Saturday, December 02, 2006

ArticleBlaster Why Dolly The Sheep Is An Icon Of Web Content


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Please consider this free-reprint article written by:
Brian Hack

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Article Title: Why Dolly The Sheep Is An Icon Of Web Content
Author: Brian Hack
Word Count: 792
Article URL: http://www.isnare.com/?aid=104576&ca=Marketing
Format: 64cpl
Author's Email Address: brian[at]h4h.biz (replace [at] with @)

Easy Publish Tool: http://www.isnare.com/html.php?aid=104576

================== ARTICLE START ==================
Original unique content on the web is like Dolly the cloned
sheep and her lamb Bonnie, different yet the same. So let�s
take a closer look at the nature of content.

Information can generally be divided as subject and object. The
subjective character of a composition, theme, essay, article, or
story is the creative part of content where ideas appear as a
flow of information from writer to reader. The flow requires
both subjective and objective inputs and outputs.

A subject always begins as original organic content. Writing
subjective human idea source code is like a data transfer from
an author to a storage medium like paper or computer equipment
where the content is compiled or processed for use as an
information product.

Objective composition can be measured in terms of form and
function. The form can include elements like manuscript,
headers, footers, page numbers, chapter headings, sub-headings,
pictures, drawings, footnotes, endnotes, works cited, index,
table of contents, lead pages, typography, cover, design, and
layout to name a few.

The function includes accuracy of spelling, grammar, internal
links within a document, and external links to other books,
ebooks, and web �content�. Function can also include a range of
output options that are device independent like a monitor screen
or printer.

Since the words �original� and �unique� apply to both
subjective and objective aspects of information, another
distinction must be made to tell the difference. For example,
the word organic can be used to distinguish a difference
between a human using a search engine to find content and a
robot or software being used for similar search activity. An
organic, living, natural search involves both subjective and
objective testing by means of reading but the robot search can
only recognize the objective, synthetic, non-organic aspects of
characters, words, and phrases in content. The distinction then
can be expressed as organic original as opposed to synthetic
original content.

The billion-page supply of synthetic non-organic content
competes for market share with supply from comparatively few
original organic content writers. Both use the same keywords to
attract natural search but artificial methods obviously dominate
the quantity of content available and also uses natural search
un-naturally.

The all icing no cake professional package and marketing of
unique artificial content significantly impacts quality by
leveraging semantics for profit from content of marginal use
value. Fortunately, the surplus of synthetic content also
indicates an unusual demand for the real McCoy original organic
content.

Interestingly enough this aspect of the interface of technology
and culture is as developed as the obvious deficit between human
and machine productivity. In other words although computer
software can produce more content for less money at the click
of a button, it can never produce original organic content, the
source code only available from human writers.

The scarcity of original organic content is in the order of
tens of thousands to billions or .0001 percent of all content.
While this may explain why the synthetic type of content may
leave some readers with an unsatisfied or empty feeling, it
does not explain why scarcity of original organic content has
not yet driven the income of writers through the roof. Does it
not make sense then to leverage organic content for greater
profit?

Article directories are one of the main funnels of original
organic content into the web but do little to appreciate the
value of this scarce resource or to distinguish it from the
synthetic type. Not only do some directories promise
recognition and links to authors� sites in a so-called resource
box in return for content, some charge the author to distribute
to other directories. It�s like saying, pay me five bucks and
I�ll take that gold off your hands and give you credit for it
in a by-line.

Well that�s about to change because hiding in plain view,
concealed in a most obvious place, is an unassuming Alliance to
Refine Content. It�s a virtual needle in the internet haystack
with some most unusual support features. Here the secrets of
book publishing that include the art and science of packaging
are starting to trickle into the internet at this quiet
location.

While some infopreneurs have an idea of what ebooks can look
like, or how they can function, or how to make money from them,
the integration of form and function is expanded at this site to
include how to make more money no matter who you are, what
knowledge you have, or what niche you want to play in. Want to
know more? Anyone is welcome to visit and join the Alliance to
Refine Content.

About The Author: Brian Hack currently authors and publishes
H4H :: Residual Income Digest Express, http://www.h4h.biz a web
site that analyzes internet business opportunity for the purpose
of long term personal and business growth. Contact
author@h4h.biz

Please use the HTML version of this article at:
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For more free-reprint articles by Brian Hack please visit:
http://www.isnare.com/?s=author&a=Brian+Hack


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