30 Free Useful Websites for Online Promotion

360c6f8d4453c0a6fc71d996637a8515 30 Free Useful Websites for Online Promotion

This visualisation was made to help inform and advertise on how easily and effectively you can use the web 2.0 tools to build an online presence through free sites, feeds, embed and monitor progress/stats.

 

 

There are more that I have started to use and need to integrate at some point (they were just embeddable widgets).

 

feedburner.com google’s feed aggregator, splice in Del.ici.ous links or amazon and ping your blog posts to different services   postrank.com blogpost ranking widget, show readers your popular posts   technorati.com blogpost organiser/aggregator pinging and rating among your categories of blogs.   facebook.com share & connect   hostpapa.com (not free, but cheap and can host many sites) I share a friends web hosting   uk2.net (not free, but cheap and easy to integrate with hostpapa) bought an yearly domain .com £8.99   linkedin.com professional networking, set up your own groups   vi.sualize.us (update: vi.sualiZe.us - not with an s)  visual social bookmarking toolbar   delicious.com social bookmarking toolbar   blogger.com google’s blogging platform   flickr.com share photos/artwork with groups and friends   visualisationmagazine.com my website for my data visualisation magazine free to see online (using issuu, search it in my blog posts)   chriswatsondesign.viviti.com   my homepage of activities, viviti lets you build a basic website to promote if you dont have your own host or dont want to learn html etc.

issuu.com 
 
share books with an online viewer either public or private (still embeddable, private is little more awkward to implement, see 
   
 
      http://visualthinkmap.blogspot.com/2009/10/self-publishing-visualisation.html)   twitterfeed.com share feeds auto on twitter, your blog, your del.ici.ous, vi.sualise.us, flickr (anywhere with a feed)   twitter.com microblogging 150 word updates   getsatisfaction.com free online customer services, embeddable widgets and brandable with your own header etc.   ning.com create a social network and add pictures, website links, blog posts, videos, linked to flickr, you tube.... very good. add html data.   createspace.com free online publishing tools, books, cds, video   affiliate-program.amazon.com earn money through product placement  

sharethis.com share posts/links anywhere, such s twitter all those services, whatever you use, tumblur, stumble upon its listed.

 

addthis.com share posts/links anywhere as like share this.  

addtoany.com share posts/links anywhere as like share this.   geekchart.com show where you share, more novelty but interesting nonetheless for visitors wanting to know where to follow you best.  

feedjit.com 
 
show where your traffic comes from in the world.
   
 
    clustrmaps.com show where your traffic comes from in the world.   sitemeter.com site visitor stats   goingup.com (not signed up yet, but looks good) earn money through stats   popuri.us   site rank stats, where are you on google page rank, alexa, yahoo back links etc. e-zeeinternet.com   free embeddable counter, no subscribing/details needed. just your url of where its going.

this was a great post, many that i need to have a look at and probably use,

desizntech.info/2009/10/22-really-useful-online-tools-for-web-designers-and-bloggers/   If you know of any more really useful and excellent sites/services that are free on the web please let me know. ADDITION: http://www.ubervu.com/    widget free to track stats of where your site - link goes accross the web  

Design

 

 

It was quite a challenge, I wanted to avoid the amount of edge crossings with the lines. This isn't that easy as you can imagine to avoid the amount of edge crossings, if there are too many like in the diagram below it can reduce the readability mentioned upon by Lau & Vande Moere.pdf, pg 1 (infosthetics.com) and referred too as Good Continuity in the Gestalt Laws of Perception for effective visual communication in Cartographic Design: Theoretical and Practical Perspectives, from John Wiley & Sons Inc. 

  

 

So I had to re-arrange the different sites quite a few times as it is quite easy to make them all integrate, such as rss/atom feeds directly being fed to different sites, or being able to embed items into blogger, websites etc. As you would expect from today's web 2.0, you want them all spidering each other and linked and easily integratable with each other it generates a lot of lines (not that easy to distinguish which sites can link, embed with each other). I thought about using colour to differentiate between embed links and rss links.

 

I think there are 13 edge crossings (making it look like spaghetti and hard to follow, causing conflicts and burdening cognitive load and reducing readability and ease of engagement as you interact with it, inevitably giving up with it, 'oh **** that!'). That 13 is a high number, trust me it could have been worse, but i try to get round that by giving a perception of depth and differentiating line quality so that they arent the same and the eye can still maintain good continuation, as Gestalt say, for the reader and the designs readbalility (think there is a test that scores the readability of text, see Hrant Paparazin 'Improving the tool' in Graphic Design and Reading: exploring an un-easy relationship by gunnar swansson.

 

 

 

I help when they come to going along the differentiated dashed line from Visualisation Magazine or Flickr that I added a depth too by also adding rigid straight lines contrasting the flowing curved solid lines (lots of contrasts to differentiate).

 

I also straightened the lines making them parallel such as to the left hand side of Blogger (orange b), Or underneath Blogger connecting to Ning. Helps with the Common Fate (Gestalt) and again easier to follow the individual lines. Simliar to TeleGeography with their parallel lines springing from countries.  

 

Below are links to Picassa. Please observe image copyrights to their owners. Use these to have ago your self at creating a web 2.0

 

     

Website as Graph

83322eb356c98ffccea8e502305deb91 Website as Graph

Made by Marcel Salathe (email me: salathe.marcel AT gmail DOT com)

Type in your website url into the tool here: http://www.aharef.info/static/htmlgraph/

Very intersting way to see the structure of your html for websites, the key is below to the colours. The big red blue cluster to the bottom left is my blogroll with table, tr, td, a href TAGS in a big list hence the volume of the cluster. That was an easy part to spot.

What do the colors mean?
blue: for links (the A tag)
red: for tables (TABLE, TR and TD tags)
green: for the DIV tag
violet: for images (the IMG tag)
yellow: for forms (FORM, INPUT, TEXTAREA, SELECT and OPTION tags)
orange: for linebreaks and blockquotes (BR, P, and BLOCKQUOTE tags)
black: the HTML tag, the root node
gray: all other tags

found: http://www.dddinfographic.com/index.php/2006/06/08/websites-as-infographics/

might be old, so apologises for re-showing people