Archive for December, 2011



David Haase

12/15/2011

Facebook Timelines Now Live for Everyone
03:15 pm by David Haase

Things YOU need to do now that Facebook Timelines is live:

  • Pay attention. You have seven days to review your timeline, but it’s going live on Dec. 22 whether you have reviewed it or not! So, pay attention.
  • Become a revisionist. It’s your life; that means it’s your story. Revise it to tell the story you want … which for most people will involve removing at least one photo.
  • Check your privacy settings. You don’t have to let anyone see anything you don’t want them to see, and that includes your Timeline. (See ‘It’s your life’ above.)
  • While you’re in your privacy settings, clean out those old apps. You know, the ones you said could retrieve all your data and then you forgot that you even allowed them at it. Apps are easy to remove. We recommend that you do a little housecleaning.
Aaron

12/14/2011

New Launch: 2012 Scottsdale Culinary Festival
01:56 pm by Aaron

We’re pleased to announce the launch of The Scottsdale Culinary Festival’s 2012 Web site. We at IWS have been working on this site feverishly since mid-October and we’re ecstatic with how it turned out.

Not familiar with the Scottsdale Culinary Festival?

2012 marks the 34th year of the Scottsdale Culinary Festival. Since the event’s humble beginnings in 1978, the Festival has grown to be a community favorite that hosts nearly 40,000 guests from all over the nation with over a dozen events, hundreds of restaurants, dozens of chefs and countless fine wine and spirit selections.

If you want to know more, go visit the site. If you live in Arizona, I would encourage you to attend – it is a lot of fun every year. If you live outside of Arizona, April is the perfect time of year to visit.

Now, if you’ll excuse me, working on this site for the past month and a half has made me very hungry . . .

Aaron

12/12/2011

Google+ Finally Causing a ‘Ripple’?
09:47 am by Aaron

Google+ ran into a brick wall at the outset, being compared to Facebook.

It was competing with Facebook for the same market, or a very similar market. Both firms have impressive pedigrees, which led to numerous stories about how Google+ could be the next Facebook or a “Facebook killer.”

When such expectations are piled on anything, disappointment is usually the only realistic outcome. After a fast start, Google+ has slowed down, and many people have moved on to finding the next “Facebook killer.”

One area where Google+ has Facebook beat, however, is the graphical display of its pages and profile’s metrics. Note: I’m not saying the Google+ metrics are better. I’m saying their graphic display is better.

This is true because of a service called Ripples, which lets you see in a very nifty way  everyone who publicly shared your post.

You can access Ripples from any Google+post by clicking the drop down arrow and choosing “View Ripples.”

Google Ripples screenshot

From there are you treated to an impressive graphical display:

Google Ripples graphic

You can zoom in:

And actually see what was said by the person who shared your post:

Only public shares can be tracked, which saves Google+ from a major breach of privacy but also restricts you from seeing all shares of your content.

Ripples is a cool feature for Google+, but is it actually worthwhile? Personally, I think it’s a really cool toy but not much more. In the end we don’t need a really cool way to see who shared our posts, we just need to know if our posts were shared, +1′d, liked, re-tweeted, whatever. Unless you can afford to employ somebody to sift through the share and see who is saying what about your posts, I don’t see a practical application.