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Results for: db gadgets review

December 23, 2011

Take 2: Marshall Minor Headphones

Finally found this other Marshall headphone which I’m supposed to include in the other giveaway the previous day. The Marshall Minor is basically the younger brother of the Marshall Major and also comes in pure white.

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December 22, 2011

Mighty Dwarf and Nano Beat Vibration Speakers

Just when I thought I’ve all sorts of portable speakers, here comes the Mighty Dwarf and Nano Beat vibration speakers — these portable speakers have a power output of up to 10 watts.

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October 08, 2011

Divoom iTour Ozzo Speakers: One for the Road

Most other portable speakers offer a relatively light and smaller form factors. Divoom’s Ozzo iTour didn’t sacrifice those and features a rectangular, curved speaker barrel. That, plus a two-piece set that seems to be inspired from Lego-land.

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September 20, 2011

HiSense HB440H Bluetooth Headset

First time I heard of HiSense was when the guys at Awesome.PH sent me a free (HiSense HB200M) unit to review last year. Since then, I’ve encountered a number of other headsets from them including this Bluetooth model, the HiSense HB440H.

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August 26, 2011

HP TouchPad Review

The HP TouchPad is the very first webOS tablet ever built, and probably the last and only one — after HP recently announced it will abandon all devices running on the platform. Check out our full review of the HP TouchPad after the jump.

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June 18, 2010

HTC Desire Review

Later today, HTC Philippines will have announced local availability of the HTC Desire in the Philippines as well as revealing the suggested retail price. Before that happens, read on and check our full review of the handset below.

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January 27, 2009

X-Mini Max Capsule Speakers

Since I first reviewed the X-Mini last year, I’ve been a huge fan of these capsule speakers so I bought the X-Mini Max just to see if it’s worth what it claims to be.

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December 29, 2008

Top Stories on YugaTech for 2008

As the year 2008 is ending, I dug up into my Google Analytics to see which stories in tech made a lot of buzz here on YugaTech. We’re heavy on gadgets and gizmo’s so here are the top 20 gadgets and top 10 stories published here this 2008.

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November 27, 2006

Some people just don’t get Problogging

Someone once asked me what’s the difference between pro and non-pro. I said the pro‘s get paid to do it. A professional driver gets paid to drive; a professional photographer gets paid to shoot pictures; a professional basketball player gets paid to play hoops; a professional crier gets paid to cry on burials.

In the same sense, a professional blogger gets paid to, you guessed it, blog. So, what’s so damn wrong if professional bloggers are getting paid to blog, except for the fact that the concept is so new to people beyond their 40′s (excuse the pun)?

Professional blogging is still in its infancy in this 3rd world country of ours and that every day, income generation evolves just as it was first revolutionized when Google Adsense was born in mid-2003. Do I need to enumerate them still?

  • Bloggers place Adsense codes, tweaks them, layouts them on top of the fold, colors them like their own blog theme, blends them within the body of their content hoping that visitors gets fooled a little confused in clicking the ads as if it were part of the content. Others even try to hide the line that states “Ads by Goooogle”.
  • Bloggers sign up with link advertising services like Text Link Ads(aff.) and get paid to display links of advertisers. Others try to hide the paid links by blending them with their blogroll to avoid the wrath of Google (allegedly) but that’s another story altogether.
  • Bloggers add Amazon Associates codes for books, gadgets and whatnots then sometimes label them “must reads” and “this blog recommends” hoping that their readers would buy the items and eventually get commissions from the sale. And yes, the bloggers don’t need to have personally used each of those items he endorsed on Amazon.
  • Bloggers sign up with InText link advertising like Kontera which automatically add links to the text in the body of their blog content hoping that for each click of a curious visitor, they get a few cents out of it.
  • Bloggers sign up with affiliate marketing campaigns, puts an affiliate link and even write a neat endorsement post (peppered with affiliate links) about the product or service and pray that it converts (CPA). They later receive fat cheques from the affiliate program.
  • Advertisers send free accounts to paid services or sample products in the hopes that the blogger writes about it and eventually adds to the awareness campaign.
  • Advertisers pay bloggers to have testimonials or endorsements added somewhere in their blog to promote a service or product.
  • Bloggers may also employ advertisement schemes that displays a whole page ad on top of the page, just like an overlay. I’m sure most of you have seen those nasty Adbrite ads I had here once.
  • Ahhh yes, and just recently, bloggers are now also getting paid to do reviews.

