How to filter your google plus stream and how to detect if someone is filtering you're stream.

Google Plus users may not be seeing what IC or what I am now considering to be the new spam that is being projected as posts.
You may be asking yourself at this point what spam?  But it's there and it's right in front of your face what I am referring to is shared posts.
Look in your Google+ Stream, you may have seen them without giving it another thought.
Just recently I've been noticing posts from Internet showboats like Robert Scoble and Chris Pirillo and an even Tom Anderson spamming mine and is invading your Google Plus Stream.  I have found myself, commenting on their post just as hundreds have been doing since the Google Plus launched.  But it's not so much mine or us the commenter's fault.  It's the offending posters that are to blame not to mention the fact everyone commenting to those posts are responding to spam.  So here's what's happening and guide you can fix it so you will never received another spam from these intruders because who wants to see this type of thing happening on Google+ anyway. 
 To get rid of spammers go to their Google Plus page and you will see a link to the bottom left corner, see the block User Name.
This is the message you will see if someone has
Blocked you from commenting on their Google+ posts.
Click the block this user.  The dialog reads "What happens if you block User Name, you will no longer receive this persons content in your stream".

  • This person won't be able to comment on your content.
  • This person will be removed from your circles.
  • This person will still be able to see your posts.

Username won't receive an e-mail about these changes you can always unblocked this person later.

This will stop the offending Google Plus intruder from spamming you in the future.  Note: I'm not saying block everyone just block the worst offenders.





     Knowing who is blocking you should be a no brainer. When you have become a usual commenter on one of those spammers posts and let's say they didn't much enjoy the fact you commented something about them; usually a block will come some sort of negative feedback.  Try commenting on one of their posts and use the plus user name +User Name to grab their attention, if google plus gives you an error message "there was a problem updating your comment please try again".  You will know who is blocking you but still want you as their are audience or drone.

Keeping your google about you and what interests you should be your main priority and not some jack Ross way of manipulating you into becoming another one of those drones.  Stay in touch with people in your Circles and create an actual following by creating your own interesting topics, this should be your number #1 goal when using YOUR Google Plus.
And remember to keep things flowing in your stream by sharing interests and helpful information let's keep your Google Plus on the right track.

http://gplus.to/vote

Google+ Approaches 18 Million Users [REPORT]


Google+ continues to set records as the fastest-growing social network in history, but Google’s social juggernaut is beginning to show signs that it’s losing steam.
Ancestry.com co-founder Paul Allen (not to be confused with the Microsoft co-founder of the same name) posted his most recent analysis of Google+’s growth on his Google+ account Tuesday. According to his analysis, the search giant’s Facebook competitor will likely reach 18 million users by the end of Tuesday, but its growth rate has dropped by 50% from its peak.

“Last week we saw two days where more than 2 million signed up in a single day,” Allen said in his post. “If that rate had continued, Google+ would have reached 20 million users by last Sunday night. But the last four days have averaged only 948,000 new users, and yesterday the site added only 763,000. Yesterday’s growth of 4.47% was the slowest viral growth since Google op
ened up invites back on July 6.”

SEE ALSO: GOOGLE+: THE COMPLETE GUIDE | VIDEOS | REVIEW

Why is Google+’s growth slowing down? Google Trends indicates that the buzz around Google+ has died down some, which is natural for any major news item. Allen makes the important point that Google+ hasn’t been promoted by any of its other properties and that the social network is still invite-only. Once Google+ is promoted on YouTube or on Google.com, its growth may simply skyrocket.
Allen estimated that Google+ hit the 10 million user mark sometime on June 12 or 13. Google CEO Larry Page confirmed that Google+ had more than 10 million users during an investor earnings call on July 14. Its most followed user, Mark Zuckerberg, now has more than 250,000 followers, despite not posting a single public item on his Google+ account.

Google Plus Mentions Beat Buzz? But Not Facebook Or Twitter?


If you think the buzz around Google+ is bigger than it was for Google Buzz, then you’re right. But if you think Google+ is monopolizing social media conversation, you’re way off.
That’s the gist of new research from Sysomos, a social media analytics firm. At Mashable‘s request, Sysomos compared the social media chatter for Google Buzz when it launched in February 2010 to Google+’s introduction this summer.
There’s little comparison between the two launches, according to Sysomos. Google Buzz’s social media mentions peaked at 150,00 while Google+ surpassed 250,000 mentions.

