The photos from our afternoon at Strawberry Banke in Portsmouth are quite a contrast to the Victoria Mansion.
Click on photos for larger view.
The photos from our afternoon at Strawberry Banke in Portsmouth are quite a contrast to the Victoria Mansion.
Click on photos for larger view.
This year we took in the Christmas decorations at the Victoria Mansion in downtown Portland. Beautiful house with gorgeous decorations even Scrooge could appreciate (post ghosts of course). Hope you enjoy these images from our visit.
Click on images for larger photos.
Please forgive any fuzziness – no flash allowed and I didn’t have a tripod. I’m thankful they allow photos at all under new rules this year.
More pics coming soon of Christmas at Strawberry Banke in Portsmouth, NH.
New Book Review available at The Cozy Library – Saving Cee Cee Honeycutt
The story begins with Cee Cee’s early years in Ohio, raising herself while trying to care for a psychotic mother who traipses around town in one prom dress after another from Goodwill. In her mother’s mind, these are the glory days of a pageant queen’s life in Savannah. To 12 year old Cee Cee, it’s an embarrassment and the fear of how to hold their lives together… Read More
Check out the new book review at the Cozy Library: The Dovekeepers
http://cozy-library.com/great-reads/dovekeepers/
If you are looking for Holiday Gift Ideas, consider the book above, or some of the other great books on the site. My favorite this year is November’s Featured book on the home page: Night Circus.
Today’s post is a reprint of a guest post I wrote for flyteblog.com. A big thanks to my boss for having it on his popular blog.
The Goals: Learning, SEO and Social Media Experiment, (and possibly get some passive income without investing much money).
As a developer, I’ve probably built or worked on several hundred websites at my current job.
As the company has grown and our offices have become more spread out, the exposure to elements of a project that are not part of development has naturally narrowed. (I do sometimes miss our “one room schoolhouse” office). Flyte has been on the leading edge of Social Media and I’ve become a convert, but haven’t done a lot with it beyond my Twitter and Facebook pages.
I thought it might be fun and interesting to see what my learnings would be while working through a new project of my own.
The idea:
Several friends and acquaintances have mentioned that while Amazon is a trusted online store, they feel overwhelmed by the busy home page and the number of choices. As a voracious reader, my friends often ask me what I’m reading and for suggestions. I also hear excellent book suggestions from friends and my boss.
My idea was to present selected choices through Amazon with quick pick book suggestions. Once people find they like the site suggestions it can become a quick way of picking a book and ordering it though Amazon, usually within the framework of my cozy website.
Since this was a learning project, my approach was like that of a number of people with new, very small businesses – with a not fully defined idea for making some money, and a preference for spending my time worrying about what the site looked like instead of how effective it would be.
After going back and forth with my build (for much longer than I should have) because I waffled between direct links to Amazon or an iframe associates store, I decided to really go for the social media challenge and use the iframe store within my content area. This means I’ll need to get really creative with Social Media, since search engines will not “see” the book content in the iframe store. Iframes are sometimes a necessary evil but be aware of their limitations and build in other avenues to feed rich content to search engines.
(And lesson 2b, which I already knew but apparently had to learn again the hard way – make sure you have the design locked down before you start the build).
I went ahead and made the site live. After all, if you build it they will come, right? My only promotion of it was to offer a sneak peak on my facebook page (soft launch) . As expected, I’ve had very few hits (I check my google analytics daily – there was one weird day where I suddenly had 42 visitors, direct traffic from Hennepin County, Minnesota – I have a vision of an entire classroom of people being given a wrong URL!)
The better approach
Now to see if targeting search engines and using Social media can make a difference.
Coming up with keywords: Word Tracker offers a free trial or you can use the free keyword tool at Google. I put in my generic search term – Book Suggestions. Wham! immediately it returned something I’m embarrassed to admit I hadn’t given a thought to – using the phrase Book Club suggestions. I was also surprised just how much difference a slight variation can make. E.g.: “book club reading list” had low competition, and global search number of 4,400. However, “reading book club” had low competition, and a global search of 246,000.
I came up with several similar eye openers and went back to my site, rewriting some of the content, navigation and titles to incorporate the terms. I admit, at times the text felt more awkward to me, but we’re giving keywords a try right?
Next I moved over some of my mainebabyboomer blog posts on books I’ve read to the new blog on The Cozy Library. Since I’m using iframes, the blog is going to become the main source of content that the search engines can find. Starting out with several posts gives it a kick start, and I’ll need to blog regularly each time I read a new book.
I’m writing this guest blog post for the flyte blog, hopefully encouraging YOU dear reader to come visit my site. [Insert shameless self-promotion here - go to http://cozy-library.com].
I could go on tweaking the site and adding content forever, staying in “soft launch” mode. There will always be more SEO that can be done, more books added, more blog posts, more design tweaks. I want to comb through past flyte blog and Maine SEO blog posts culling out ideas to follow up. But that work can also be done after official launch. It’s better to get this website out and start promoting it – while I continue to go on reading flyte articles on how to use twitter, facebook, blogging and SEO to promote it. So….(drum roll)…Announcing the new site, Cozy-Library.com.
Postscript Learning – the spike in my google analytics turned out to be because I was doing cross browser testing using Adobe BrowserLab – be sure to take their IP out of the mix if you don’t want to skew your results.
Growing up in Bangor, my life was entwined with that of St. Mary’s Church. Attending St. Mary’s school, we had first Friday mass at the church just across the school yard (followed by Gosselin’s donuts and hot chocolate since the fast before communion prevented having breakfast – how would you like to be the nun with a class full of kids hopped up on that sugar rush!)
Month of May included the living rosary at the shrine of Mary on the corner between church and convent. First communions. Confirmations. Forgetting your chapel veil and bobby pinning a kleenix to your head. The excitement of Christmas morning mass followed by gift opening. The mystery of the teens in the family going to Midnight Mass. All part of my childhood. And so even though I started separating from the church in the mid 70′s, it came as a personal shock the night the great church burned down on Feb 3, 1978, at the hands of an arsonist.
While going through some old photos this weekend looking for family shots, I came across these pictures I took the night of the fire, and the next day. I blame the blurriness on subzero temps combined with seeing your personal history burn down before your eyes. More than thirty years later I thought some of my fellow former parishioners might find them interesting.
Do you remember where you were the night of the fire?
Click on image to view largest available size.
It’s been a while since I added a post, and even longer since I downloaded the photos from my camera. So it was fun after yesterday’s trip to the transportation museum to download some summer memories. What to do in Maine? here are a few ideas:
The antique autos here are works of art all on their own, but with some I couldn’t resist taking a little artistic license. The day we visited there was also an antique motorcycle rally. I’ve been meaning to visit here for years and glad that we finally did:









