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Can't Believe it - Another Host Is Down

This time it looks like HostGator is down. I have many major sites on HG and none of them have been working for the last couple of hours.

Anybody else notice this?

More High PR Links

I constantly get asked how to get links from high PR sites. There are somewhat conflicting views on how important the Page Rank of the sites linking to you are, but I don't think there is any question that higher Page Rank sites get crawled more often, and they are considered more "authoritative" than those with little or no Page Rank.

Both of these factors should make it worth the effort to try to get your content on high PR sites. But the question is "How"?

One very useful approach is to leave comments or feedbak on interactive sites such as blogs or social networking sites. These links will usually be in the form of comments left in response to posts, stories, videos, etc.

Unless you are happy just leaving meaningless spam comments, leaving legitimate (or even semi-legitimate) comments on blogs takes time and effort. You have to actually go to the blog, read the posts, do a little bit of thinking, and then write a comment.

I don't know what the average time would be for doing this, but I'm pretty sure if you were to try to create an efficient "system" for commenting, it would be difficult to get the process down to less than 5 minutes per comment.

Yes, I know there is software that will find blogs, isolate posts according to keywords, and then let you create comments right from within the software shell. I've looked at this sort of thing and have not been convinced it would make the actual commenting time shorter.

The three most important criteria (from the "link value" perspective) for taking the time to create comments (either manually or semi-automatically) are:

1. The "authority" of the blog (measured in Page Rank)
2. The "relevance" of the blog to your own niche, and
3. The "do follow" or "no follow" status of comment links

I have already briefly commented on the "authority" question. I know that PR is not the be all and end all when it comes to ranking in the SERPs (results pages), but it does indicate potential link value, at least in my experience.

From the perspective of link value "relevance" is probably not as important as most people think. See my previous link relevancy post for more on this. But from the "I-actually-know-what-I'm-talking-about" point of view it makes quite a bit of difference. If you're taking the time to read the posts you're commenting on, you might as well read something you're interested in and are likely to learn something from. You will also be able to create comments more quickly because you'll have something intelligent to say.

On the "do follow" question, you have to know a bit of history to understand the significance of this. A couple years ago Google tried to clamp down on comment spam by encouraging bloggers to add the "no follow" tag to links embedded in comments. The "no follow" tag tells the Google bot not to follow these links - making them much less desirable from the link juice point of view.

Many bloggers obediently fell into line because they were intimidated by Google threats. But some resisted either silently or openly and left their comment links intact. These are usually referred to as "Do Follow" blogs.

If you can find a "Do Follow" blog that still has Page Rank, leaving comments on sites like that is generally considered worth the effort.

If you'd like to take a stab at building links this way, check out "How to Get a Free PR10 link". This will take you to a free report from Angela Edwards. Angela also has a subscription service where she sends you 30 new high PR blogs every month where you can get "do follow" links.

Free PR10 Backlink - Get Yours

We do links at Linknet, so we're always on the lookout for ways to get quality backlinks. Here is a report by Angela Edwards detailing exactly how you can get a backlink on a PR10 site.

This is not BS. It's free, so definitely worth the little bit of effort. Angela will send you other sources of high PR links too.

Go to FREE PR10 LINK

Review-of-the-week.com features Product Feature Pages — pages dedicated to descriptions or reviews of  products or websites.  Product Feature pages can include photos and graphics (as long as these are readily available), and can have links pointing back to your (single) site.  Product Feature Pages are linked from at least 5 blogs, a number of  high traffic article and announcement sites.

IBM to use Cell Chip in Blade Server
Feb 9, 2006 - Linknet Tech News

IBM to use Cell Chip in Blade Server

IBM to use Cell Chip in Blade Server

Feb 9, 2006 - Linknet Tech News

IBM recently announced that it would start building "blade" servers that make use of its highly touted microprocessor called the "Cell" chip. The chip was designed with partners Sony and Toshiba. It is so far only slated to be used in Sony's PlayStation 3 and high-definition TVs from Sony and Toshiba.

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Last month, IBM, Sony and Toshiba extended their partnership arrangement for another five years.

The announcement that IBM would incorporate the Cell chip into a new line of servers is meant to diversify the applications where it is used, and spur others to consider using it. The new servers will be primarily for defense, medical imagery and entertainment applications where high end graphics are required.

Main competitors in this field are graphic chipmakers ATI Technologies, Nvidia and semiconductor giant Intel. Microsoft's Xbox 360 and Nintendo's GameCube game consoles use ATI chips. ATI also supplies chips required by increasingly popular digital and high-definition TVs.

But IBM wants the Cell chip to reach a broader market segment. "Blade" servers, made by IBM, are relatively thin units that are specifically designed for specialized computing tasks. IBM sees them being used in a wide range of settings, including military vehicles.

The chip has been promoted as a "super computer on a chip" because of its special capabilities. It includes an IBM Power processor at its core, with eight additional processors helping it along.

For the chip to gain wider acceptance, IBM needs to convince outside programmers to write software that takes advantage of Cell's special capabilities. But that may be difficult since Cell's architecture is so different from other chips.

One specific problem with Cell is a common one -- it generates a lot of heat. This makes it unlikely that the current version will make it into mobile devices.

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