Since its launch a couple of weeks ago, Google+ has garnered more than 106,000 mentions in blogs, close to 30,000 news stories, and 1.9 million tweets. Some 85% of those combined mentions were positive. Those findings were published on Sysomos’s blog on Thursday.
Now for the bad news. Google+’s mentions are nowhere near as prevalent as Facebook’s and Twitter’s. Each of those services gets more than twice as many mentions per day as Google+.
Sheldon Levine, community manager for Sysomos, says he was surprised at the findings. “From my perspective, it seemed like everyone was talking about Google+ a lot,” says Levine. “But it could just seem that way inside the social media world.”


 Connect with S.Rippetoe through Google +, If you are on the new Google+ platform then you can follow S.Rippetoe aka:Votekick

Already using Google+? Follow Votekick

Google+
Google+ has dominated the digital headlines. Interest in Google+ has been incredibly high and Google’s social network is reportedly nearing 10 million users after just two weeks.

Already using Google+? Follow Votekick or ask for your Invite+

Still, Google’s answer to Facebook is still young. There is still no Google+ iPhone app and Google is still figuring out how to optimize Google+ for businesses.




Google’s project is still in its infancy, so it’s no surprise that we’ve heard a lot of Google+ feature requests from our readers. The most common one is Google+ for Google Apps accounts, but everything from privacy to collapsible comments has been brought up as missing features in Google’s social network. Google is even working on some feature requests, including the ability to set your gender as private.




For today’s open thread, we’d like to open this question to our readers: what features do you think Google should add to Google+ next? Let us know in the comments. We’ll make sure to let Google know about your requests.
Make a Starbucks Frappuccino for $0.32

Frugal living blog Squawkfox's make-it-yourself Starbucks Frappuccino includes cost breakdowns, lots of photos, and a secret ingredient that can deliver your caffeine guilty pleasure for a fraction of the price.
A lot of people love Starbucks Frappuccinos, a blended concoction of coffee, milk, and sugar, but at $3.86 for a classic tall they're a spendy as a daily habit.
According to Squawkfox, all you need to make your own is a blender, ice, Starbucks coffee, milk, sugar, and the secret ingredient, xanthan gum, a popular food thickener (key to replicating the texture of the drink).
Squawkfox was able to mimic the famous budget-busting drink for $0.32 per 12oz serving which saves you 92% versus the one with the siren on the cup.

See the full post for details.
Full Recipe at:
Make a Starbucks Frappuccino for $0.32Make a Starbucks Frappuccino for $0.32 |
Squawkfox

Twitter Ads Will Get Harder To Ignore: “Promoted Tweets” Coming To Your Timeline This Summer

As Twitter raises even more money, it’s getting more serious about making money. The service is set to start showing ads in users’ “timelines” within the next month, following through on plans it has talked about for more than a year.
Twitter is pushing a new ad product called “Promoted Tweets To Followers”, set to launch by early August.
They will give marketers a chance to place their message directly front of users that follow particular brands, via ads that will show up in when a user first logs on to Twitter.com.
Twitter has been selling “Promoted Tweet” ads, which look and act like regular Tweets, for more than a year. But it’s entirely possible for most users to spend all day on Twitter.com and never see one, since they usually only show up when a user searches for a particular term.
That’s created an inventory problem for the CEO Dick Costolo and his sales team, since Twitter users don’t use search in the same way that Google users do.
“Promoted Tweets To Followers” are supposed to help solve that problem in two ways. They allow brands to send messages directly to people who have already said they care about them — that is, Starbucks can target people who are already following Starbucks on Twitter. And they can ensure that Starbucks’ followers actually see the ad, by inserting them at the top of their timelines.
Twitter is moving cautiously with the new ads. It’s telling marketers that it will limit the number of Promoted Tweets users see, and tweaking that number as it gauges consumer reaction.
And it’s not pinning the ads at the top of users’ timelines, like it had briefly tried to do with its ill-fated Twitter “quickbar” on its iPhone app this year. The ads will move down the timeline like any other Tweet.
Twitter has already tested Promoted Tweets in timelines via the Hootsuite Twitter client, but this will be the first time it has run the ads on Twitter.com. At the start, the ads won’t run on any other clients, like Tweetdeck or Twitter’s mobile apps.
The company has been pushing the ads to marketers over the past few weeks. Twitter wouldn’t comment on its plans directly, but offered this statement via e-mail: “We are taking a deliberate and thoughtful approach with our advertising platform. As that platform evolves, we will continue to focus on delivering value for both marketers and users.”
Plans for ads in timelines have been in the works since Twitter first unveiled Promoted Tweets back in April 2010. And Twitter has occasionally told advertisers that they’d be coming soon: Last February, for instance, it said ads in timelines would be here by end of Q1.
I think it’s striking that it’s taken Twitter so long to make its ads more visible, even as its valuation keeps skyrocketing. And even this is a modest step — if you don’t follow any advertisers on Twitter, you still won’t see their ads.
Eventually, that will change. Twitter executives say that one day, they’ll have a targeting system that allows marketers to find receptive audiences for their ads even if they don’t search for certain terms or follow their brands. But that’s not happening anytime soon.

