Roberto Marquez Attorney At Law
This video that we produced last December was just released on YouTube.
This video that we produced last December was just released on YouTube.
People always want more emersive experiences with greater mobility and less delay.
We were working on presentations over the weekend, and put together this one just for fun!
This is a short review and demo of the Libec LS-22 Tripod. You can find the tripod here: B&H
Robert Scoble spotted the Rush to video search keywords back in 11/27/07. We predicted the end on 10/26/08. Six months ago, the keywords we watch on Google had 2 or 3 thumbnailed videos on page one, now they have 0 or 1. In the last month, competitive keywords on YouTube have results that change daily as YouTube tweaks their algorithms. Authority seems to be determined first by Keywords, then by Views when an order of magnitude greater, and then by Ratings when extreme one star or five stars. So now it’s back to delivering value by creating videos that inform, entertain, amuse, or uplift, delivering value by communicating unique quality.
You know the Gold Rush is over when they start hanging the claim jumpers!
This morning I came across a great quote in Chris Anderson’s post The rise of “retail blogs” — Voice builds trust and trust sells stuff.
Here at microCHUNK.TV we have been looking for our voice for the last four years, and we think we have just about found it. Thanks for listening!
Misty and Madison have different views. This is for the Magical Veggie Challenge.
Two of our favorite Internet Marketers, Hugh MacLeod and Loren Felman have hooked up to do some work together. This should be good!
We had a few clips from a audio recording session, so just for fun we put them together!
We had a great time at the 2008 Mountain Mandarin Festival today. As we walked up to the entrance, a friendly lady offered us some free admission tickets. We walked past vendors booths sampling candy, nuts, jelly, and of course Mandarin oranges. Then we came to the highlight of the event — Traylor Ranch Mandarins. We saw a Mandarin booth with signs saying no pesticides, a good indicator. A man was standing in front of the booth, not hiding inside it, giving out whole Mandarins as samples, not just tiny slivers. We decided to buy a 10 lb. bag for $14, and pulled out a twenty. A woman in the booth asked if we had singles, we didn’t. The man out front said we could have two 10 lb. bags for twenty, we said yes. Magnificent Mandarin Marketing!