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LARGE Expression Engine sites

Posted 27/01/2010 under Blogging ToolsResearch

Web developers and Expression Engine (EE) experts, Hop Studios have researched what they believe to be the “largest” sites developed using EE as the content management system. The criteria for “largest” site was based on the monthly number of unique visitors + number of entries/comments + number of members/forum posts + awards/buzz (I really hate that word, “buzzzzz”), plus Hop Studios own good judgment.

This eventually led to a list of the 32 sites deemed “very large”, and who could fail but to be impressed with some of the figures they have unearthed. change.gov, Obamas presidential transition site leads the way, but if a confirmed ranking of 20,000,000 page visits per month for iLounge (an iPod & iPhonesite) is impressive then try the unconfirmed number of 31,000,000 pages per month for All K Pop (a Korean celebrity news site). Staggering.

Anyway, you can view the results and criteria here.


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Google to end censorship in China; may pull out

Posted 13/01/2010 under Internet in AsiaNews Articles

Yesterday, Google released a detailed blog post discussing the decision to review its policy towards China after they uncovered cyber attacks on their corporate infrastructure. The attacks, Google say, were aimed at accessing the accounts of Chinese human rights activists.

Google said, “These attacks and the surveillance they have uncovered—combined with the attempts over the past year to further limit free speech on the web—have led us to conclude that we should review the feasibility of our business operations in China. We have decided we are no longer willing to continue censoring our results on Google.cn, and so over the next few weeks we will be discussing with the Chinese government the basis on which we could operate an unfiltered search engine within the law, if at all. We recognize that this may well mean having to shut down Google.cn, and potentially our offices in China.”

Reportedly, this incident has been “the straw that broke the camel’s back,” as far as Google’s presence in China is concerned. Interestingly, Google has struggled to make a financial success of its Chinese operation and it trails the Chinese search engine Baidu by a significant margin.


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Expression Engine - finally!!

Posted 10/12/2009 under Blogging Tools

It was over 12 months ago that I wrote this article explaining the reasons why I made the decision to upgrade from pMachine to Expression Engine as my Content Management System (CMS). But a lot of other things have been going on in my life over the past year, and learning the intricacies of EE has been too tiring to contemplate.

However, I couldn’t stand the nagging thought in the back of my head that something was being left undone (it was a bit like when you avoid doing the washing or ironing), so eventually I bit the bullet and dug into the documentation and tutorials to see what EE is all about. Gaining an understanding of how EE works seemed very daunting at first, but like anything, once you get into it and begin to play around, things begin to full into place (although I’m not sure that I’ve had the “light bulb moment” that the EE team constantly refer to as yet).

Anyway, “royby.com” and “a weblog about weblogging” are now both powered by EE but I’m still on a steep learning curve as I look over the myriad of plug-ins, extensions and modules available to me. I’m also contemplating a change to the overall navigation set-up and of course there is the image gallery to get back up and running. A lot of work to come yet and a general lack of time in which to do it. However, I’ll keep plugging away at it.

The great thing is that comments are now working properly, so please, leave me a comment, as is the member registration set up.


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Website Marketing SEO Score Tool

Posted 06/02/2009 under Resources

Hubspot is an inbound marketing system designed to help your business get found on the Internet. The best way to be found on the Internet is to employ good Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) methods and Hubspot have developed a Website Grading Tool that not only allows you to see how your site ranks, it also allows you to compare it with the websites of your competitors. Best of all, at time of writing it’s free.

First up the grading tool evaluates how your Web site stacks up in terms of marketing effectiveness against the hundreds of thousands of websites that it has evaluated previously. It does this by using an algorithm of over 50 different variables and they say that this software is being constantly upgraded and the algorithm enhanced. I assume that, as more websites are graded, your own websites score will alter slightly according to the ranking of other sites evaluated. If that makes sense!

Considering that I’ve never worried too much about SEO for royby.com, I was happy that it received a score of 69/100. That means that it has scored higher than 69% of all other sites evaluated.

Website grader looks at on-page SEO first, like title, meta keywords, heading summaries etc, and then it checks out the off-page SEO like domain info and google page rank etc. It checks to see if you have a blog and finds your Technorati blog ranking which measures the popularity of a given blog compared to all the other blogs that have been submitted to the system. A Weblog About Weblogging ranked 1,285,236, which is not good enough if I want this blog to be right up there in terms of popularity. But hey, that still in the top 1.84% of all blogs tracked by Technorati.

Finally, Website Grader looks at your websites standing in the social mediasphere, how it converts qualified visitors to leads via RSS and conversion forms, and looks at your sites competitive intelligence. Throughout all of these evaluations, Website Grader gives you valuable hints and links to information about how you can better optimise your website. You receive an e-mail telling you when the evaluation is complete with a link to click and view the report.

A very useful tool and one that I will use consistently in the future as I strive to upgrade royby.com’s SEO.


