hosted on, and any other relevant sites. On top of that it also retrieves a site's rank from Alexa and Complete.com. Most interesting though is the analysis DomainTools does on the homepage content. As well as counting the number of internal and outbound links on the homepage, it works out the relevancy of the meta description and site title against the homepage content. Create a free account to get access to more tools and goodies.

Compare the Finance-Portal.co.uk page against the one for AboutUs.

BuiltWith.com



BuiltWith works in a similar vein to AboutUs and DomainTools. The difference with BuiltWith is that it's tools are more concerned with the optimisation of a site, and the technology and software used to build it. BuiltWith will report on things like the advertising systems being used, the scripting framework, the analytics and tracking software being used, and so on.

Get a flavour of what's available with this report on Finance-Portal.co.uk

Taken individually, these are all interesting and useful tools. However, when combining their reports together, they can be used to fully map out the web presence for a given domain. Equally, they can produce powerful pages and reports which can be used to promote a small site or blog.

Give them a go and try them for your sites.

Wednesday, 2 April 2008

Cyanide and Happiness

If you haven't come across their cartoons and animations, your life has a gaping void in it. Luckily for you, it can now be filled!

Cyanide and Happiness, a daily webcomic
Cyanide & Happiness @ Explosm.net

Spartacus is probably their best animation yet. Enjoy!

Monday, 31 March 2008

TRON's lightcycle scene - in stop-motion animation

French filmmaker Freres-Hueon has recreated the epic lightcycle battle from Tron in fantastic stopmotion form. Using cardboard cutouts to replace the computer graphics, and the entire scene is re-enacted in all it's glory.

Feast your eyes on this gem:



Utterly fantastic. Head on over to http://www.gltron.org/index.php and relive the fun for yourself. There's an IRIX binary available to, to give your SGI workstation a proper workout.

Saturday, 8 March 2008

Ling from LINGsCARS on website promotion

I've known about Ling's Cars for a while. Not only is the website pretty awesome, but Ling also has a Zil 131 truck with a fake nuclear warhead strapped to the back. I've been a big fan of Zil and Gaz trucks for ages, so that's how I first came across Ling and her site.

Ling has a fantastic post on her blog at http://www.lingscars.com/blog/?p=2412 where she goes into detail on how she builds awareness of her website. This should be required reading for anyone who's trying to get traffic or raise the profile of their site - it's not all about PPC and Google Adwords.

Well worth a read, and I can highly recommend subscribing to her RSS feed as well.

Friday, 7 March 2008

Home Secretary in ID Card database security gaffe

Home Secretary in ID Card database security gaffe: "

Unhackable? Up to a point, minister


Security experts have rubbished claims by the Home Secretary that databases for the controversial National ID Cards will be 'unhackable' because they are being kept off the public internet.…

"



(Via The Register.)



When will the current Government learn the lessons from IT gaffe after gaffe? Jacqui Smith's speech is well worth a read through, just to understand how badly the Home Secretary and the Government are trying to mislead votes over the ID cards scheme.

For an even more complete takedown, read the thorough dissection at the excellent SpyBlog.

Monday, 25 February 2008

How is this legal?

So I was reading a report in Management Today detailing HMRC's involvement with a Lichtenstein 'Deep Throat' mole.

For some background: Lichtenstein is a tiny country in Europe that exists purely as a tax haven. A number of years ago, an employee of a main bank there stole some account details.

Let's be clear here - he stole them. These contained information including balances, transfers, and other account details for a number of very wealthy account holders, who had Lichtenstein bank accounts for - surprise! surprise! - tax avoidance purposes.

Her Majesty's Revenue & Customs (HMRC) have bought this list, and are now using it to conduct tax investigations against a number of people.

What exactly seperates HMRC from any other criminal organisation at this point? There was no moral outrage here, the guy wasn't a whistleblower - he stole people's bank account details and has been trying to sell them to the highest bidder. He'd already sold them to the German tax authorities for £5m.

Given HMRC recently lost personal details (including bank account information) for 25 million people, it's clear how little they value personal information - at least, the public's personal information. Their automated systems also recently screwed up and they sent out hundreds of 'missed payment' penalties to businesses across the UK. Bear in mind, these weren't 'friendly reminder' notices, these were 'we are taking you to court because our system says you didn't pay your taxes 3 years ago' notices.

Try getting a Freedom of Information (FoI) request carried out by HMRC. The double standards here are breathtaking.

Grab the full Management Today story at http://www.managementtoday.co.uk/newsalerts/article/786024/mtsweek/hmrc-cash-liechtenstein-deep-throat/?DCMP=EMC-Daily%20News