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FanMix – The Only Inbox You’ll Ever Need for Managing All Social Messages

on Feb 2, 2012
FanMix – The Only Inbox You’ll Ever Need for Managing All Social MessagesFanMix describes itself as “one inbox to rule them all”. The tool allows you to manage all of your social conversations from across the Web. While they currently only support three social sites, you’ll soon be able to manage your blog comments as well as various other sources. It’s meant to be a “dead-simple inbox, just like email”. So if you’re still suffering from social overload or just looking to make your life easier, FanMix is worth giving a try. It will help you keep up with all mentions of you or

The Dangers of Integrating Your Blog w/ Facebook

on Mar 3, 2011
The Dangers of Integrating Your Blog w/ Facebook

For bloggers, Facebook has provided an unprecedented way for us to connect with out readers. Not only does it give us a chance to be where our readers are naturally, but it is much more personal than email newsletters, RSS subscriptions, etc. Best of all, it gives our readers an excellent chance to share and spread our content, something that’s much more difficult over other means.

Start the year off right: empty your email and take some time off from Twitter/Facebook

on Jan 1, 2011
Want to get a fresh start on the new year? Here’s a few quick tips: - Start the year off with an empty inbox in Gmail. It’s pretty simple to do: you assign a label for everything in your inbox right now, then archive everything so your inbox is empty. You can still dig into that label if you want to work down your email backlog, but it feels great to start the new year fresh. Follow the steps to declare a lightweight email bankruptcy, with the chance of still responding to those emails down the

Using Spam to Your Advantage

on Jul 8, 2010
Using Spam to Your Advantage

Don’t you love it when your inbox gets crammed full of spam mail? All you did was sign up for one measly special report and within a week you’ve been sent ten emails from the site you signed up with. Most people will unsubscribe immediately after receiving the free report, some people will simply hit the delete button for a few days because they’re strapped for time, and yet others will let it accumulate because they’ve used an email address they don’t check often. I personally use Yahoo for my spam mail and I usually wait a few weeks before I unsubscribe. Why? Because there can be little goodie nuggets in those emails. Use them to your advantage and to gain knowledge.

Effective link wheel combine with social bookmarking