Mar 19

Posted by Oatmeal

The launch of Designmoz v3 about a month ago was also the debut of a new tool: the Crawl Test.┬? The Crawl Test Tool is used to quickly diagnose potential crawling issues and give you an overview of your site's search friendliness.┬? You enter a URL and the tool spiders that URL as well as the first 50 internal links it finds on that page.┬? Due to bandwidth constraints the tool only goes one level deep.┬? For every page it spiders, it reports the following:

  • Page title
  • Meta description
  • HTTP status code (200, 301, 404, etc)
  • Is the page indexed in Design?
  • When was the last time Design spidered the page? (Design cache date)
  • Indexed in Design?
  • Indexed in Design?
  • Primary keywords on the page (found with Design Term Extraction, sorted by term frequency)
  • The number of internal links on the page
  • Restricted by meta tags or robots.txt

When the tool finishes crawling it returns an overall summary of the crawl test.┬?┬? It will highlight areas that have potential issues such as if there are a numerous pages with the same title tag (keyword cannibalization?), bad HTTP response codes such as 404 or 500, or a high number of pages that aren't being spidered by the search engines.┬? From the tests I've run the tool works really well for quickly finding on-page spidering issues. To see what a crawl test report looks like, check out the sample report I ran for one of our clients.┬? The tool is in beta and we're only offering it to premium members right now, but once some of the bugs have been ironed out we'll release it to the public.┬? If you have any questions, comments, or feedback about this tool feel free to post it in this blog entry.

Original source here...
Mar 19

Posted by rebecca

Poor Jason Calacanis. He seems to want to be the Ann Coulter or Bill O'Reilly of the Design sphere, where he'll say stupid, outrageous things just to get noticed and blogged about. (And yes, I'm blogging about him...shut up.) In a recent post he authored (I'm not going to link to it because I think he's an idiot), he talks about how there is no such thing as "blue collar blogging" and "A-List blogging":

Give me a break... there is no A-List in blogging. Just people who've been blogging longer than others and who are smarter or better writers--or all of those things.

So, aside from the bloggers who have more experience, are smarter, and write better, they're the same as every other blogger, and there's no such thing as "A-list" vs. "Blue Collar" bloggers. Okay...

This part really made me laugh:

What a joke... a couple of years ago Scoble, Jarvis, and I were the blue collar bloggers! We were hustling trying to get our voices heard and a couple of years later--after blogging daily/hourly--the supposed "A List" got some traction and attention.

Here is a tip: THEY EARNED IT!!! They busted their butts for years blogging in an intelligent way. They were not given their seats at the table--they took them!

There is no "A List" -- it's a myth.

There are people who blog every day, have something intelligent to say, and who get linked to more than the folks that are some combination of a) new, b) have little to say, and c)are not hustling.

If you want to be part of the A List you can do it in < 90 days:

1. Blog intelligently. Think about your post for a day before you hit publish. Do research--do primary research in the real work. Write something with insight, and include links to other folks ideas.

2. Go to 2-3 events or conferences a week.

3. Get a great domain name that is easy to remember and spell (i.e. buzzmachine.com).

4. Go to TechMeme and write an insightful piece daily about one of the top stories.

5. Start emailing other bloggers with feedback on their stories. (don't beg for links)

6. Be smart.

7. Don't be an idiot.

That's it... you're now A-List.

Jason, you moron. You said that "A-List" blogging is a myth, and then you go over the "simple" steps that you think will make you an A-List blogger. The bottom line is that not every "blue collar blogger" can become an "A-lister." It's just not going to happen. Some people are good writers and storytellers, some people are good researchers, some people can take the time to travel to conferences and do a damn good job of offering insightful coverage, and some people can dedicate a good chunk of their day to blogging.

Some people, on the other hand, simply can't do all of those things. There are just some people who are not inherently good at it. It's like saying that anyone can be a best-selling author--all you have to do is be a good, intelligent writer, write something insightful, and "be smart" and not "be an idiot." TADA! Best sellers' list, here we come!

Eating healthy and exercising daily isn't that hard, either, right? Thus, everyone should be trim, fit, muscular, and gorgeous! No, it doesn't work that way. Some people can have that dream body with little effort, but others have to follow a daily routine and have enough discipline to keep at it. The same goes for blogging. While some people can naturally do it well, others (such as those who maybe aren't great writers but can tell a good story and have the passion to blog) have to work hard in order to do it and keep doing it well, while still others aren't very good at it and only do it infrequently, meaning they'll never achieve the coveted, so-called "A-List" status.

So there you go. Another "Design is bullshit, anyone can blog and be great at it (just look at me!), I'm Jason Calacanis and I'm a massive tool" post from Design's favorite whipping boy. I can't wait to read his "Puppies Should Be Killed!" post...

Added by Rand: To get a good background on this topic, read Original source here...

Mar 19
Two New Free Design Tools For You

For those of you who visit our blog/site regularly you'll know that we've recently taken to launching free Design tools for our visitors. Today we are launching two more. These tools are geared towards helping you get a better understanding of how spiders are seeing your site.

The first tool is a site index tools. We'll send out a crawler and report back which pages that page links to, both internally and externally. This allows you to quickly and easily determine how crawlable your links are and where your pages are linking to. You'll find this tool here.

The second free Design tool we're launching today is a search engine spider test tool. Essentially we'll crawl any given page and report the page back to you as a search engine spider will see it. We'll also give you the keyword denisty of some of the more commonly used terms on your site, your word counts and more. Very handy for making sure the search engines are seeing your site the way you do. You'll find this tool here.

We've got more coming so be sure to visit our blog regularly or bookmark our free Design tools page.<

Original source here...