The online revenues at the Independent are up 65% according to PaidContent.org.
Technorati Tags: newspapers, web
The online revenues at the Independent are up 65% according to PaidContent.org.
Technorati Tags: newspapers, web
Google is adding a “plus box” to some of its search results to indicate that there is more information – mainly stock and maps – available through an AJAX interface just by clicking the symbol.
Technorati Tags: GYM
Steve Rubel is predicting that Twitter could be in difficulties due to a huge SMS bill. He points out that in the States the receiver pays, but elsewhere in the world the sender pays which means growing popularity in the non-US world could spell trouble.
Technorati Tags: mobile
NBC and News Corp are joining forces to launch their own video distribution platform which they say will be the “largest advertising platform on earth” reports Wired. Following on the heels of the Viacom $1bn lawsuit this is more evidence of the fightback of old media.
Technorati Tags: video
Magazines publishers are still puzzling over how to make money on the internet, according to a report from the UK’s Association of Online Publishers.
The latest addition to the “g-data” family of Google product APIs is one for Picasa Web Albums. It will enable users to add slide shows and other picture applications directly into web sites.
Yahoo! has launched a mobile search service into the US which it say brings back results to the mobile not lists of links. Graphics here.
There appears to be some activity with Google Page Rank, reports Whims and Wonders blog, which noticed some fluctuations in the last day or so.
Update: Matt Cutts finally sheds some light on what’s going on:
Okay, back on topic. The data for externally visible PageRank didn’t change. The only way someone would notice their PageRank changing last week is for example if they were checking for a different canonical url (e.g. externally visible PageRank is shown for www.example.com, but Google changes the canonicalization from www.example.com to example.com).
Google is launching a “pay for actions” service – advertisers design ads, define the actions that they want from them, and then pay only when the “actions” are completed. Interesting…
Technorati Tags: advertising, GYM