And to the uninitiated, yes, that my friend is the evolution and diversification of blog monetization and professional blogging. If you don’t like them, you are free to remove those Adsense ads in your own blogs (i.e., if you have a blog).

I have, at one time or another, used many if not all of those monetization schemes I mentioned above. I tell my readers what advertising campaigns I employ and which ones are paid (in the case of paid posts or affiliate links). I even post a thank you note with link loves to all those who’ve successfully signed up under my affiliate account. Still, I don’t understand why others would criticize the way I handle advertising campaigns or revenue models for my blog.

If some accidental reader doesn’t want me to maximize my blog’s revenue potential and earn my keep, they can always click that cute red X button on the top right of their browsers.

November 14, 2006

Krispy Kreme & Blog Endorsements

This is in continuation with our on-going discussion about paid blog post advertisements, endorsements and the grand opening of Krispy Kreme. Connie explained it more clearly than me in her latest post About Endorsements. Max, Connie and Me (parang yung sa movie ano? I should have used “I” but “Me” rhymed better) may have varying ideas on this issue but one thing is clear here, one’s credibility is always at stake if you’re a public figure whether you’re a veteran newscaster, a celebrity endorser, or a blogger with just 100 RSS readers.

She also mentioned about a comment she got from the PR firm of Krispy Kreme. I also got an email from theme informing me about their local branch’s launching at City Center, Fort Bonifacio, Taguig City on November 30.

Unlike Connie, I don’t think I will have time to line-up at Krispy Kreme and grab a bite before I can blog about it. The fact that the PR firm acknowledges this blogger that his opinion about their product is valuable is fine with me. They can send me a truckload of doughnuts to try (most of it I might just give to the kids caroling here every night) and it won’t affect my opinion about the product. If it tastes like shit, it tastes like shit. Nothing more, nothing less. They asked for it. (In mathematical terms: Product Sampling != Blog Endorsement)

The same is true with Globe. They’ve been very gracious in sponsoring events, giving us free DSL/wifi accounts, and allowing us to demo test their units. That doesn’t mean all they’ll hear from me are positive reviews. Just read about what I wrote on the Samsung Z560 they lent me. They told me that they want an honest assessment of the unit and they got it. Even if it were a negative feedback, they’ll surely ask me to do some more testing in the future.

Then, there were other product samples like the iPod skin (iFrogz) and the Invisible Shield we reviewed at PTB. We could never have gotten hold of those items and review them if it weren’t shipped to us by the manufacturers from the US. If everything we reviewed in our blogs we need to buy ourselves, we’d have to file for bankruptcy before the year ends. I don’t think even Engadget, the most popular gadget blog, can afford to buy everything it reviews. Much much more with the Autoblog.

Let’s dig in and go a little closer to home. In blogging, blogrolls have an iconic meaning. It tells your readers that these link are worth reading and you endorse them as good reads. TextLinkAds comes in willing to pay you to be on that blogroll. You create a new section on your sidebar and label it paid links. It’s still an endorsement, right.

How about we go to Adsense, the blogger’s staple. If most of what you write on your blog includes those stop words, you’ll end up with non-paying PSAs. So what do you do? Would you refrain from using the stop words to get normal ad impressions. How about if you were lambasting AirborneAccess for their crappy service but your Adsense shows an ad by AirborneAccess?

Product sampling is a marketing strategy. It used to only target columnists and journalists because of their reach. But most of those reviews were merely lip-service. Now, it has entered the blogosphere as well. Will it still be lip service truthful reviews? With Krispy Kreme’s case, I think they’re hoping for a buzz with this product sampling. The brand is already out there and well-known, they just need word of mouth to spread the news that they’re here.

So I go back to my original point – it’s up to that person, whether journalists or blogger, to sacrifice his credibility and I think there’s a lot of gray area here.

Ok, ‘nuf of that. Let’s move along.