Archive for April, 2009

Your Business Card Is Crap!

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

This is a great viral video, it’s just too bad that he never mentioned a company name or even his name for that matter. Or could this be an even better strategy, as now there might be a buzz on the Internet to find out exactly who this guy is?

Speaking of business cards, check out these other sites for some impressive and creative business cards.

SEO Site Analysis: Gifted

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

SEO site analysis

Here is a site analysis I have prepared for Gifted (http://www.madebymarie.com). If you would like one prepared for your business website, please visit the contact page.

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Business Profile: Gifted

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

Gifted

Today’s featured business is Gifted, based out of Boston, MA. I happened to find them on Twitter, so you can add this to your list of reasons to use Twitter.

If you are interested in having your business or site profiled here, please visit the contact page and send me an email.

So, let’s get right to my interview with co-owner Marie Corcoran…

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DiggBar Review: Friend or Foe?

Monday, April 6th, 2009

Digg Bar Cry Babies

Last week Digg released the DiggBar which resulted in plenty of criticism. The most widespread complaints seem to be that there is a loss of SEO benefits for content providers, and also the DiggBar url is what will be bookmarked by the user, as opposed to that of the content provider.

I’ll tell you straight out, right now I love the DiggBar and here’s why…

Less blind Digging (I hope)

People are lazy and have no problem blind Digging a story based on a title and the description of an article. As the content provider, this has absolutely no benefit to you unless you hit the front page of Digg. Now with the DiggBar, there’s really no excuse not to click through for content that you’re interested in, because the DiggBar gives you everything you need (Digg button, link back to Digg, link to the post, the ability to share the link, and the ability to kill the DiggBar.

Your CPM’s won’t suffer

Even with the DiggBar, your site will still serve up ad impressions to the reader. I don’t know about you, but most of my sites have over 60% of their traffic coming from referring sites, and the revenue they generate is through the CPM advertising model. Essentially, I don’t care how people get there. I’m going to get paid regardless of whether or not the reader viewed my content in the DiggBar iframe.

You can ditch the Digg toolbar

I hate toolbars because they just make for a painful web browsing experience. I avoid them at all costs, unless of course it’s a toolbar that will increase my productivity. With the DiggBar, you’re essentially getting the Digg toolbar, but only when you need it.

It’s a URL shortener

By simply adding “http://digg.com/” before any URL, you automatically get a shortened Digg URL. If you are really lazy, you can even add the DiggBar button to your bookmark toolbar, and it will shorten the URL with the click of a button.

Take that tinyurl.com!

Wordpress 2.7.1 Upgrade Tip

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

brunette_screaming

Over the weekend, I had the pleasure of upgrading one of my sites from Wordpress 2.7 to Wordpress 2.7.1. Everything appeared to be going smoothly, as automatic upgrade worked behind the scenes to bring Wordpress up to date. When the upgrade was complete everything in my admin panel looked fine, and was fully functional.

However, when I went to check the site itself there was a problem. The front page wasn’t being served, however when visiting the site from an inbound link to an individual post, the site appeared fine.

I went through the normal gauntlet to make sure that the problem was actually with my site. I cleared the cache in Firefox and Internet Explorer and even tried accessing the site through a proxy. All three times, the browser wasn’t able to resolve the front page.

I decided I would leave the site be for a while as for some reason, issue like these sometimes resolve themselves. Umm, not the case here.

On Sunday, the site front page was working, but guess what? The site was crashing every 45-60 minutes! I tried deactivating all of the plugins, and nothing changed. However, I did notice that restarting Apache would bring the site right back up again. As the day went on, the time in between crashes got smaller and smaller, until it was at the point that the site couldn’t be live for more than 30 seconds.

I decided to enlist the help of my host Media Temple. From what they could see, something was generating open connections in MySQL and the connections were not closing. As these open connections piled up, they ultimately lead to the site crashing.

Media Temple suggested that I make some adjustments using SSH, such as increasing the maximum connections to 250 with the hope that it would give the server more time for the connections to close. Nope, that didn’t help, but I sure had a lot of fun reading the documentation on shell commands.

Now before I get to the solution, here are two of the errors I was seeing:

When visiting the site, I was getting the error message “error establishing a database connection“. I would then restart Apache, and in my Plesk control panel I would see…

*Service is not available now, probably your Plesk is misconfigured.
Contact Your provider for details.
Internal Plesk error occurred: Unable to connect to database: mysql_connect() [< a href='function.mysql-connect'>function.mysql-connect]: Can’t connect to local MySQL server through socket ‘/var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock’ (2)*

The Solution

A big round of applause to my buddies at Grand Master B and Buzz Pirates for suggesting the following to resolve the issue.

1. Disable wp-cache (super or original) from the WP Admin screen.
2. Stop Apache
3. Delete the entire wp-content/cache directory, as well as the wp-content/wp-cache-config.php and wp-content/advanced-cache.php files
4. Delete the wp-content/plugins/wp-cache and/or wp-content/plugins/wp-super-cache directories.
5. Remove any wp-cache rewrite rules from /.haccess file
6. Start up Apache.
7. Make sure everything is working.
8. Reinstall wp-super-cache from scratch. Be sure to get the latest version.

That’s it! How simple was that? If you find this solution useful, feel free to leave a comment or link back to this post.