buggia | Shared With: Everyone - May 09 2008 | seattle, search, developmentTwo networking events coming up in the next couple weeks for devs about SEO. One hosted by Google, and the other by Microsoft. Each will have a couple talks, some site reviews, beer and some networking time. Come check them out!
Quoted: Are you in the local seattle area and interested in the technical side of search engine optimization? E.g. Implementation/ operational best practices, design patterns, site reviews, etc? Then you should come check out one of the upcoming events being hosted by Jane & Robot in May. Each event will have a couple 15 minute talks by a local expert, time for Q&A, and then a couple in depth site reviews. (not to mention free beer and snacks!)
buggia | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 08 2008 | Seattle, SEO, developmentAre you a web dev? Come check out this 1 day conference that Vanessa and I are working on.
Quoted: Building search-friendly code and infrastructure can open the door to millions of searchers looking for your products and services. Join us at SMX Advanced Developer Day to learn how search-friendly architecture can join functionality and usability as a primary tenant of web application design for substantial increases in traffic.
buggia | Shared With: Everyone - Apr 29 2007 | web, microsoft, development
Related Content from Around Faves
developer
-
Well said...
1 FaverViewed: 7 TimesQuoted: The process of making new things simple to win a market is a story that Apple understands extremely well, given their overwhelming focus on the user experience. There’s nothing really very simple or very “less is more”, about the iPhone, for example. Yet it gloriously made a bunch of clunky stuff simple and a lot of hard stuff possible.
- mohit - Feb 29 20082 FaversViewed: 12 Times
- markosharko33m - 7 days ago11 Favers
seattle
-
A public experiment that was better in theory than in practice: "In the end, the restrooms, installed in early 2004, had become so filthy, so overrun with drug abusers and prostitutes, that although use was free of charge, even some of the city’s most destitute people refused to step inside them."
0 FaversViewed: 3 TimesQuoted: After spending $5 million, Seattle officials decided to close the city’s five automated public toilets, which had become filthy and costly.
- Rich - 7 days ago1 FaverViewed: 2 Times
- derek - 8 days ago1 FaverViewed: 5 Times

