Welcome! wxexw - Wired by England by Weird - is the dumping ground for all things Will England - photos, videos, and audio of my family and dog, professional geekery, video and photo tips and my slightly tilted opinions. Enjoy your stay, subscribe to the RSS Feed with your favorite feed reader.
You can always contact me at wengland@gmail.com! - Will England
Thursday, October 29, 2015
Slate 8 - Great media device - Sprint Product Ambassadors
The Slate 8 isn't going to win any awards for fastest, most powerful or highest resolution tablet. But what it does have is a super clear IPS screen and enough horsepower to run Netflix, Amazon Prime Video or Google Play Movies. So what you have here is a fantastic kids or back seat media device. Or, in my case, a way to catch up on Top Gear during my lunch break! And bonus - it's basically free for existing subscribers and only few dollars a month for new customers!
Both LTE and WiFi playback kept up with the clean resolution on the tablet. I found no lag, stuttering or buffering problems watching full episodes or jumping from clip to clip on YouTube. I'm really impressed with the screen on this tablet - it's nicer than the Galaxy S2 tab I have. Brighter, clearer and wider angle of view.
Now all I need to do is find a stand or case for this to properly prop it up on my desk!
Disclaimer: The Product Ambassadors are Sprint employees from many different parts of the company that love technology. They volunteer to test out all sorts of Sprint devices and offer opinions freely to the Community. Each Product Ambassador shares their own opinions of these devices, therefore the information in this post does not necessarily reflect the opinions of Sprint. The PA's do not represent the company in an official way, and should not be expected to respond to Community members in an official capacity. #sprintemployee
Friday, October 23, 2015
Ad Blocking - it's the users way of saying enough is enough!
I've been running ad blocking software since, well, it first came out on Firefox. Then Chrome and now it's available on iOS handsets now. Why? This snippet from the Adobe Digital Marketing blog sums it up quite well for me:
Users are fed up with bad advertising experiences. Every install of an ad blocker is a statement against annoying ads, security risks, slow browsing, and ads’ consumption of computing resources. With ad blockers, users have taken back control of their browsing experience. Now, it’s up to publishers to adjust.Exactly. The ads are annoying - slow - and stop me from seeing the content I want to see. By using the ad blocker, I can see the content without the overlays, popups and junk. I want to support the publishers, but the content people and publishers are going to have to make some changes. Again, suggested changes from the Adobe Digital Marketing Blog:
How publishers can adjust
If bad ad experiences are causing users to flee to ad blocking, good ad experiences can help decelerate this trend. Here are nine ways to ensure a good ad experience:
- Make sure the ad load to content load is fair to the user.
- Match audio and video ad experiences to user expectations. In-stream ads can automatically play video since the users expects this. In contrast, in-banner ads shouldn’t automatically play audio or video because it interrupts an otherwise quiet browsing experience.
- Prevent ads from obstructing content.
- Screen ads for security risks.
- Optimize ads for speed.
- Optimize ads to consume the least amount of computing resources possible.
- Seek out deals with advertisers or intermediaries that have a vision for well-designed, useful ads.
- Ask users for feedback on your ad experiences. Look for insights in the feedback that can make the ad experience better.
- Apply the “does this work for me” test. Give your audience the experience that you would enjoy yourself.
Do you block ads when you are browsing the web? On your phone? What's been your experience as a consumer, and as a publisher of content?
Wednesday, October 21, 2015
What are the best jobs for work life balance?
Balancing your career and your home life seems simple when you're young - work all the time, play later! But as life and a family come along - or you realize you may want to do something more than your paying job - work life balance starts to become important.
Do you have a job with a good work-life balance? What make that important to you?
Glassdoor took their survey data and compiled a list of the top 25 job titles for work-life balance, along with their availabilty and salary data:
1. Data Scientist
Do you have a job with a good work-life balance? What make that important to you?
