Friday, 24 February 2012

Hide Friends on Facebook Chat Trick By SagarGanatra

B4 Planning Mobile App Development tips by Sagar Ganatra



Here are 10 things to consider before developing your app.

1. Agree on goals for the program.


When developing a digital solution strategy, first examine your organization’s goals for the program. Are you looking to be seen as innovator, or fend off competition by showing progress in the space? Simply showing initial momentum and previewing the future roadmap can often place you ahead of the competition. Should your digital solutions help build customer loyalty and enable greater customer self-service, or is your highest priority to create new revenue streams? Once you’ve agreed on the goals, prioritize them so you’ll know where to start.

2. Understand your target users.


The next step is to understand who your target users are, their goals and requirements, and the technologies they use. This process includes researching the platforms your users are most likely utilizing, then gaining an understanding of each user experience. Every device is different, and every user has multiple needs. For example, a person might typically use an online banking application to pay a bill, but he might use the bank’s mobile application to find the closest ATM.

3. Build a user testing focus group.


Spending time with your target users is the only way to ensure you really understand what they are looking for in a mobile application. As you move through the process of discovery, you can discuss ideas with this group on a daily basis. Focus groups can provide value from the far beyond the initial discovery phase.

4. Identify a minimally viable solution set.


Don’t try to tackle the whole problem at once. Instead, companies should identify a minimally viable solution and start there. In other words, release a basic but functional app as a foundation, then take advantage of the efficient upgrade paths most devices offer to provide regular updates. This enables you to enter the market more quickly and refine as needed. Plus, periodically giving your users access to new developments ensures your organization stays top-of-mind.

5. Plan for multiple releases.



With mobile applications, releasing the initial version is only the beginning. Statistics show that many users will re-engage with your application when new features are added. Spread key functionality across the first handful of releases to keep your users engaged. Be careful not to release too often, lest users feel bombarded. In many cases, a 2-3 month window between major releases will keep your users engaged over a longer period of time.

6. Balance your users and your business.


Balancing business drivers with real user needs can be difficult. In many cases, the two are at odds with one another. Therefore, arm yourself with the right information to make smart tradeoffs. Collect research such as user studies, expert opinions, and business viability and technical feasibility studies. This body of data can then be weighed to achieve the best balance between user-centric solutions and business-value gains.

7. Know what is out there.


Spend time exploring apps in each of the platforms you plan to support. Each platform offers different interface paradigms and a different collection of applications. Experimenting with the most popular applications will help you understand not only what is possible on the platform, but also the user’s expectations. If possible, use a different mobile platform device during the exploration process.

8. Bring your IT team into the discussions early.


The far greater technical challenge is tying your backend business processes to a digital solution that encompasses smartphones and kiosks, for example. The technology infrastructure for a multichannel solution goes well beyond the platform you choose for front-end development. In order to be successful, companies must consider how to architect data delivery and API management as well as security, scalability, content aggregation, device optimization, API translation, etc. Bring your IT team into the discussion before you get too far down the planning path.

9. Decide on a technology you can live (and grow) with.


As the mobile space matures, there will be many more application develop choices. In many cases, your goals will help determine what you choose here. For example, if your goal is to reach as many users as possible across all platforms, you may choose an HTML framework with little hardware integration. If your goal is to provide deep hardware integration for augmented reality technology, then you’ll probably develop a native application. Decisions around technology can directly affect your app’s functionality.

10. Plan to analyze.


The final step in the process is determining how to measure success. With a morass of potential features, devices, platforms and technologies, success can be challenging to define, but it will affect your ultimate strategy. Consider the following questions.
  • Will this increase our transaction volume and, therefore, revenue?
  • Will this increase customer adoption and retention?
  • Will this increase our brand recognition and loyalty?
  • Will this decrease our costs?
  • How many people do we want using our app?
  • How do we want to integrate the solution with our social media program?
  • How will we integrate with our existing analytics tools?

Wordpress Theme Installation by SagarGanatra

Wordpress Theme Installation


This is a quick guide to help you install wordpress themes downloaded from Extremebrain
The hardest part of this process will be choosing of our themes as the theme installation is quite simple. The theme installation can be achieve in 7 steps as this guide instructs.

Step 1

First and foremost you will have to choose and download one of the themes available.Download zip file of wordpress theme

Image 1

Step 2

Once you have downloaded your preferred theme the next step is to login into your wordpress dashboard and click in the themes link as illustrated in image 2.

