It's two things - a Windows application that does keyword research using the GTrends technique and a Firefox extension (optional) that can grab the keywords from a Wordtracker page and pass them to the Windows program. Inspired by the Thirty Day Challenge, I've tried to make this tool accessible to both beginners and professionals and this includes choosing a low price that almost anyone could afford (even though some of my customers have said they'd gladly pay three times what it costs now). Initially you needed to check the number of competing pages, analyze the keyword on Google Trends, place a ruler on your screen (I'm not kidding) to calculate the number of visitors per day and do a number of other things. No need to give up control - you can add, remove, export or otherwise manipulate keywords at any time; you can pause/resume the analysis at any time and see the current progress at a glance; you can save the keyword list and load it up again later - the software will continue processing from the point it left off; GTrends SE is fully user-configurable - from "good" keyword criteria and up to nifty tweaks like the number of execution threads (if this made you go "Huh?", don't worry - the software comes carefully pre-configured and will work "out-of-the-box" August 2007 - that was the month of the Thirty Day Challenge, the "biggest Internet marketing event to date". TDC was different - it was free (and the archives are still available free of charge), the information and techniques were actually useful and it wasn't a thinly veiled attempt to sell something. The online tool from Wordtracker helped automate some of these tasks, but you still need to investigate every keyword separately. You can also add keywords manually, so you don't have to install the extension if you don't want to. So I wrote a program, or - more accurately - two programs. GTrends : The Second Edition » GTrends SE