There is nothing
worse than a blog that has not been updated in months.
And he writes here that law firms need to realize that the «severe blowback» from heavy - handed demand letters «damage the company's reputation far
worse than the blog post that offended them.»
Just as it a blog that hasn't been updated in months is
worse than no blog at all, a Facebook page with no updates is worse than a waste of space.
You will have to be diligent about maintaining it, however, because, just like a Twitter account, an old blog with no recent posts is
worse than no blog at all.
Nothing is
worse than a blog in a dead zone, with the last post showing a date from years ago.
Not exact matches
«There will be another flash crash, and probably a crash far
worse than the May 2010 flash crash simply because there are too many players looking for the trillion dollar score,» Cuban wrote on his
blog.
Search engine optimized
blogs and websites will appear in search engines higher
than review sites, making customers click on your site rather
than the review site with a
bad review.
I find that frequently a good and insightful
blog post generates less in the way of comment
than a
bad one, because there is little within that people feel they need to contradict.
Yet so - called «loving christians» say
worse than that regularly in these
blogs against «unbelievers», so don't act all offended and shocked.
It seems even in this
blog, folks are still more interested in dispelling a myth
than addressing ill - will or
bad behaviors.
P.S. I tried to post a comment on another
blog (one critical of me) that my plunge into «heretical liberalism» is
worse than they think.
The people who read this
blog think
worse of Obama
than the swing guy does — and studies back me up on this.The real charge against Obama that's sticking like glue is that he's CLUELESS — not that he's an EVILDOER.
Before this season started I had written on this
blog that, if TH wants to make it to the play - offs as
badly as he was talking about it, he must play better
than he had played last season and become the leader on this team, put up the numbers like a real star.
The
blog I posted last week about potty training led to some interesting discussions, especially on whether or not the fact that toddlers are training later today means we are doing things better or
worse than we did 100 years ago.
Lauren Warner, Founder and Editor [See all «From the Editor» posts] Beth Berry, Revolution from Home [«The Perfection Trap»] Amber Dusick, Crappy Pictures [«Making Time for Free Time»] Heather Flett, Rookie Moms [«Choose the One Thing»] Elke Govertsen, Mamalode magazine [«We Need Each Other»] Meagan Francis, The Happiest Mom [«Write Your Own Story»] Nici Holt Cline, Dig this Chick [«Dead Ends Don't Exist»] Devon Corneal, The Huffington Post [«You Are Stronger
than You Think»] Melanie Blodgett, You are My Fave [«The Truth About Making Friends»] Allison Slater Tate, AllisonSlaterTate.com [«Enjoy the Ride»] Katie Stratton, Katie's Pencil Box [«We Are What We Eat»] Lisa - Jo Baker, Tales From a Gypsy Mama [«Mom Sets the Mood»] Shannan Martin, Flower Patch Farm Girl [«Find Your Delicious»] Tracy Morrison, Sellabit Mum [«Real Life Goes On Here»] Amy Lupold Bair, Resourceful Mommy [«Choose Happy»] KJ Dell» Antonia, New York Times Motherlode [«Do What You're Doing»] Anna Luther, My Life and Kids [«Fake Farts Make All the Difference»] Bridget Hunt, It's a Hunt Life [«Our Own
Worst Enemies»] Judy Gruen, Mirth and Meaning [«Don't Forget Your Vitamin L»] Shannon Schreiber, The Scribble Pad [«When Mom is Afraid»] Rivka Caroline, Frazzled to Focused [«From Frazzled to Focused»] Pilar Guzman, Editor - in - Chief of Martha Stewart Living [«The Hard Work of Being Good»] Molly Balint, Mommy Coddle [«I Want to Be a «Yes»»] Melanie Shankle, The Big Mama
Blog [«Not Enough Time (Or Toilet Paper)»] Lindsay Boever, My Child I Love You [«They Will Love What You Love»] Mary Ostyn, Owlhaven [«A Family That Plays Together»] Lindsey Mead, A Design So Vast [«Feeling Hurt?
11:53 - I am quite ill and highly grumpy today, so this live
blog may be more
bad - tempered
than usual.
From Nick's
blog: «The other main obstacle to a contest was the fear of many Labour MPs that the pain of public division might be
worse than sticking with a leader who many are convinced is taking them to certain defeat.»
«The positives in New York's FY 2018 budget make up a pretty short list — while the negatives are in some respects
worse than usual,» wrote E.J. McMahon, Empire Center's founder and research director, in a budget breakdown post on the Center's
blog.
Writing in his
blog at weirdexperiments.com, he points out that: «No other movie title pops up more often in the heading of a scientific paper
than The Good, the
Bad and the Ugly.»
«Breaking: From BEST to
worst in less
than a day,» began a post on the conservative Powerline
blog.
Guest
Blog Post By Natalia Moore Laziness and
bad habits are often to blame for a woman looking less
than her best.
I
blog all the outfit photos I take too — the good and the
bad and the awkward angles and the frowning face... we are more
than just an outfit photo.
I think this is a little late given it's been 2 weeks already since my only recent travel to Manila and yes, if you're an Instagram stalker, you'd have already seen these images but it's customary for me to share nearly every outfit that I wear on this
blog - the good, the
bad, and the ugly; the hits and the misses, in any form of visual possible and so here we are with another better late
than never post.
There's nothing
worse than falling for a clothing item in a
blog then finding out it's $ 300!
I'm always tempted to give up my
blog as well because I know it's going nowhere fast (the fashion
blog scene is just as
bad if not
worse than crafts) but for some reason I can't quite do it.