Image 2 Step2

Step 3

If you following along nicely in this step you will have to click in "INSTALL THEMES", the big tab at the top, check image 3.

Image 3 Step3

Step 4

We are almost there, now you will have to click in the "upload" link as marked in image 4. There are other options if you would like search for other themes in wordpress repository but for now is not what we want.

Image 4 Step4

Step5

Well this step is as simple as to browse and upload the theme downloaded in step 1. Please refer to image 5.

Image 5 Step5

Step 6

The moment of glory has arrived and you simply need to click the "Install Now" button as image 6 demonstrates.

Image 6 Step6

Step 7

If you made this far congratulations you have a modern and fashion theme installed in you wordpress blog. Go ahead and preview or activate the theme.

Image 7 Step7

Thursday, 23 February 2012

LinkedIn’s Mobile Site tips by SagarGanatra

linkedin image 


Have you checked out LinkedIn‘s mobile site yet? No, not the mobile app — the in-browser mobile site. It’s very powerful and very useful for connecting with LinkedIn’s 135 million users. After all, mobile page views account for over 11% of total visits to the social network for the professionally-minded.
LinkedIn released the updated mobile site (along with iPhone and Android apps) last summer. Mobile usage of LinkedIn has been growing quickly.
“We are seeing mobile grow at a very rapid pace, as high as 400 percent a year,” Joff Redfern, mobile product director at LinkedIn told The New York Times in August of last year.
Want to know more? Check out these five tips for using the mobile site.

1. Share Useful Links and Information


Did you just read an interesting article on your mobile device and you think that it’s something your LinkedIn contacts should see right away? That’s easily done with LinkedIn’s mobile site. The upper right-hand corner of the site has a speech bubble. Tap that, and you’re redirected to the update screen.
You can share a text update or drop in a link to content you’d like your contacts to see. Then, you can toggle whether or not that update will be sent out as a Twitter message as well. Finally, you have control of which of your contacts can see the update. That’s good, because you might want to send an update to your co-workers and not your entire network.

2. Get Updates



When you open LinkedIn’s mobile site, you’re greeted with a scrollable list of your connections’ updates. The menu is easy to navigate. Upon clicking a shared article, you’re presented with a quick synopsis of that article instead of being launched to the article itself. You can also use the synopsis page to load the profile of the person who shared it.
That smart design saves precious mobile bandwidth (and money, for those not on an unlimited data plan). If you decide the article is worth loading, you can then decide to launch it in a new browser window. When you’re done enjoying the article, remember to share it!

3. Connect With a New Acquaintance



Swapping business cards is so passé. With LinkedIn’s mobile site, all you have to do is pop in a person’s name. If they’re on the service, there’s a profile chock-full of their employment and education information.
The mobile site takes users’ full-page profiles and compresses them into easy-to-read miniaturized versions. There’s no feeling of profiles being stuffed or crammed into place — it’s almost like profiles were designed with mobile browsers in mind.

4. Spend Time With Your Groups


Even your LinkedIn groups are easily accessible on the mobile site. Want to follow the discussion on your favorite groups while you’re on the go? That’s easy.
After clicking the LinkedIn logo on the top-left of the screen, then “more.” Boom, there are your groups. Discussions are easily read, and adding your own comment is next to effortless. LinkedIn’s mobile site makes it easy to keep up with your professional organizations and societies.

5. Get Invited


Do you find yourself getting overloaded with invitations to connect every time you load LinkedIn? With LinkedIn’s mobile site, you can manage those invitations on the go.
The site’s interface makes it easy to see how many invitations you’ve got and learn more about who sent them to you. Just tap the LinkedIn logo, then the “inbox.” If you’ve got new invites, a notification will appear that lets you know how many new messages are in your queue.

Going Mobile


LinkedIn’s mobile site is found at http://touch.www.linkedin.com. Point your smartphone’s browser over there and dive right in. Do you think that LinkedIn’s mobile website helps with sharing? Let us know in the comments.

Wednesday, 22 February 2012

Free Android Apps 4 Every Day by SagarGanatra

You can start every morning with this alarm clock app. If waking up is tough for you, this app lets you set several alarms, each with its own ring tone.
Are you the type that sub-consciously turns your alarm off in your sleep? There's a math feature that makes you solve a simple equation to dismiss it. This way, you know when it's really time to get out of bed.

tax calculation apps for Android and Symbian

Think Tax - Android
The app looks good and is easy to use too. It can calculate tax based on your income or you can create an account, which is a simple step and gets detailed calculations done.

