Quoted in Good Morning Silicon Valley

  • Quoted in Good Morning Silicon Valley – "Pixar completely understood that when you write your software hand-in-hand with the creative people writing the story, you are creating a revolutionary company." Amen.
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What is an ad impression

I’ve blogged previously about [various] [page-view] [Web] [visitor] [analytics] [visit] [terms] [pages-per-visit]. Almost all of those would be described as **audience** terms — they describe how people are viewing your site.

Let’s take a stab at some **revenue** terms, starting with:

**What’s an ad impression?**

It’s a measure of the number of times an ad is seen by a user. In that sense it’s almost like a [page view] [page-view], except it only refers to a portion of the page — where the ad is.

The number of impressions is important to several different sets of folks.

* The advertising sales folks need to know how many impressions are generally available on the site, so that they don’t over or under sell.

* The marketers buying ads on your site want to know how many impressions their particular ad, or set of ads, received. They’re likely paying for a set number of impressions and they want to make sure they weren’t undersold.

* The marketers also care about the impressions of a campaign of ads across a variety of sites because that’s a measure of, roughly, how much effect the ads should have on the marketplace. Just as page views are impression of a piece of content’s influence on the marketplace.

An page can contain multiple ads and thus serve multiple impressions per page view. Why would a site put multiple ad units on a page? It’s all about [CPM] [cpm], but we’ll tackle that one [another time] [cpm].

[page-view]: /blog/2008/11/13/what-is-a-page-view/ “What is a page view?”
[visitor]: /blog/2008/11/18/what-is-a-visitor/ “What is a visitor?”
[visit]: /blog/2008/11/19/what-is-a-visit/ “What is a visit?”
[pages-per-visit]: /blog/2008/11/20/what-are-pages-per-visit/ “What are pages-per-visit?”
[cpm]: http://heisel.org/blog/2008/11/30/what-does-cpm-mean/

Posted in Business, Journalism, Technology | 8 Comments

Yesterday’s turkey

Science is amazing. In my seriously novice hands I can take something seriously unappetizing like this:

Brining turkey

And turn it into this:

Roast turkey

The before photo is not of a [Dune navigator](http://dune.wikia.com/wiki/Guild_Navigator) but is instead our Thanksgiving day turkey breast in brine.

For the curious, our menu consisted of:

* [Roasted turkey] [alton-turkey]: But we altered the brine to be just sugar, salt, vegetable broth, peppercorns and water to dilute.

* [Mashed potatos] [alton-potatos]: Substitute sage instead of garlic, OMG teh awesome.

* Sweet potatos: Marshmallow topped is a Heisel family tradition

* Brussel sprouts: Birds Eye baby sprouts in a microwaveable pouch, I didn’t think I’d eat brussel sprouts till I met these

* Cranberry sauce: Homemade

* Crescent rolls: An Endicott family tradition

* Pecan pie: Homemade as well

[alton-turkey]: http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/alton-brown/good-eats-roast-turkey-recipe/index.html
[alton-potatos]: http://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/alton-brown/creamy-garlic-mashed-potatoes-recipe/index.html

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Giving thanks

For a wonderful [partner](http://ericaendicott.com) in life,

For the new space we call home,

For the good health of my family,

For the safety of my brother-in-law,

For my challenging yet rewarding career,

For the talented group I get to work with on a daily basis,

For all the years I’ve had on this Earth, and the years yet to come,

For all that and more, I give thanks.

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Feed flood: under control in NetNewsWire

I’m a huge RSS addict. If something isn’t available as RSS, then I’m likely not reading it, certainly not when I sit down with [The Sunday Internet] [sunday-internet].

But my time to sit down with [NetNewsWire] [nnw] is limited during the week, especially if we’re in the middle of big projects.

There’s nothing more disheartening than returning to your feed reader to find unread post counts in the triple digits for a single feed.

But, I found a nice gem in [NetNewsWire] [nnw] that helps keep that under control for feeds that are frequently updated.

* Control-click on the feed in question
* Select show info
* Click on the twister next to **Persistence**
* Click the checkbox **Use custom persistence setting**
* Click the radio button next to **For at least** and enter the number of days worth of back posts you’d like to retain.
* Feed flood problem taken care of!

Picture 1.png

[nnw]: http://www.newsgator.com/INDIVIDUALS/NETNEWSWIRE/
[sunday-internet]: /blog/2008/11/10/the-sunday-internet/

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