Where can I categorize this video? Hmmm … I look over the internet and some sites categorized it as adult movie (for which I need an account to view it), other sites describe this movie like “cochon movie”. Well, I like this movie, where Mauricio Ricardo changes the sexy stuff in innocent stuff. I think he is a very talented artist, with a fertile imagination. Watch this!
Three weeks ago, my son, who has 3,8 years old, and his father, participated to an event called CriticalMass. This event held in Romania, Izvor Park. Here is some words about CriticalMass and 2 picture with my son (and the other).
Critical Mass is an event typically held on the last Friday of every month in cities around the world where bicyclists and, less frequently, skateboarders, inline skaters, roller skaters and other self-propelled commuters take to the streets en masse. While the ride was originally founded with the idea of drawing attention to how unfriendly the city was to bicyclists,[1] the leaderless structure of Critical Mass makes it impossible to assign it any one specific goal. In fact, the purpose of Critical Mass is not formalized beyond the direct action of meeting at a set location and time and traveling as a group through city streets. – (WikiPedia)
He goes with his little bicycle, and, as you can see, he is the little leader of this event.
Three days ago I’ve found out about BlogRush, that’s seems to be an easy and free way to increase your blog’s traffic. It was launched this weekend, and it seems that suddenly everyone is talking about that. So, I speed up over the BlogRush site and, after I watch the presentation movie, I’ve decided to try it out. I signed up in a minute and took the code that it gave me and put it in a sidebar text widget, put the widget where I wanted it (you can see it on my sidebar just to the right). It’s so easy!
BlogRush users earn “syndication credits” (the right to have their blog post titles shown inside a widget on another related blog) based on their own traffic (loads of the widget) as well as the traffic of other users they refer to BlogRush. Users can automatically refer others to BlogRush via special links on the widget, as well as through the promotion of a special referral URL they are given.
BlogRush is a “Cooperative Syndication Network” that rewards its users for their contributions to the network — from the impressions they provide of the BlogRush Widget to the referral of other users through 10 ‘generations’ of activity and the impressions of the widget that they provide. BlogRush was designed to be incredibly viral and to provide its users with tremendous distribution leverage to receive exposure for their blog content (onto related content blogs) that they could never achieve on their own; at least without a massive advertising budget.
In BlogRush Help you have some step-by-step video tutorials (for different blog types) that show you how to add the BlogRush code to your blog.
Just sign in, take the BlogRush code that it give you and put it in a sidebar text widget, and put the widget where you want to. And that’s it! So, how easy is this?
Yesterday, while I’m trying to explain to someone how important is that title, description and keywords must be different from every page. And not just anyway, but they must begin different. I.e., for title, not “company name – product name xx” for all products, but “product name xx – company name”. Same for description and keywords. I want to explain her that in first case, with fixed part at first for title, description and keywords, most indexed pages goes to the supplemental results. And I want to give her an example and show in Google how they appear. And surprise! No supplemental results! Even if she has over 100 pages with same title, description and keywords. Hmmm!
However, from what I read in article, supplemental index doesn’t disappear. Just the label “supplemental results” for supplemental. So, there are still many differences in ranking pages from main index and supplemental index, but now, we aren’t able to see those differences.