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Attorney Blog Design

August 21st, 2010 No comments

This is a blog I created for a law office in the bay area. It’s a WordPress blog with a customized theme.

Attorney Blog Design

Attorney Blog Design

Blogs to promote legal practices are getting more and more popular these days. The blog can contain timely analysis of current events relating to the legal practice’s focus, and highlight the attorneys’ expertise regarding the subject. The posts can also link back to the attorney’s main website, adding some SEO benefit.

Pleasanton E-Waste Collection Event at the Fairgrounds

April 6th, 2009 No comments

Have an old TV, monitor, computer or other electronics that you want to get rid of responsibly, yet inexpensively. Well, then the annual FREE E-Waste Recycling Event held at the Alameda County Fairgrounds is for you!

Where?
Alameda County Fairgrounds
4501 Pleasanton Avenue
Gate number to be announced.
Pleasanton, CA 94523

When?

Friday April 17th 12:00 pm – 5:00 pm
Saturday April 18th 9:00 am – 3:00 pm
Sunday April 19th 9:00 am – 3:00 pm

This event is put on by Electronic Waste Management. For more information, visit their website at http://noewaste.com/calendar/event-display.php?7

Categories: blog, e-waste, Pleasanton, recycling Tags:

Blogger Beta, Firefox, Greasemonkey, Magical Sheep and Technorati

December 6th, 2006 No comments

Check out my cool new Technorati tags at the bottom of my post. Wanna know how I got ‘em? Do ya? Well:

1. First I downloaded Firefox (ok, I already had it, but you can download it by clicking the link at the to of the page!).

2. Next I downloaded Greasemonkey – It’s a Firefox extension that allows you to run user scripts on any webpage to add functionality. For example you could add cool Technorati tags to the end of your blog posts.

3. The user script you want to use in your Mozilla browser, enabled by Greasemonkey is called Magical Sheep. Click on the button, open your Blogger Beta, and voila, you can now add ultra-neato technorati tags like you see below.

Blogging Basics – Part One

December 5th, 2006 No comments

I’ve only been seriously blogging for a few months now, although I published my first post in 2004. I’ve learned a few things and taken some missteps, and I thought I’d share them with you. I’m not at the top of the learning curve , so please take that into consideration as you read.

The following tips assume that you are writing blog posts with the intent of drawing maximum readership. They cover factors that are on-page. Off-page factors will be covered in part two.

1. Forget about Google for the first 6 months. They are very snobby and won’t care about your blog at first. I used to think there was such a thing as optimizing for particular search engines. Now I have a pretty standard set of rules, based on quality content and putting the right keywords in the right places. If you do try to figure out algorithms and tweak your blog posts accordingly, concentrate on MSN and Yahoo for the first 6 months to a year.

2. Your main page is where it is happening. When you are first starting out, with a piddly page rank of 2 or 3, your main page is going to have the best shot at showing up in the SERPs. After the posts fall off the main page, they are much less likely to get hits. I’m still experimenting myself, but suffice it to say, don’t set your posts to drop off from the main page too quickly.

3. Start multiple blogs. If you think you may want to blog on many or a few different subjects, don’t put everything on one blog. The last thing you want is a big mish-mash of different subject matter, which will dilute your targeted content. As stated above, it takes a while for the big-boy search engine, Google, to see you as an established presence, so think things out and start as many blogs as you think are necessary to they can each get their own page rank, and when you are finally ready to roll and start gaining some blogging momentum, you’ll have several venues with decent visability, instead of just one.

4. Just start writing. When I first started blogging, I had no idea what I wanted to say. Writing a post was like pulling teeth. Gradually, however, as I gained practice at putting my thoughts to words, and seeing which type of subjects made good posts, writing because more effortless. You have to start though. Just do it. Pay your dues. Just delete your early practice posts when you start getting traffic, or you could be in for a bit of embarrassment.

Technorati Ping Problem Solved

December 4th, 2006 2 comments

Yesterday I wrote a post entitled Technorati Ping Problems on another blog. It described a problem I was having with a new blog promotion service I started using recently, Technorati. Information for one of the three blogs I have registered with them (this one) was majorly wacky.

I just received an email from Technorati support saying they made a “small adjustment” and everything should be working now. Sure enough, everything is looking good. My latest posts are up there, showing my index as updated 6 hours ago rather than 393 days. I emailed them just yesterday, so I’m impressed with their response time. Hopefully the problem is truely solved and I won’t be needing “small adjustments” on a regular basis.

Technorati appears to be a very useful and powerful service. They do have a problem related to pinging some blogs, but they are handling it. I think I’ll keep them ;)

Categories: blog, index, ping, problem, seo, technorati Tags:

Blogger Censorship

December 3rd, 2006 No comments

I’ve heard rumors about posts on Blogspot.com being deleted without the author’s consent. I first heard of this in a website marketing article. I haven’t been able to find any more specific information on what the author of the marketing article was talking about, but decided to start a WordPress blog on my business Website design site, in order to compare and contrast. The new TP Designs Website Design Blog is at http://www.tpdesigns.net/wordpress and will contain news about services, technology and special offers.

Categories: blog, blogger, blogging, censorship Tags: