Industry News

Catch up on interesting new discussion and industry news.

    Built to last

    by Rian van der Merwe
    May 15, 2013
    Jason Fried, co-founder of 37signals, in an interview with The Great Discontent:

    People should consider the value of a long-term investment in something. Can you make your idea your life’s work instead of your life’s work being 30 ideas?

    I’m more of a fan of constant, steady growth because it feels more sustainable over a long period of time. Creating things that are lasting is what great cultures do. [...] What are we creating today that’s going to last for 20, 50, or 100 years?...

    Google To Soften The Panda Algorithm

    rustybrick
    by rustybrick
    May 15, 2013
    As I covered yesterday, in very brief summary, Google's Matt Cutts told us ten SEO changes coming to Google by the end of this summer. One of those changes is softening the impact of the Panda algorithm for sites that are in the "gray area" or "border" of being impacted by the Panda algorithm...

    Leaving gadgets on the table

    by Rian van der Merwe
    May 14, 2013
    Nick Bilton in Disruptions: Even the Tech Elites Leave Gadgets Behind, an article on the growing (not just hipster any more?) trend to step away from technology every once in a while:

    As every aspect of our daily lives has become hyperconnected, some people on the cutting edge of tech are trying their best to push it back a few feet. Keeping their phone in their pocket. Turning off their home Wi-Fi at night or on weekends. And reading books on paper, rather than pixels.

    The “phone...

    Matt Cutts On 10 New SEO Changes At Google In Next Few Months

    rustybrick
    by rustybrick
    May 14, 2013
    Yesterday, Google's Matt Cutts did something he doesn't often do - he pre-announced changes Google will be implementing to the ranking and indexing algorithms in the next few months...

    What to expect in SEO in the coming months

    MattCutts
    by MattCutts
    May 13, 2013
    We just recently taped a new round of webmaster videos, and I thought this video deserved a full-fledged blog post. This is my rough estimate (as of early May 2013) of what search engine optimizers (SEOs) and webmasters should expect in the next few months:



    Bear in mind that this is a very rough estimate, because priorities, projects, and timing can change based on a lot of different factors. But I hope this gives folks a ballpark idea of what to expect in the coming months as far as...

    What should we expect in the next few months in terms of SEO for Google?

    May 13, 2013
    Matt Cutts, Mountain View Have a question? Ask it in our Webmaster Help Forum: http:...

    Speaking at SMX London – May 15th 2013

    DaveN
    by DaveN
    May 13, 2013
    On Wednesday I will be heading back to Chelsea Football Club to speak at SMX London. As a Leeds United fan I used to go to Chelsea’s ground many years ago for away matches, but lots has changed since those days I’m speaking on a panel with the...

    Google's Major Penguin Update Coming In Weeks. It Will Be Big!

    rustybrick
    by rustybrick
    May 13, 2013
    On Friday, Google's head of search spam, Matt Cutts announced on Twitter that the Penguin update we are expecting this year, will be coming in the next few weeks.

    Matt Cutts said...

    It’s (still) all about affordance

    by Rian van der Merwe
    May 12, 2013
    Granted, the skeuomorphism vs. flat design debate (a false dichotomy anyway) is getting a bit old. But it’s worth reading Matt Gemmell’s take in Tail wagging, because he makes some great points about what makes for good interface design. Like this one:

    Our tastes, and capabilities, have moved a bit beyond screamingly-obvious knobs and dials. We don’t need drop-shadows to encourage us to poke at something. All we need is an invitation, in the form of icons or labels or animations which...

    Example debunk post

    MattCutts
    by MattCutts
    May 12, 2013
    Over the years I’ve written a lot of blog posts to debunk misconceptions or claims that weren’t true. Sometimes I publish the blogs posts but often I don’t. This is a pretty typical example post. Someone claimed that Google was evil for removing a particular domain, when in fact the domain had been removed from Google’s index via a self-service user request to our url removal tool.

    When we see misconceptions, we try to figure out where the confusion happened and how to prevent that type of...