Review 3369

The title, “Where We Relax,” in the author’s self-appointed category, “Personal,” suggests this might be a family blog, about the places two or more people who spend a lot of time together go to relax. I imagined parks, saunas, swimming pools, cafes, most of them kid-friendly, illustrated with photos of the happy group enjoying their sojourn from the nine to five. It would be bursting with “awww” moments and the scent of fresh air so tactile it would cause tendrils of longing and envy as the reader dreamed of escaping from behind the computer screen into a playground of green earth, dirt, dandelions, and buggy-wugs. Naturally, reality bears no resemblance to my imagination. Normally I cope with the stress of this rift by eating cookies and reading surrealist fiction. The bloggers over at “Where We Relax” suggest that I cope with that stress by using one of their massage products, available through their sponsor, Ultimate Water Massage.

The blog is written by a team of seven people. Thus far most entries have been written by the only two without human names, Service Guru and Product Guru. In lieu of an “About,” one must refer to the upper toolbar and select “Company and Authors,” which is a blog post written by Admin, which is either short for “administrator” or the name of a human male. Here one learns that the blog is written by employees. For once my imagination isn’t concussed after colliding with reality.

The design is based on the idea of water. The background is a soothing collage of blue abstract shapes and lines. The entries and navigation column are silver with rounded edges, while the content background baby blue framed by lavender. Very feng shui.

Aside from a smattering of first person posts that begin with the story of a stressful meeting or painful toe and end with sweet relief offered by one of the company’s products, most of the blog entries are decidedly impersonal. Strangely, the topics that have the most posts seem to have the blog writers as the intended audience. “Writers Only” and “Writing for WordPress Tips” have a combined total of 15 posts, balanced against 23 posts under the 8 other categories combined.

Most of the other posts are about stress, ways people cope with it, what causes it, the damage it can do, and concerns along those lines. The posts read like professional articles, which is to say, they are very well written. Many are punctuated with statistics and polls. According to one of the how-to-write posts, this is the “E” in a SUPER post. A SUPER post is Simple, Unexpected, Practical, Expert, and Relates to the reader. Wedged between the E and R of a SUPER post, one learns that Expertise, specifically when the reader perceives it, DEFEATS doubt. How can you be sure the reader perceives your expertise? By using Demonstrations, Examples, Facts, Evidence, Analogy, Testimonials, and Statistics, one can be sure to bludgeon doubt by exuding the perception of expertise.

As a reader, any one of those letters might dispel doubt, but when they are all used in a cacophony, what is perceived is not expertise but the salesman’s pitch. Bites of numbers and percentages don’t necessarily lend credibility, especially when one doesn’t know where the numbers came from, how they were counted, or who counted them. Statistics are notorious for being misleading, and statistically, people are disinclined to follow things that will mislead them.

The writers are knowledgeable and skilled at crafting technical essays. However, I can’t shake the feeling that it’s all crafted just to sell something to me. This blog doesn’t seem to have found its own voice yet. Normally I have no problem imagining what kind of person might read a particular blog on a regular basis, but aside from repeat customers and industry employees, my imagination fails me. However, the first entry was made less than two months ago, so this blog is young enough to be rife with potential.
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Review 3361

First things first — I feel suddenly very, very old.

I’m 40. Should I be reviewing a site that focuses strictly on music that I am not listening to? I mean, I like to think I’m slightly more in tune with what is going on musically than the average 40 year old housewife who thinks Kenny Chesney is just so effin’ HOTTTTT in his wifebeater Ts, straw cowboy hat, pookah shell necklace, flip flops and swim trunks (insert swoony noise here).

I feel almost guilty giving this one a go. But that’s not going to stop me.

Kids Pushing Kids as a site has a decent layout. The colors are interesting and reminded me of the very first layout I had for my very first blog entry in 2001. The greens, the white, the overall simplicity. Nice.

The site has an “about” page (and I always head there first to gain thoughtful understanding of the mission the writer/s have in mind) and was happy to realize that I just read about Danielson in Rolling Stone recently… and I went to iTunes to get some of their music… so I didn’t feel too incredibly out of touch and felt somewhat at ease going through the site.

Kids Pushing Kids hopes to share mp3s of bands the author/s enjoy/s and I have to say that it is nice to be exposed to some new music. There are embedded YouTube videos, and embedded links to songs so the reader can listen while looking at the review. The site writer/s don’t let on where they are located geographically, so I am not sure if there is a specific local scene that they are into, or if they are trying to build an national audience.

I liked the mp3s and absolutely loved the music player, similar to the one I play when I listen to Guster concerts on Archive.org (yes, I am unbearably lame but proud of it, shut up) to help make the pain of my undeniably horrible workday lessen. But hated that when I went from page to page to read the archives in the sit the music stops. Feh. A standalone player to listen to the ten items on the playlist while flitting around the site would be a great improvement.

And I knew three of the ten artists on the playlist. You go ahead and guess which three. Be proud of my nineteen sixties born ass.

As for entries, mostly they focus on a band with an mp3 and an opinion. As I write this I am listening to Pterodactyl’s debut on Brah Records — “Esses.” It’s not bad, but I feel it falls apart at the end and bores me.

