Monthly Archives: August 2008

Tools I use: Zemanta

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Zemanta is a Firefox extension that works with your blogging platform to make suggestions for your blog posts. I use it with WordPress, and it works really well.

Here is what I like about Zemanta:

Zemanta integrates right into the WordPress blogging page, so all the new features are right there on the same page where I’m writing my post. That makes it very easy to use.

Link suggestions: Zemanta will search for relevant words or phrases in your post and suggest links for them. This is handy if you like to link to Wikipedia and Amazon a lot, which I do. It also finds home page links for organizations and people. However, Zemanta is limited in the sites it suggests links for — this feature shouldn’t substitute for you searching out and including relevant links in your blog post.

Tag suggestions: Zemanta suggests relevant search engine-friendly tags based on the content of your post. I usually end up using half or more of the suggestions. I generally have a few tags I add myself, though. Again, the software can’t replace the writer.

Photo suggestions: Zemanta suggests photos that may be relevant to your post. These suggestions are hit-and-miss. Sometimes I like the randomness, like when I am writing for my personal journal. Often, I don’t find a relevant photo, although with book covers and people, the suggestions work fairly well.

You should always check the license of a photo before you use it. You can get details about a photo by moving your mouse over it. Some photo suggestions are not freely licensed, and some are licensed for noncommercial use only. Respect copyright — don’t use a photo if you’re not sure whether you’re allowed to.

Article suggestions: This feature is the one I use least because I don’t usually find anything relevant in the suggestions. Probably that’s because I’m writing about topics that the rest of the blogosphere doesn’t care about. But I have noticed that the more articles I write using Zemanta, the more my titles are appearing in the article suggestions. That’s nice, because it might lead to more links to my content.

Zemanta does include a “Reblog” icon at the bottom of the post, which you may or may not like. This allows someone else to quote from your post and link to it when they are reading it. I like this feature for most of my blogs, because again, it increases the likelihood that someone will link to me. However, you can remove the icon if you want, which I have done in the posts I write for my company blogs.

Zemanta does slightly slow down the posting experience. That hasn’t bothered me too much. But if you don’t want your posts to become part of the Zemanta “network” of recommended articles, you probably shouldn’t use it.

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Helping others find value in social networks

Like many nonprofits, we are tentatively playing with social networks and other Web 2.0 tools.

Those of us who are comfortable with technology tend to dive right in to new tools like social networks, play around and learn as we go. We see possibilities, become enthusiastic and want to bring what we’ve learned to our “real-life” networks, whether that’s our family or where we work or some other group we belong to.

But the problem is that not everyone is so comfortable with using these technologies or learning them as they go. They need to understand the value before they begin, and that can be very difficult to communicate if you haven’t experienced it. In the nonprofit where I work, for years I heard about how much more effective we would be if everyone could communicate easily across offices dispersed worldwide, tap into one another’s expertise and learn from one another’s experiences. Of course, I saw how technology could help make this happen. But getting people to use the technology effectively was a challenge I did not foresee.

The Bamboo Project has an article on this subject, which I found helpful, especially the comments.

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    Just be happy already

    Sean smiling.

    Sean smiling.

    Life is change. And life with a baby is extreme change.

    People tell you it will be different. There is no way to communicate just how different it is. It has to be experienced.

    Like learning how to do everything with one hand because you’re always holding the baby. Or realizing that your curfew is now the baby’s bedtime. And that you are never going to get to sleep in again. And that as the baby’s source of food, you cannot be apart for more than a few hours. And then there’s the overwhelming realization that you are completely responsible for the physical and mental well being of another human being.

    I intend to start practicing happiness because it is all too easy in this kind of situation to succumb to stress and irritability. I have read about this method of tricking yourself into being happy before, but this article from The Huffington Post pretty much sums it up.

    It’s all too easy to have a mantra like: “I’ll be happier when…” Such as, “I’ll be happier when the baby weans,” or “Things will be better when the baby can walk.” Substitute your own wishes and desires. “I’ll be happier when I get that promotion or that new job or get married or get my degree or have a child.”

    The thing is, you’re living your life right now. So why not be happy right now?* What are you waiting for?

    Every day will bring something new to be upset about. The baby won’t nap. A diaper will end up in the dryer. Nothing will come off the to-do list. Something will blow up at work. The spouse will have to go away on an unexpected business trip.

    This is life. Life is happening. So instead of waiting for that magical thing to happen that’s going to fix everything, just be happy now.

    *I realize this advice does not apply to those living with clinical depression.

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