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very cool tool - CSS SuperScrub

Posted 05/01/2009 under Miscellaneous

very cool tool to spruce up your sloppy CSS coding, available here


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Blogging - a book by Dr. Jill Walker Rettburg

Posted 30/12/2008 under Research

Dr Jill Walker Rettburg has been a research blogger since October 2000 and this year saw the release of her latest book which is titled simply, “Blogging”. There is no prize for guessing what this book is about, but if you are interested you can visit Amazon and search through the table of contents and some extracts as well.

image The book earns glowing reviews from such well known luminaries as Howard Rheingold, “Blogging is a landmark in social cyberspace studies and much more than that”, Axel Bruns, “Jill Walker′s Blogging is set to be a key text in its field” and danah boyd “Walker′s book brilliantly documents, analyzes, and situates blogging”.

I’ve just ordered a copy and I’m looking forward to reading it when it arrives.

 


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How Web 2 are you?

Posted 29/12/2008 under Miscellaneous

Along with all the Web 2.0 start-ups that have emerged over recent times has been a swag of creative logo’s, some of which are now highly recognisable. But how many do you know? Take this quiz to find out.

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new blogging direction

Posted 10/11/2008 under Blogging ToolsWhat is a Weblog?

Last month a hacker found a way into royby.com’s pMachine control panel, deleted most of the data and left me some cute messages. In it’s current form, royby.com is over 6 years old, so that was a lot of data to lose. However, it wasn’t really a problem because the data was backed up and it didn’t take too much effort to restore it.

What the incident did do though was to remind me that for a long time now I’ve been meaning to replace the now obsolete pMachine blogging software with something that is supported and still under constant development. I also want to change the overall design, (I’m certainly tired of the old design now), restructure the overall site design and consider the direction that I want royby.com to take.

Every time I consider beginning this project however, I experience a sharp stabbing pain in my forehead accompanied by a sick feeling in the pit of my stomach. It’s not that I’m not capable of undertaking all of these tasks, it’s the amount of time that I know they will take. Time that I just don’t have right now.

So I’ve decided that, rather than embarking on a major overhaul to all the above mentioned areas, baby steps are going to be the order of the day. I’ll make small tweaks here and there to the site design until I get time to code a new set of templates and change the CMS. Expression Engine has replaced pMachine as Ellis Labs prime content management tool and I have it installed and under development, but I can see that it will take some time to get it to the point where I can migrate my data from pMachine.

Expression Engine is a natural progression after using pMachine for a number of reasons, but the primary one is the ability to migrate data to the new system. There is no literature about such a migration to the latest version of Wordpress or indeed to a program such as Drupal for instance. Other than that, the support team at Ellis Labs are just so helpful if there is a technical problem. And won’t there always be a technical problem when you are working with an application for the first time?

The Expression Engine forum holds a wealth of information as does their Knowledge Base and Wiki. There is a healthy philosophy at Ellis Labs which I recognised when I first began using pMachine and your queries are always answered in a timely fashion by people who know what they’re talking about and who take a real interest in ensuring that your technical problems are solved.

So, stay tuned for more information on how I progress with the gradual re-build of royby.com.


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Australian IT - Blogging confuses Britain (Correspondents in London, SEPTEMBER 28, 2005)

Posted 29/09/2005 under News Articles

Blogging confuses Britain
Correspondents in London
SEPTEMBER 28, 2005

At the risk of being accused of “pommy bashing” I say “so what” to this article. It just doesn’t surprise me that people who know all about networking the news if they find a couple having sex in a park or recording their mates bashing some poor innocent victim wouldn’t have a clue about anything meaningful that is happening in the world let alone know about blogging.

PROPONENTS of the latest web trends were have been warned that the rest of the world may not have a clue what they are talking about.

A survey of British taxi drivers, pub landlords and hairdressers - often seen as barometers of popular trends - found that nearly 90 per cent had no idea what a podcast is and more than 70 per cent had never heard of blogging.

“When I asked the panel whether people were talking about blogging, they thought I meant dogging,” said Sarah Carter, the planning director at ad firm DDB London.

Dogging is the phenomenon of watching couples have sex in semi-secluded places such as out-of-town car parks. News of such events are often spread on web sites or by using mobile phone text messages.

Article

More people (56 per cent) understood the phrase “happy slapping” - a teenage craze that involves assaulting people while capturing it on video with their mobile phones - than podcasting (12 per cent) or blogging (28 per cent).

“Our research not only shows that there is no buzz about blogging and podcasting outside of our media industry bubble, but also that people have no understanding of what the words mean,” Ms Carter said. “It’s a real wake-up call.”

DDB, a unit of New York-based advertising group Omnicom, said the survey results indicate that agencies may be pushing their clients to use new technology - that is, to advertise on the new media formats - too quickly.

“We spend too much time talking to ourselves in this industry, rather than getting out there and finding out what’s really going on in the world,” DDB’s chief strategy officer David Hackworthy said.

Agence France-Presse


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The New York Times > Technology > Circuits > Uses: A Mundane Shot? If It’s on a Photoblog, Someone’s

Posted 09/06/2005 under Photoblogs

BLOGS are great for those who like to write and wonderful for those who like to read, but what about people who don’t like to do either?