Train travel is a very relaxing way to travel, and the trip from Brunswick to Rockland and back makes for a lovely day trip here in Maine.

This photo is the calm before the storm – sunset on Beech Hill Pond the night before Hurricane Irene.

We baby boomers have had the opportunity to work in a fascinating stretch of electronic history. While watching Sunday Morning, their segment on the history of IBM computers prompted me to put together a visual history of my own progress working from typewriters to computers. (In my own defense, my high school had some pretty old typewriters.) Over the years I have worked on models similar to these:

Manual - with carbon paper and lots of whiteout.

Woohoo - electric!

Note the one line window for text preview/correction. When you hit return it sounded like machine gun fire as the line typed out at "super" speed.

CRT connected to a central computer somewhere "out there".

Word Processing! Beam me up Scotty!

And the personal Mac journey begins.

Then they start to get pretty.

Can it get any better?

It can get better!

Now I'm working on the amazing MacAir

The transition from work to play time is complete with my ipad2. Not as practical as the MacAir but oh the hours spent on non-productive games
What has your technical journey been like?
Recently I saw the movie Certified Copy with Juliette Binoche. There’s a great summary of the movie in this New York Times review. The start of the movie is an author’s lecture on his book, which tries to convince that a copy is as good as an original if it is such a good copy it evokes the same feeling.
While I wasn’t a huge fan of the movie, I found it interesting and did appreciate that it was a good catalyst for conversation after the movie. I found myself trying to figure out whether the couple in the movie had really married long ago, or just met.
At the beginning I was convinced they had just met, at the end of the movie I was mostly convinced they had been married long ago. It was a day or two later when I was describing the movie to my sister that it struck me how much I had reacted exactly as the director wished, thinking the copy of a marriage might in fact be an original, or real couple seeing each other again – I could not tell the copy from the original.
I’m not a big fan of 3D movies, it seems to me that the energy and resources have all been focused on the special effects rather than story and character development. So what I’m asking here is – what makes a real 3D movie – a special effect needing glasses, or is it when the movie reaches out to you, grabbing you so that two days later you’re still discussing the thoughts and ideas it evokes?
Recently I watched the show “Who Do You Think You Are”, and saw a fascinating story of Rosie O’Donnel tracing her roots back to Ireland.
Over the past couple years, my siblings and I have made more progress in tracing our Irish roots than in previous decades. We knew our paternal side could be traced back to Ireland, but with that generation gone by the time we started looking, we had only a few family stories to go on.
This is one of the areas where Baby Boomers are getting an incredible boost from the internet. With every passing year more paper records are transferred to electronic availability. In our case, it still took some physical visits to City Hall or other offices with public records (thanks Greg!), but we are still finding new information on the web this year that we could not find just a year or two ago.
Recently my sister managed to contact a cousin when she found his updated information on the web. Now, you must remember that at the time baby boomers were young children, the easy technology of today’s digital cameras and video did not exist yet. Many families did not have the means to take photos as a camera and film were luxuries. And so it was that my cousin sent Pat a scan of a photo in his family’s album. My first surprise was that my father (James Arnold Maher) was known as Arnold to several members of his family. I had always heard he was called Jim. My next realization was that this photo, titled Uncle Arnold and Family by my cousin, and blurry though it is, is the first and only time I’ve ever seen a photo of my entire family in one shot. (My dad died when I was 6, so much of what I know is through stories) That’s me sitting on my dad’s knee.
I want to urge all my fellow babyboomers out there to start searching now for those ancestor photos and stories. Not only is more information available on the web than every before, but also you can tap into the family stories and photos before they are lost forever.