You can key in the details, like break-up of your salary, your savings, and investments, and the app will tell you how much tax you need to pay.

The Think Tax app allows you to save the results, mail them to someone or share them with others.
MyTaxIndia - Android

"My Tax India" instantly calculates your tax, tax splits, and can decide how much more investment is needed to save a given amount from your income.

"My Tax India" also comes with added features like the ability to export your details (to mail accounts); and enable multiple user entries etc.

The graphics of the app make it interesting to use and also easy to understand.

You can see nice graphs of where your savings are, how much you've saved and many other details.
Tax Guide With 10 Calculators - Android
While all the other apps in this list are for amateurs, this app is meant for professionals like chartered accountants, cost accountants, lawyers and tax practitioners. If you are none of the above mentioned professionals and are well versed with taxation, you too can use this app.

These professionals have to deal with various tax computations on a day to day basis. They also need to search for case decisions of various tribunals, High Courts and of the Supreme Court of India. Apart from that they need to keep themselves abreast of news in the taxation field.

This Android application is a very easy tool in the palm of finance professionals. They will not only be able to calculate tax deductions and exemptions under the Income Tax Act, but can also search for CBDT (Central Board of Direct Taxes) circulars, instructions and various case laws.

Users can compute tax on total income for the financial year 2011-12, tax deduction at source, house rent allowance exemption, rent free accommodation perquisite, exemption in case of gratuity receipt, leave salary exempt amount etc.
Income Tax Calculator - Symbian

This app provides a step by step guide to calculate tax. You can feed in your personal data and various sources of income at the home screen. After that the app will take you to the deductions screen.

The next step will display an exhaustive list of deductions. Once the above mentioned data is fed into the app, a screen will appear with details of basic exemption, tax payable under each section, education cess and the total tax payable.
Tax News and Views Widget - Symbian

Tuesday, 21 February 2012

SEO Exam answers by SagarGanatra

When I wrote these exam questions, I have to admit, I didn’t think about publishing the answers. It seemed kind of… wrong. But then I thought about the havoc wreaked if all kids had the teachers’ answer keys (obscure Simpsons reference there). And I smiled in a way that makes my family nervous.
So, the answers:

1. True or false or both: The ‘nofollow’ attribute is good for SEO.

Yeaaahhhh so about this one. I did a lousy job with the question, and about 30 people simultaneously pointed that out. The question should have read:
True or false: The ‘nofollow’ attribute is good for pagerank sculpting.
Then the answer is false, per Matt Cutts. ‘Nofollow’ is actually good if you’re using it to prevent penalties relating to link selling.
This is why I’m not a professor, OK?

2: When are drop down menus bad for SEO?

The answer is
c. If they cause unnecessary PageRank ‘leaks’.
And now, you’re saying “Ian, wtf?! When is a PageRank leak necessary? And who cares about PageRank anyway?!”
PageRank does still matter, even if the math behind it is now a total mystery. Somehow, every page on the web holds its own authority. Links allow that authority to drain away to other pages. Put a ton of links on the page and you reduce the amount of authority passed by each link. That means the page can no longer effectively pass authority where you want it to go. That’s bad.
The leakiest part of any page is often the drop-down menu. Somehow, drop-downs have become the place where everyone compromises: No, we won’t put the link in the drop-down. OK! OK! Stop whining! We’ll put it in the drop-down! Now leave me alone!
And you get stuff like this:
stupid drop down
Drop downs don't kill people. Stupid people creating bad drop downs kill people.
Impossible to understand, and a PageRank sieve.

3: How many times should you repeat a key phrase on a page?

The correct answer is
a. Come off it, Ian, there’s no right answer to that.
You should use a word or phrase precisely as many times as you need to. No more. No less.
Just keep in mind that search engines have a much easier time classifying you as a puppy web site if you actually use the word ‘puppy’ somewhere.

4: What’s the most important on-page SEO element?

The answer is b: The TITLE tag. No argument. No discussion.

5: What’s the best choice for a server response code if a page doesn’t exist?

As @pageoneresults correctly pointed out, the right answer wasn’t actually in there. Given what I put in the choices, the right answer is ‘b. 404′.
But a ’410′ response code is even better, as it results in faster removal from the index.

6: What’s the correct way to redirect…

…visiting browsers and bots from a page that is permanently gone to a replacement page?
‘a. 301′ is the correct answer. No ifs, ands or buts.

