Search .NET Google is great for search driven development when you are working on your .NET project. The problem is that you get search results from many different other technologies as well, so you have to do a lot of filtering in the results. Also, you often click on a result that point to bad solutions or in worst case, inaccurate solutions.

Not any more. Dan Appleman has created a search engine, www.searchdotnet.com,  that is build upon Google that only search in .NET related websites and blogs that he has manually chosen. I’ve been using it for a couple of weeks now and it dramatically increased my searching productivity for .NET related topics.

He handpicked the best resources that will most likely give you exactly what you are looking for without you have to go through 5 pages of results. It’s build in ASP.NET of course. Give it a try, it's brilliant.

In the late nineties background music and click sounds on websites were quite popular. Today, we don’t use those sounds anymore on most commercial websites. Only flash sites make use of click sounds and background music to set the mood. Generally I think it is a good idea to backup your message with sounds or audio clips whenever it is appropriate. So when is it appropriate?

It is a tricky question because there are not many sites that use audio to support its message, so who knows what works or not when we can’t see it in action. I don’t think click sounds can be used to support a message, it’s just annoying. But voice bits could be cool to implement various places on a website or blog.

Take this blog for instance. I could add a little speaker icon next to my image on the right side of this page that when clicked, played an audio file of me presenting the website shortly. Also, when a visitor writes a comment, I could record a thank you message that would be played back to the visitor. Once a week I could change the audio message to add some variety.

Just think about it for a second. You probably recognize the voices of Scott Hanselman, Rory Blyth, Carl Franklin, Scott Guthrie and many more that either has their own audio or video show about .NET or has been guests on them many times. I do. It’s almost like you know these guys even though you’ve never met them in person. I believe that the audio has played a major role in that, so why not start using audio yourself?

It will be part of the branding of your blog or personal site because it let’s your visitors get closer to you as a human being instead of just being another anonymous site owner. Your visitors might just feel they know you a little and that hopefully makes them return to your site more than they normally would. Visitors are good, returning visitors are even better.

The only drawback to embedding audio on a website as I see it is when you forget to turn your speakers down at work and they suddenly make all your co-workers aware that your favourite porn star appreciate your comment on her blog in a highly inappropriate way. Other than that, I only see benefits.