Starting From Scratch: A Step-by-Step Guide to Reinstalling Your OS

How to tell if your Company is Advanced: 10 Criteria Of Social Business Maturity

Excited about your new Facebook page but don’t know what’s next?  What does a truly advanced company look like in social business?  They can say yes to seven or more of these ten criteria.

We’ve been interviewing the most sophisticated brands in the world when it comes to social business for our upcoming report on “Enterprise Social Strategists Role”.  We’ve come to learn which companies are advanced and why.  Secondly, I meet a variety of companies who tell me they are “Very advanced, having done this for a few years, and have dozens of Facebook efforts” but when I ask them some specific questions on their sophistication, they often retract their statement.

You can follow the ‘via’ link above to go to the source and read the rest of the article if you’re interested…

My Mom’s on Facebook?

My mom’s on Facebook. How about yours?

Steve Jobs: “Onerous Terms” Prevented Ping-Facebook Integration

And Facebook is nowhere on Ping, either. Currently, there is no linking, sharing or participation of any kind with Facebook–or Twitter or MySpace–on Ping, which will work only on the iTunes software on computers, iPhones and iPods.

When I asked Jobs about that, he said Apple had indeed held talks with Facebook about a variety of unspecified partnerships related to Ping, but the discussions went nowhere.

The reason, according to Jobs: Facebook wanted “onerous terms that we could not agree to,” related to connecting with Facebook friends on Ping.

For those who are struck by the word, the definition of onerous, according to an online dictionary: “Involving an amount of effort and difficulty that is oppressively burdensome; Involving heavy obligations.”

Jobs did not elaborate on those troublesome terms and also would not say if Ping would incorporate connecting with Facebook or even using Facebook Connect–which would make it much easier to find friends to share music with.

“We could, I guess,” he shrugged.

And when I asked how to find friends, Jobs offered, noting iTunes had 160 million users across the globe: “You can type their names into search or send them emails inviting them to join.”

Okay, although being more open would work too!

Talk about ‘the pot calling the kettle black’ — here we have Steve Jobs complaining about another tech company and their onerous business terms. Jobs is the king of onerous terms and it’s the main reason why Apple only picks weak business partners like AT&T for their products. Onerous terms and attitude are the ‘Achilles Heel’ of Jobs and Apple…

11 ways to lose your job on Facebook…

Facebook has become the social media channel everyone loves and loves to hate. It is a powerful platform to share your content as well as being a soapbox to post your feelings and thoughts whether they are appropriate or not.

Social media seems to have hit such a nerve with people sharing anything and everything online with such gay abandon. 11 Ways To Lose Your Job On Facebook

It continues to provide great online fodder that keeps us amused and entertained in an almost voyeuristic fashion.

The reaction to a post that I wrote titled “30 Things You Shouldn’t share on Social Media”  revealed to me the high interest in other people’s online Faux pas with 69 comments so far.

Follow the ‘via’ link above to go to the source and read the rest of the article if you’re interested…

Chrome August’s big winner as Internet Explorer resumes slide

Microsoft bringing back three-license Windows 7 Family Pack

When should you delete a comment on your Facebook Page?

Top 10 Facebook Pages

If You’ve Got Social Media Fatigue, UR DOIN IT WRONG

Just as I was reading Paul Carr’s latest column about quitting social media, my husband looked at his phone and broke into a huge smile. He is a graphic designer and has long been a fan of Chank Fonts. Earlier that day, he’d taken a picture of a retro-looking podiatrist office, posting it on Twitter with the word “Font-o-licious.” It didn’t go viral. It didn’t become a trending topic. It didn’t get him 1,000 new followers or even attract much attention at all. But it was noticed by Chank Diesel of Chank Fonts who Tweeted “I’m gonna dedicate my next font to that type-savvy podiatrist” and started following my husband.

Here in front of me was one of those serendipitous moments of social media collapsing  space-and-time. These moments don’t change the world, but they’re exactly what made social media so addictive in the first place. Imagine an industry hero of yours who seemed untouchable creating a product just because of a random picture you posted on an ever-moving stream of colliding information that he happened to see. Here, in the guise of my beaming husband, was the perfect articulation for why I think people—even my close friends— who declare dramatic social media bankruptcy were just doing it wrong.

What made social media a phenomenon were moments like these. Passively connecting in-and-out of a persistent conversation with people you know and see everyday, people you know but have lost touch with, and people you don’t know but share interests with. People who in a more efficient world, you might have known. It’s about making relationships more efficient. My parents know what I’ve been up to by reading my Twitter feed, so when I call home I don’t have to answer a vague question like “What have you been up to?” I answer a specific question like “What country are you traveling to now?” If a friend is looking for a job at a given company, I can’t always remember who I know who works there, but with LinkedIn, I don’t have to. And seeing what an old flame looks like on Facebook never gets old.

If you have social media fatigue or you haven’t even started and you’re afraid of social media fatigue, comment, call or use the contact form to discuss how this applies to your business. The ‘e1evation workflow’ and our “practical, tactical social media” approach will help give you relief…

10 Top iTunes Troubleshooting Tips & Tricks

Building Community Sites with WordPress: 15 Plugins to Get Started

10+ Resources For Free Professional WordPress Themes

Make Free iPhone Ringtones

Here’s a bone for the Mac fanboys on the list…

Top 10 External Hard Drive Tricks

Older Adults Nearly Double Social Media Presence

A new study from Pew Internet found that between April 2009 and May 2010, social networking site usage grew 88% among Internet users aged 55-64, and the 65 and older group’s social networking presence grew 100% in the same time frame.

Young people still dominate social networks like Facebook (Facebook), but their usage only grew 13% during the year covered by Pew’s report. Older adults are catching up at an incredibly quick pace, though it remains to be seen whether they will pass the youth or hit a ceiling at or below the usage levels reported by young adults and teens.

Older adults who use services like Twitter (Twitter) or Facebook are still in the minority amidst their peers. Pew reported about 10 months ago that 19% of all Internet (Internet) users use status updates, but only one in ten Internet users aged 50 and older used status updates or read ones written by others. That’s a lot more than there used to be, but it’s still a small group — especially when you consider the fact that Pew’s numbers only cover people who are on the Internet at all. Many people in that age group aren’t going online to begin with.

Five Best Text Recognition Tools

Bye, Bye FourSquare. Hello Facebook Places?

Comparing Geo-location Tools (Including Facebook Places)

ShareThis Starts Measuring Social Reach, Facebook And Twitter Account For Nearly Half

Google Launches Setup Guide for Small Businesses

In its latest move to appeal to small and medium-sized businesses, Google has launched an online guide to getting started with Google Places and Google Sites, both of which are free tools geared toward SMBs.

Google Sites is a hosted service for building out simple, template-based sites on Google’s cloud infrastructure. Business owners can choose from four templates: Restaurant or Cafe, Retail Shop or Boutique, Dentist or Doctor’s Office and Spa or Salon. Site content, color scheme and fonts are customizable, and of course Sites plays nice with other Google tools like Analytics, Webmaster Tools and AdSense.

The second opportunity Google gives small companies to showcase their business online is called Google Places (not to be confused with the recently launched Facebook feature). It enables companies to claim their business on Google Maps and provide basic information like address, contact information, store hours, accepted payment methods, photos and videos. It can also be used to upload menus, publish coupons and for a fee, enhance listings for greater visibility.

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