7: Under Google’s Panda update:

The right answer is:
A site with 10 great pages and 1,000 lousy ones is in trouble.
Although the bamboo thing might be worth a try.
bamboo
Herrreeee panda panda panda...

8: TRUE OR FALSE: Site performance can impact search rankings on Google and Bing.

True. A slow site reduces crawl efficiency and may have a rough time getting indexed. But also, there’s strong evidence that site performance is a ‘quality’ factor, which means it goes straight to Panda. Roar.

9: Pick the most important SEO performance indicator for an e-commerce site:

Duh. ‘b. Sales from organic search.’ gets you an A+ on this one. All businesses do much better when they’re actually making money. Listen to Mitt Romney &emdash; he repeats that every 30 seconds or so.

10: Pick the most important SEO performance indicator for a lead generation site

I didn’t even change the letter of the correct answer. It’s ‘b. Leads from organic search.’ Same letter as #9.

11: What are the first 3 things you check when doing an SEO audit?

Annoying, I know. There are no right answers to this one. On the bright side, there aren’t many wrong answers, either, unless you start writing stuff like “The keywords meta tag,” in which case I might slap you. Things like ‘duplicate content’, ‘broken links’, ‘canonicalization’, ‘title tag use’ and ‘graceful degradation’ are all good answers, though.

12: List five things that impact a site’s authority.

I wasn’t sure I could list 5 things when I started, but as it turns out, I can: Linking domains, quality of linking domains, relevance of linking domains, social media citation, canonicalization, redirect usage, link velocity, citation velocity…
You get the idea.

13: You got something totally wrong. What do you do?

NO FAIR IAN. You’re asking ethics questions now!!!
Tough shitskies, as my cycling coach used to say.
The best answer here was ‘b. Find the solution, then tell your manager what happened and how you’re fixing it.’ Ideally, it’d be up to you and the manager to talk to the client at that point. But if someone went with ‘c,’ I wouldn’t be horrified. ‘d’ is only OK if you’re me.

14: A client’s confused as heck after 3 emails. What do you do?

Please, for the love of all that’s holy, tell me you picked ‘a. Call them on the phone’.

15: What’s a fast way to add links…

… to a web site’s link profile that won’t violate the Google and Bing Terms of Service?
Answer a, ‘Buy links’, violates the hell out of both engines’ terms of service. Answer b is good, but a content campaign takes time. Answer c, ‘Fix broken incoming links’ is your best bet.

16: Define canonicalization

If you reference saints and Christianity, you blew it. See my article on canonicalization on Search Engine Land.

17: Describe blended search

It has nothing to do with a Cuisinart. ‘Blended’ search describes mixing images, videos, product results, local search and whatever else Google or Bing think might keep you around another .05 seconds into the traditional organic results.
I wrote a whole series of articles about this back when it was called Universal Search.

18: A client is panicked…

…They’ve just fallen out of the rankings for the phrase “foo bar”. That was their top traffic generator. They want to shut down all onsite content and technical SEO and focus 100% on links. What do you tell them?
No perfect answer here. But “HAHAHAHAHAH YOU ARE SO SCREWED” is not acceptable. Something involving sympathy and a game plan would really be better.

19: Tell me what you think PageRank is

This is more about me seeing how my team thinks than getting the ‘right’ description of PageRank. Although, if someone said “That little number in my Google Toolbar” I might get a little worried.

20: What’s a ‘headless browser’?

Man, I got some funny answers (many unprintable) for this. You guys are seriously twisted.
A ‘headless browser’ is, as Michael King put it, a web browser with no user interface. He wrote a great article about the whole topic here.
It’s relevant to SEO because there’s strong evidence Google uses a headless browser to render page layouts, thereby figuring out when you’re being all sneaky, using jQuery to hide all that ugly content in tabs and stuff.

21: What’s a reverse an inverted index?

Also called an inverted index, a reverse index lets you efficiently store a keyword index of a document, by storing each word or phrase once, and then storing the numeric locations of that phrase. It’s cool. Really. I’m serious.
Although, once again, I screwed up. Technically a reverse index is another optimization technique, where you actually reverse the key for a piece of data. I won’t even try to explain that, because it makes my frontal lobe hurt. In future versions I’ll just make this question “What is an inverted index?”
I truly do suck at this. I could write standardized tests for school systems.

22: To you, the One Ring is:

Well, duh. The answer is A. Sauron’s jewelry. Read The Lord of the Rings if you didn’t know that, K? All Portent employees must know The Lord of the Rings, Doctor Who trivia or at least a bit about Star Trek.
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