Posts about Mashable as of July 19, 2009
07/19/2009
AllTop URL: http://alltop.com/ A lltop is the “online magazine rack” of the web. The stories are updated every hour. Pick a topic by searching, news category, or name, and AllTop will deliver it to you 24 x 7. Their motto is: “aggregation without aggravation.” To be clear, Alltop pages are starting points—they are not destinations per se. Ultimately, Alltop’s goal is to enhance your online reading by displaying stories from sources that you’re already visiting plus helping you discover sources that you didn’t know existed.
07/19/2009
Sunday, July 19th, 2009 by Steven 0 Add a CommentForty years ago, on July 20th, 1969, Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong became the first human beings to set foot on the moon. The Apollo Program, though, was a decade-long project involving millions of dollars, thousands of scientists, and constant competition with the Soviet Union. The result was one of mankind’s most remarkable achievements.We felt compelled to find some way to pay tribute to the 40th anniversary of when man first stepped on the moon.
07/19/2009
Mashable has put together a great collection of 12 YouTube videos chronicling the timeline from JFK’s challenge in May 1961 that man visit the moon, to the ultimate landing of the Apollo Lunar Module on the moon 40 years ago, on July 20, 1969. Here’s one of the videos, click here to see the rest via Mashable.
07/19/2009
Mobile Presence Smarter for Business than You Think – lottspace.com 07/19/2009 By Chris LottPublished:July 19, 2009Posted in: Featured, Geek Speak Hello there! If you are new here, you might want to subscribe to the RSS feed for updates on this topic.Powered by WP Greet BoxI recently investigated Foursquare, Google Latitude, Zhiing, Yowza, UberTwitter, and others.
07/19/2009
Forty years ago, on July 20th, 1969, Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong became the first human beings to set foot on the moon. The Apollo Program, though, was a decade-long project involving millions of dollars, thousands of scientists, and constant competition with the Soviet Union. The result was one of mankind’s most… Read the whole story here: Apollo 11 Moon Landing: A YouTube Timeline Related posts: HOW TO: Experience the Apollo 11 Moon Landing in Realtime Did you know that in just 8 days, it…
07/19/2009
Forty years ago, on July 20th, 1969, Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong became the first human beings to set foot on the moon. The Apollo Program, though, was a decade-long project involving millions of dollars, thousands of scientists, and constant competition with the Soviet Union. The result was one of mankind’s most remarkable achievements.
07/19/2009
Forty years ago, on July 20th, 1969, Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong became the first human beings to set foot on the moon. The Apollo Program, though, was a decade-long project involving millions of dollars, thousands of scientists, and constant competition with the Soviet Union. The result was one of mankind’s most remarkable achievements. We felt compelled to find some way to pay tribute to the 40th anniversary of when man first stepped on the moon.
07/19/2009
Sunday, July 19th, 2009 by Steven 0 Add a CommentThe social news site Digg found itself criticized earlier this year after the release of the DiggBar and Digg short URLs, which some said “stole” traffic and pagerank from publisher sites to increase Digg’s pageviews. Now Digg faces a new accusation: that it has, either accidentally or on purpose, changed the behavior of these URLs to send logged-out users to Digg.com in preference to the publisher sites.
07/19/2009
The social news site Digg found itself criticized earlier this year after the release of the DiggBar and Digg short URLs, which some said “stole” traffic and pagerank from publisher sites to increase Digg’s pageviews. Now Digg faces a new accusation: that it has, either accidentally or on purpose, changed the behavior of these URLs to send logged-out users to Digg.com in preference to the publisher sites . See the rest here: Digg Accused of Twitter Traffic Bait and Switch
07/19/2009
The social news site Digg found itself criticized earlier this year after the release of the DiggBar and Digg short URLs, which some said “stole” traffic and pagerank from publisher sites to increase Digg’s pageviews. Now Digg faces a new accusation: that it has, either accidentally or on purpose, changed the behavior of these URLs to send logged-out users to Digg.com in preference to the publisher sites . We were able to verify that Digg is indeed redirecting Digg URLs to its own site.