Facebook Google+ Slapfest "The Epic Gif that keeps on giving."

Oh, I could just watch this all day. We’ve been writing about the growing rivalry between Facebook and Google, with its new Google+ social network. But here you have it in gif form, with the Facebook and Google+ favicons superimposed on the dwarf from Game of Thrones (Google+) slapping the child-king (Facebook) over and over again. I am not sure why Google+ is a dwarf, but it doesn’t detract from the enjoyment of watching.

It kind if sums up visually the whole fight between the two companies. Don’t you think?
And where did I find this? On Google+ of course. It was created by graphic designer Ala’a Assamawy . Well played, sir. A meme is born.

Google’s +1 Button Already More Widespread Than Twitter’s Tweet Button [STATS] + Get Your Invite Invite

   Google’s +1 buttons have only been out for about a month, but they’re already more common than the tweet button on major web destinations.
Add me or Get Your Invite
BrightEdge, an enterprise SEO platform provider, analyzed the 10,000 largest sites on the web and found a 33% surge in placement for Google’s +1 button during the past few weeks. The company found that +1 buttons are now on 4.4% of those sites, up from 3.6% in June. Meanwhile, Twitter’s plug-ins are displayed on 3.4% of the sites.
Both Google and Twitter trail far behind Facebook, whose plug-ins, most notably its “Like” button, are on about 20% of the sites’ front pages. Note: Although the chart below lists Twitter’s plug-in as a “Twitter Share,” BrightEdge CEO Jim Yu says it refers to the Twitter tweet button.
To put +1′s growth in perspective, Facebook’s “Like” button showed up on 50,000 websites a week after the company announced a web-wide “Like” button last April. It was on more than 100,000 sites within a month. Twitter, meanwhile, made its tweet button available to publishers last August.
A Google rep declined comment on the report.
The study also notes adoption for links to Facebook Pages or Twitter feeds on front pages. Such links are much more popular than buttons, but still, more than half — 51% of the sites — have no Facebook or Twitter link on their front pages.

App Helps Make Plans You Never Thought About


The Spark of Genius Series highlights a unique feature of startups and is made possible by Microsoft BizSpark. If you would like to have your startup considered for inclusion, please see the details here.
Name: Picksie
Quick Pitch: Picksie is a location-based discovery platform for iPhone and iPad that shows you what’s going on around you now.
Genius Idea: Introducing places and activities before you search for them.

For a simple question, “What do you want to do?” quite often stumps a lot of people.
One reason, says Ajay Mohan, the CEO of Picksie parent company Ishi Systems, is that sites such as Yelp with their catalogs of entertainment establishments and event calendars have a gaping flaw when it comes to browsing.
“Basically you have to know what you want, which limits you,” he says.
Picksie, which launched in New York on June 15, aims to instead introduce you to relevant businesses near you before you search for them. It filters choices by preferences that you indicated at sign up, the time of day at which you are searching, and the weather.
It will not, for instance, suggest that you go to dinner at a restaurant that’s only open for breakfast and lunch. Nor will it, theoretically, send you to the botanical garden when thunderstorms are in the forecast.
To create reliable recommendations, Picksie incorporates databases such as Zagat’s and Fandango’s. It also includes concerts and festivals from online calendars. Users can “train” the app by giving its recommendations the thumbs up or thumbs down, and lets them leave short, Foursquare-tip-style reviews for other users.
Apps such as Zagat and Yelp already help map nearby venues, Fandango tells you what movies are playing near you and the Songkick and Eventful apps will tell you where to find concerts near you. Picksie’s main advantage is that it puts these location-based data points in one place. Eventually its makers hope to use this advantage to develop a hyperlocal-marketing platform.
At this point, however, the recommendations are dominated by restaurants, bars and movie theaters. These categories are already on most people’s go-to activity lists. The app would be a better discovery tool if it pinned down a wider variety of one-time events, like a specific drink deal at a bar or live music at a restaurant.
Improve that, and it could be an extremely handy tool on anyone’s phone.