Other entries are “Shortlist” content which consist of a series of links and pack a few news items in for a punchy entry. (I love Human Giant too, so it was fun to read the little blurb about them taking over MTV). There are industry links and news items and not every entry is an opinion piece on a song or a band. So that’s nice. And unlike other mp3 sites, this one hasn’t had a lot of time to develop into a really heavy duty “oh we’re too smart for YOU and YOUR pedestrian allegedly indie tastes” kind of sites, where they discard the music of anyone other than their friends and mock mock mock like Paris drives drunk. But they do link out to those sites (Pitchfork was mean to Guster back in the day!!! and I’ll never forgive them!!!) so it is good to get a lot of different portal-esque coverage of the music scene.

Two criticisms. First — there are sadly not a lot of archives. I enjoyed the visit to the site, but felt like it should be reviewed in about a year. Perhaps a re-review will be necessary as the site grows beyond May and June archives.

Secondly, I immediately cringed at the Ads by Google at the top of the page(s) and the Amazon videos on the right navigation area.

It is hard to look at a site that focuses on up and coming music with a big fat ad at the top calling out for 2007 cutest kid of the year and 3d educational games.

Everyone needs to make money but … feh.

Now, my favorite indie bands are Dealership out of California, and The Knockout Drops out of Brooklyn NY… The Knockout Drops are as of this moment doing a kick ass Off Broadway show called Escape From Bellevue. Check them out! Consider me a kid pushing kids. I went to high school with lead singer Chris Campion. He rocks harder than any 20 something I’ve ever seen… and that’s saying a lot for a 41 year old man from Long Island.

I wish this site well, good growth, great success, and have added it to my personal blogroll.
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Review 3347

Cars, trucks, or vehicles in general don’t really fall into a bucket of things I want to learn about on a regular basis. Anytime I’m around my younger brother, however, I learn a little more than I’d ever wanted to know. He’s got opinions of every car and knowledge of car parts that cost more than the actual car itself. I felt qualified to give Car-O-Focus a fair review, despite not being as big of a car buff as my motorhead of a sibling.

The archives go back to December 2006, making this site about six months old according to the posts I could find. Each post is three or four very small paragraphs that make up the first part of the post. Readers then have to click on a link that takes them to a completely different URL for the rest of the entry. This would become increasingly annoying if one was reading the site through an RSS reader.

The layout of the site is extremely distracting. Red is one of my favorite colors, but having so much of it on this site drew away from the actual entries, which were also a bit tedious to read at times with white text on a dark gray background. There are so many Google ads thrown all throughout the site that readers will have a hard time distinguishing between a link the author suggests or an ad of some sort. There were often up to 15 separate ads on any given entry.

In the “about” section of the blog, the author explains that he wanted to start a site that had a particular niche. He does do a good job of staying in the niche he’s chosen.

I didn’t particularly find this blog as one I would return to anytime in the future. I didn’t even find the need to pass it along as a link of interest to my brother, who, as I mentioned before, loves anything to do with cars. It’s just another blog that happens to be out there and ready for someone to accidentally stumble upon when searching for a BMW review, but not one I could see winding up on too many lists of “blogs one must read or their life will not be complete”.

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Review 3355

Ok so the first review of this site I mentioned how there wasn’t a blog and that there needed to be one. The author quickly sent me an email asking me to review the blog portion of the site. The blog can be found at http://fusioncharts.blogspot.com/.

One thing I kept in mind that the blog is not listed off of the main product page like I suggested in my original review. This is something that should change very quickly.

The blog is short. Very short. There are 3 posts. All 3 posts happened on May 1st or May 4th. So that makes this pretty easy to review. The blog helps explain what the product does and how to use it. But it isn’t very engaging. It reads more like a bad sales pitch or a power point presentation.

The author really needs to figure out the purpose of this blog. If it is a sales pitch site, then it needs to do something to spice it up. If it is more for tech support then they need go that route. If it is more for showing off the features of the product, again go for that. Personally I think it should be used for all of those and then also showcase sites that are using the product.

Overall I can’t rate this blog very high. The blog doesn’t do anything for me, nor for the product it is trying to sell. The lack of posts may just be due to the relatively newness of the site, but even if that is the case, it hasn’t been updated in almost a month.NULL

Review 3365

Being a dad to be I knew I had to review this site. The name of Daddy Daze is pretty much what I have been in since I found out I was going to be a father. Some days are good, some days are scary, and the worst part is that the baby isn’t even here yet.

Daddy Daze is written by three dads. Each gives their perspective on what is going on in their child’s life as well as their own. It is unique in the fact that there aren’t very many daddy blogs out there, where as there are a ton of mommy blogs. Dads think of things differently, and this site proves it.

My favorite section has to be the pictures and the stories behind each picture. All three dads have uploaded some pictures and a great story behind it. Most of it is very funny and I tend to relax a bit knowing that is what I have to look forward to. Every now and then though that little voice inside my head freaks out based on what I read.

The design of the site is a simple 2 column layout with a customized header. Archives are done correctly with a monthly break down and each month lists the number of posts which is a bonus. There are also reviews of some products that they were asked to review which is a good thing.

I really cannot get into too many details about the blog without spoiling the good time you will have reading it. My guess is that this blog will be attractive to any parent, any soon to be parent, and anyone who likes kids. I have enjoyed reading it, and I know most of you will too.NULL