Glassdoor took their survey data and compiled a list of the top 25 job titles for work-life balance, along with their availabilty and salary data:
1. Data Scientist
- Work-Life Balance Rating: 4.2
- Salary: $114,808
- Number of Job Openings: 1,315
- Work-Life Balance Rating: 4.1
- Salary: $45,720
- Number of Job Openings: 338
- Work-Life Balance Rating: 4.0
- Salary: $63,504
- Number of Job Openings: 1,171
- Work-Life Balance Rating: 4.0
- Salary: $40,000
- Number of Job Openings: 661
- Work-Life Balance Rating: 3.9
- Salary: $24,380
- Number of Job Openings: 590
- Work-Life Balance Rating: 3.9
- Salary: $44,700
- Number of Job Openings: 446
- Work-Life Balance Rating: 3.9
- Salary: $91,440
- Number of Job Openings: 338
- Work-Life Balance Rating: 3.9
- Salary: $70,052
- Number of Job Openings: 640
- Work-Life Balance Rating: 3.8
- Salary: $32,512
- Number of Job Openings: 384
- Work-Life Balance Rating: 3.8
- Salary: $66,040
- Number of Job Openings: 2,117
- Work-Life Balance Rating: 3.8
- Salary: $69,088
- Number of Job Openings: 208
- Work-Life Balance Rating: 3.8
- Salary: $65,532
- Number of Job Openings: 809
- Work-Life Balance Rating: 3.8
- Salary: $71,120
- Number of Job Openings: 503
- Work-Life Balance Rating: 3.8
- Salary: $66,040
- Number of Job Openings: 782
- Work-Life Balance Rating: 3.8
- Salary: $60,000
- Number of Job Openings: 341
- Work-Life Balance Rating: 3.8
- Salary: $91,440
- Number of Job Openings: 457
- Work-Life Balance Rating: 3.8
- Salary: $53,848
- Number of Job Openings: 500
- Work-Life Balance Rating: 3.8
- Salary: $36,525
- Number of Job Openings: 299
- Work-Life Balance Rating: 3.7
- Salary: $71,120
- Number of Job Openings: 524
- Work-Life Balance Rating: 3.7
- Salary: $58,928
- Number of Job Openings: 1,954
- Work-Life Balance Rating: 3.7
- Salary: $60,960
- Number of Job Openings: 409
- Work-Life Balance Rating: 3.7
- Salary: $92,456
- Number of Job Openings: 652
- Work-Life Balance Rating: 3.7
- Salary: $27,550
- Number of Job Openings: 779
- Work-Life Balance Rating: 3.7
- Salary: $80,000
- Number of Job Openings: 3,330
- Work-Life Balance Rating: 3.7
- Salary: $75,000
- Number of Job Openings: 1337
Monday, October 05, 2015
Is iOS 9 Content Blocking Fragging Your Analytics?
Last month, Apple rolled out the ability to block certain web content via applications, like Ad Block. these don't just block the annoying advertisements, they also block important tracking metrics for your website and business. Two apps have made it into the top 100 of the App Store so far. So, what impact are they having on your mobile business?
I took a few minutes to check for my employer. I created a segment in Adobe Omniture for IOS devices running a Safari browser, then set up an Anomaly report on page views and Occurrences. Turning the dates back a bit to give the anomaly algorithm more to work from, this is what I found:
In a nutshell? Nothing. We'd be looking for traffic drops in iOS Safari after September 16th. What we saw that was out of the norm was traffic peaks for the iPhone pre-order and iPhone launch. Traffic is trending upward for mobile, expected for the fall device refresh season.
Adobe is reporting similar: "What is the impact of ad blocking apps across Adobe’s customer base? So far, it’s not measurable. [...] Adobe’s Digital Index team has access to traffic data across hundreds of sites, and they analyzed the Safari traffic trend over the last couple months. How much has Safari traffic dropped since the release of iOS 9? Nada. "
From a web metrics provider and analyst point of view, that's great news.
I took a few minutes to check for my employer. I created a segment in Adobe Omniture for IOS devices running a Safari browser, then set up an Anomaly report on page views and Occurrences. Turning the dates back a bit to give the anomaly algorithm more to work from, this is what I found:
In a nutshell? Nothing. We'd be looking for traffic drops in iOS Safari after September 16th. What we saw that was out of the norm was traffic peaks for the iPhone pre-order and iPhone launch. Traffic is trending upward for mobile, expected for the fall device refresh season.
Adobe is reporting similar: "What is the impact of ad blocking apps across Adobe’s customer base? So far, it’s not measurable. [...] Adobe’s Digital Index team has access to traffic data across hundreds of sites, and they analyzed the Safari traffic trend over the last couple months. How much has Safari traffic dropped since the release of iOS 9? Nada. "
From a web metrics provider and analyst point of view, that's great news.
Friday, October 02, 2015
One in Seven.
On Monday, August 27th, one in seven people in the world were using Facebook. At the same time. One billion simultaneous users.
Regardless of your personal feelings for Facebook, that's quite an accomplishment, both from the human connection point of view and from a technical perspective.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)