They are expressing themselves through photoblogs,  Web sites that are part visual diary, part photo gallery, where in recent years anyone with a digital camera and Internet connection can take part. Many sites have made it easier than ever to share photographs, including Fotolog.net and Flickr.com, which was recently bought by Yahoo.

Among the most interesting photoblogs to peruse are group oriented,  where many people post pictures, all of them around a central theme. You will find abandoned bicycles, subway scenes, pets. Group sites celebrate the ordinary, the mundane, the ephemeral,  things that everyone can understand. Article available here

The Mirror Project

The Mirror Project, mirrorproject.com, gathers self-portraits reflected in different surfaces: windows, bodies of water, shiny balloons and rearview mirrors. More than 29,000 photos have been submitted from all seven continents since the project began in October 1999.

It began as “Friends of Jezebel’s Mirror,” or FOJM, a spinoff site to Jezebel’s Mirror, where a Web designer named Heather Champ posted 250 of her own self-portraits after the death of her parents, who had been the primary documenters of her life.

For the Mirror Project, Ms. Champ invites guest curators to sift through the submissions and collect photos around themes, some of these have been Ikea, Sept. 11 and books.

The value of the self-portraits, from supermodel-esque poses to corner-of-the-eye glimpses, is that people are less likely to put on airs when they are photographing themselves.

Guess Where

New York photobloggers have created a group photoblog game called “GuessWhere” on Flickr.com, where people post photos from specific cities and others have to guess where they were taken (often with hints).

The original, and most vibrant, is Guess Where NYC, with a hundred or so members. That inspired Guess Where DC, Guess Where San Francisco and Guess Where Tokyo. (At Flickr.com, type in “guesswhere.”)  In New York, all five boroughs qualify. And the photos are sometimes well-recognized places with a twist -  in a reflection, say, or close up.

Those posting photos have learned never to underestimate people’s intimacy with the city. One challenger posted a shot of a round street sign that read “Guardians of Hydrocephalus Research Foundation -  Water on the Brain.” Within a day, a person identified it as a sign at Sackett Street and Court Street in Brooklyn.

Challenge

A number of photoblogs pose one-word themes as a challenge for photographers. Wordphoto, at word photo.org, often poses words that have multiple definitions. The interpretation of the word can express as much of the photographer’s personality as the actual photo. “Slide,” for example, was expressed both as a child on a playground and a professor with an overhead projector.

Photo Friday, photofriday.com, and Thursday Challenge, spunwithtears.com/thursday.html, each pose a weekly theme, where people can then submit links to photos. 

Sadness

Digital photography makes it cheap to take photos of things that are otherwise ignored in daily life - like broken umbrellas, discarded bicycles or abandoned televisions.

But vibrant collections along such ordinary themes have shown up on Fotolog.net, a popular photoblogging site. The hundreds upon hundreds of photos from around the world reinforce a sense of universality.

Jason Wilson developed a fascination for the carcasses of mutilated and destroyed bicycles and started a group photoblog on Fotolog.net that quickly attracted contributors. “It turned out that many people had one, two or 40 of these pics sitting around looking for a context to thrive in,” Mr. Wilson said.

Europeans, who commonly use bicycles to get around rural areas and some cities, have contributed many of the most provocative photos.

“Sad Umbrellas” got its start with Eric Brown, who moved to New York from Los Angeles six years ago and became fascinated with the number of abandoned umbrellas on the street. He wanted to save the graceful, broken umbrellas, but that was impractical. Inspired by the “Sad Bikes” group, he found a home for his infatuation on Fotolog.net. Now there is also a “Sad TV’s” and “Sad Carts” (for shopping carts).

The Anonymous Archives

Almost all photoblogs have a contemporary feel -  a product of the instant digital photography age. By contrast, bighappyfunhouse.com has the feel of a group photoblog that pulls the past into the present, with a jarring voyeuristic effect.

For years, Ron Slattery, a 40-year-old entrepreneur from Chicago, has scoured flea markets, garage sales and trash bins for old photos. Last year, he started putting them onto the Internet: vacation photos from the beach, snapshots of pets, family portraits at birthday parties.

The photos are anonymous, both the subjects and the photographers. At a time when we routinely browse photo albums on Snapfish and Kodak’s gallery, there is something disquieting to see photos that were never meant to be public. His photos span from the late 1800’s to almost the present - a mishmash of hairdos, fashions and photo quality throughout the decades. So far, he has put up more than 900 photos. He often wonders about the people shown, smiling and not, and where their lives took them after that instantaneous meeting with a lens.

In May, he received an e-mail message from a man who had found a picture of himself and a friend, who was wearing a Hello Kitty costume, on his site. The picture was taken in 1982 in Houston when the two men, then teenagers, were hired by someone to pass out balloons at the grand opening of an office supply store.  “What is driving me CRAZY is this. ... How did you come across that photo?” the man wrote.


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