By Kaitlin Pennington Yesterday, my Bellwether Education Partners colleague Andy Rotherham wrote on this
blog that «as long as the Democrats don't burn the place down, it's going to be hard for them to have a
worse convention
than the GOP just did.»
«In her
blog, Weingarten states, «A well - regarded Stanford University study found that charter school students were doing only slightly better in reading
than students in traditional public schools, but at the same time doing slightly
worse in math.»
But concluding that all book trailers are a silly approach to book promotion doesn't make any more sense
than deciding that blogging for book publicity is a
bad idea after you've seen a
badly - written book
blog, or reasoning that media releases don't work after you've seen an incompetently - handled press release (most likely, one that reads as if it were an ad for a book, which won't accomplish anything, rather
than an actual news release, which most likely will help you achieve your book promotion goals).
Aside from games, some of the apps are really useful, like the excellent WeatherBug app (that auto - detects your location and gives hour - by - hour forecasts, moving radar images, and pictures from nearby cameras), talking to someone on Skype is more fun
than on a computer (too
bad there's no webcam), Shazam listens to songs playing on the radio and identifies them, and NetNewsWire lets me read my
blogs and RSS feeds on - the - go.
The only consideration is whether you can keep up with a
blog — there's nothing
worse than a neglected
blog where the last post was two years ago.
Read my
blog here (I share everything I've done — the good and the
bad), come to my weekly #BookMarketingChat * (on Twitter, every Wednesday 6 pm pst / 9 pm est) to learn from me (and people far smarter
than me) who know a lot about book marketing and the publishing industry, and then start interacting and asking questions.
The great Greenbackd
blog on 8 May 2012 published an article called James Montier on why investors struggle to follow the Magic Formula: Cognitive Biases and Behavioral Errors using a previous article James wrote called The Little Note that Beats the Market to explain why investors interfering with the Joel Greenblat's magic formula does
worse than if you would mechanically apply the formula to your portfolio.
Affiliate blogging creates the opposite result: rather
than laying out all the options and weighing them carefully and objectively so that readers can make the decision that works best for them, credit card affiliate links lead to motivated reasoning: since affiliate bloggers don't think of themselves as
bad people, but do write
blog posts promoting the credit cards that pay them affiliate kickbacks, it's absolutely necessary for them to be emotionally invested, for example, in the absurd notion that the Hyatt credit card annual free night certificate really is the best way to get a hotel room in downtown Seattle.
At that time I read a lot of
bad advice about how an artist's
blog should be about the art only and that anything else was «off topic» and would turn people away (because they don't want to waste time hearing about you and your interests other
than your art).
Because there's nothing
worse than being attracted to a website, only to find that the
blog is outdated or it's been three months since you tweeted.
We had a good laugh then at «critique - good, audit -
bad» — an attitude surely more
than a little influenced by the name of this
blog.
Bad Andrew, This
blog war has brought out less
than the best in many of us.
Academic
blogs have been commenting that University administrations have been
worse than usually useless in telling us how to deal with H1N1 outbreaks.
-LSB-...] you can accept all the basic tenets of greenhouse physics and still conclude that the threat of a dangerously large warming is so improbable as to be negligible, while the threat of real harm from climate - mitigation policies is already so high as to be worrying, that the cure is proving far
worse than the disease is ever likely to be,» Ridley said in the 2011 Angus Millar speech on «Scientific Heresy,» reposted in its entirety at the skeptical
blog Watts Up With That.
It also takes much less
than a grad student in the field to spot some of the
bad work recently discussed on this
blog (but believe it or not, even without a PhD, we do actually pay tuition for a reason).
There is nothing
worse than clicking on the
blog tab of a law firm website and seeing that the most recent post is from over a year ago.
Law student
blog The Shark takes issue with a UCLA law school researcher's study (first reported at the ABA Journal) which concluded that people who fail the bar exam fare
worse than even college graduates in the first five years after graduation but spring back later in their careers.
Wise Law
Blog 140 Law — Legal Headlines for Friday, September 6, 2013 Here are the leading legal headlines from Wise Law on Twitter for Friday, September 6, 2013: · Tim Hortons coin thrower found guilty of assault · Japan's Fukushima region fishery products banned in South Korea · More law profs respond to Obama's call to make law school two years · Recent Publications From the Canadian Judicial Council on Court Management ·
Worse than PRISM: the NSA's war against Internet encryption...
«This being an equal opportunity
blog in terms of eligibility for criticism or praise, today I offer a heartfelt endorsement of what Clifford Chance is doing right — and add that other firms aspiring to a truly sophisticated approach to their strategic decision - making could do
worse than borrow from Clifford Chance's playbook...»
You could do
worse than saying I am going to
blog, Tweet, and network on LinkedIn.
Worse than having your comments deleted is having them marked junk by the
blog publisher.
Leipold says he fears that layoffs of compensation partners - which tend to occur far more quietly
than those involving associate lawyers, who feel no compunction about alerting legal
blogs to the
bad news - may continue and even intensify this year as firms push work down the law - firm hierarchy to less expensive and more profitable associates.
However, an unmaintained
blog is
worse than an out - of - date calling card web site.
What's
worse is that the individual lawyer, far from being bereft of advice, is drowning in it: magazines,
blogs, Facebook posts and more are overflowing with more information
than anyone can handle.
Google removed more
than 7,00,000 apps that violated the Google Play policies and 1,00,000
bad developers from the Play Store in 2017, according to an official
blog post from the company.