Firefox 3 gets off to a bad start

Firefox - 2 Comments » - Posted on June, 17 at 5:51 pm

It looks like Mozilla’s Firefox Download Day has got off to a bad start – this was the picture at 1800 UK time (the exact time of release):

I’m guessing they’ve hit unprecedented traffic volumes, as there were a lot of people waiting for this. Conspiracy theorists might say that Microsoft probably set up a well-timed DDoS attack on Mozilla’s servers – for the purposes of any Microsoft lawyers, I’m not a conspiracy nut ;)

Now, at 45 minutes after the planned release, Mozilla appears to have rolled back to Firefox 2…

Google Pagerank update

Google - Comments Off - Posted on May, 1 at 9:46 am

Google has updated their Pagerank reporting today – looks like Netvibes gets a nice bump up to from PR8 to PR9, along with Facebook getting the same increase from PR8 to PR9. Haven’t seen any big losers as yet…

Google Safe Browsing API

Google - Comments Off - Posted on April, 23 at 10:49 am

Further to my previous post about Google flagging some WordPress blogs as badware, the Google Operating System blog points to a Google API that allows webmasters to monitor their URLs for blacklist status with up to 10,000 ‘regular user’ requests (though it doesn’t say over what time period this takes place over).

Kudos to Google for assisting webmasters in this issue.

UK mortgage market slowdown

Search Marketing - Comments Off - Posted on April, 17 at 8:36 am

As the UK seemingly enters a period of uncertain economic growth, and and an almost certain fall in house prices (the IMF believes that the UK mortgage market is overvalued by around 25%), it’s interesting to look at a Google Trends report for searches on the words ‘mortgage’ and ‘recession’:

Google trends chart - mortgage vs. recession

It’s interesting to see that at almost the exact same time that people started searching for the word ‘recession’, the volume of searches for the word ‘mortgage’ started to drop, and the third quarter dip seen in previous years around Christmas was slightly sharper and more pronounced.

What’s also interesting to see is the sharp rise in searches for ‘mortgage’ at the end of the first quarter of 2008; however perhaps at this time the intent of the search has switched from looking to buy a mortgage, to being informational searches on the condition of the mortgage market. It will be interesting to watch these trends in future months…

Great online regex tool

Programming - Comments Off - Posted on April, 16 at 1:20 pm

Just found a fantastic online regular expression tool which includes real-time regex evaluation for PHP (PCRE & POSIX), JavaScript, Perl and Python syntaxes.

Much credit to Lars Olav Torvik for writing and sharing it :)

Gibson to sue Activision over “Guitar Hero”

Music - Comments Off - Posted on March, 22 at 2:58 pm

As a real guitarist who enjoys playing real guitars, I have to say, rock on.

Best search marketing tool of 2008 so far

Search Marketing - Comments Off - Posted on March, 21 at 1:05 pm

Via searchengineland, some fantastic person has created a tool which aggregates data for page views on Wikipedia; you can search for any page that exists on Wikipedia and see daily traffic stats for that page in a number of given months.

The awesomeness of this should not be underestimated; what we’re basically seeing here is a vague estimation of the kind of traffic you can expect for a number of keywords if you reach the top ~5 in Google and Yahoo. Obviously being Wikipedia this is slanted towards information-style queries (which we see had 53k views in February), so its commercial value could be debated, but with a bit of lateral thinking this kind of info could probably be applied to anything – especially looking into the potential of niche markets.

With Overture’s keyword tool dead for over a year now, this is a very welcome addition to a search marketer’s array of research tools, and with talk of an API for this info in progress, I think this is an almost unprecedented gateway for the average search marketer/webmaster into overall traffic volumes on the web (barring AOL’s search info leak).