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Aug 12 2010

What Makes Uber.la Tick? Why Do I Put This Much Time With No ROI?

Let me share a snapshot of my WordPress control screen.

wazup and wordpress stats for uber.la

A couple fun facts.  473 posts in a year and a half. Not bad, eh? But look at those TAGS!?$#@$! 7,727 tags. That's redic. But at the same time, fun. I use tags to enrich the SEO content, to encourage alternative forms of linking and navigation of uber.la AND mostly for fun. Tagging for fun not for profit. When I write a tag "wadd'm I thinkin?" it's not because I'm going to thread a lot of posts with that tag, but more likely I am poking fun at myself and this whole business of blogging.

And then there's the comments. 463, that's only ten less than my number of posts. That's pretty ding-dang bing-bong good. Even if some of those are pokey.

mo money or no money, why blog?So you might notice that I don't DO any advertising or adwords on uber.la. So if I'm not looking to make a profit, or even a trickle via adwords, what in the world am I doing?

While I can't point to a single dollar that has come through uber.la I can tell you my referrals though this website are huge. New clients, former clients, and past clients have probably been influenced (positively or negatively) by my writing here. I don't aways do the smart thing. Sometimes I go too far. But I like what one new business referral said about uber.la. "You can see right there on the home page, what he's about." I wear it on my sleeve, I publish and unpublish on hot topics. Mostly I give voice to things that I find, funny, interesting or important.

I don't pick on Dell on purpose, but it just so happens in my two years with them I learned more about Corporate America than I had in my previous 15 years of work combined.

So I honestly hope you find something of value here. I hope you come back. I hope you join me on Twitter. Oh, and see that little stats chart there. You can see when I published and tweeted by the spikes in traffic. If nothing else, Twitter does get some people to the site. Are they reading? Are they influenced by me? Do I provide value?

This chart from yesterday shows a spike in number of posts read relative to visits. That shows that visitors are coming and finding more to read. And that's cool.

Screen shot 2010 08 13 at 8.53.03 AM1 What Makes Uber.la Tick? Why Do I Put This Much Time With No ROI?

Something in the number of comments suggests the answer is yes. I may get passed up for that next corp position due to some of my loud opinions. But if they are scared by a strong personality, they probably would not have been a good fit in the first place. I am 100% social and present. What you read is what you get. I hope to see you again soon. Real soon.

@jmacofearth
permalink: http://bit.ly/no_mo

Some related posts:

And that WAS 165 users on my blog at one time! I had just written about a pre-release copy of Snow Leopard. Lot's of folks were looking for just that kind of info. My hosting company, A2, was overwhelmed and my blog was intermittently unreachable for the next week. When you have a HIT POST you have to capitalize on it.

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Aug 29 2009

A Moment In Stats: iStat Menus and Snow Leopard Shoot Skyward

Update: iStat Menus 2.0 is now available. Download.

The other night something very odd happened with the online statistics on uber.la and I wanted to write a post about it, but I couldn't figure it out. And  yesterday a big traffic spike happened again, but this time I had some insights to share and muse on. Cause if we could MAKE this stuff happen we'd do it all the time.

A hint of iStat Menus Link Love

A hint of iStat Menus Link Love

While I was working online my ONLINE USER traffic suddenly spiked to over 250. That was 250 people online at one time. A bit of sleuthing of the IP addresses showed something in Asia was taking a liking to my blog. And rather than spidering nicely it was hammering my pages. And then it was done.

I tried to look at my Google Analytics logs and see if I could make sense of what had happened, but I could not find the trigger.

And then yesterday with the release of Snow Leopard I had another breakthrough moment, this time with some data to back up what was happening. Here is a quick stat image from my last seven days of traffic.

istat menus, snow leopard review, statistics

Obviously people are interested in Snow Leopard, but the combo of iStat Menus and Snow Leopard was an instant hit. I know it was one of the first issues I ran into as I waded into the Snow Leopard upgrade. Well, obviously a lot of other folks were having the same questions and problems.

And a minute ago my search savvy wife said, what's your SERP look like for that? (SERP = Search Engine Results Page)

istat menu, snow leopard review, google stats, SERP

istat menu, snow leopard review, google stats, SERP

So as a result of being at the right SERP at the right time, my iStat Menu review was at #3 and my Snow Leopard review were at #4 on Google for "istat menus snow leopard." And while I sit here looking at the 15 – 20 people online at time, rather than 3 – 5, I wish there was some way to reach out to them. And say, "hey, thanks for stopping by, stick around, check out a different post, see over here is my RSS feed, and my Twitter link and hey, can I interest you in commenting, I've got this cool Disqus system in place…" [Actually, that's exactly what this post is. A "Hello to you istat menu fans!" Now I just have to figure out how to rewrite this review again everyday until the iStat menu buzz is over.]

Rather, I'll write about the cool moment and how I am becoming more and more addicted to my own internal statistics reports. [Man, I've got to get out more!]

Well, here's for looking out for another home run. Maybe there's a science to it, or something. ;-)

@jmacofearth
permalink: http://bit.ly/istat-stats

Related Posts:

  • The WordPress plug-in Wassup provides the realtime online stats. It's cool to see it happening. And WP User Online also has great realtime stats.

I've asked the iSlayer / Bjango team to allow me to give out the beta link but I have not heard back from them. So at this point you will need to contact them directly to obtain the software.H

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Aug 29 2009

iStat Menus Now Running with Snow Leopard: Everything You Need to Know and More

Category: tech opinion,tech reviewsjmacofearth @ 7:00 am

Update 3-2-09: iStat Menus 2.0 is now available. Download.

Update 8-29-09: iStat Menus is a hot button for Snow Leopard. With yesterday's release of Snow Leopard, it wasn't my review that was getting link love it was my iStat Menus update. While I am not sure of iSlayer or BJangos beta policy, I am running v.111 with Snow Leopard and it's working like a champ. The link above will get you to the beta program.

istat menus, snow leopard review

+++

One of my major disappointments when upgrading to Snow Leopard a week ago was the loss of iStat Menus. Yesterday, after writing an email to Bjango about my anticipation of their update, I promptly got an invite to their beta program and a link to download the Snow Leopard-ready version. I did just that and have been back in business with all the stats at my eye-tips and finger-clicks that I care to peruse.

So in honor of Bjango's rapid response and pre-Snow Leopard beta testing program, I thought I would give a little show of what makes iStat Pro so essential.

iStat Pro, snow leopard beta review

My iStat Menus modules in Snow Leopard

You can configure iStat Menus to your heart's content, and what you see above is my layout.

1. The Calendar icon: shows current date – I can't tell you how many times a day I look for this. I had to add the info back to my clock until iStat was back on duty. One click on the icon reveals a navigable monthly calendar and a single click will open iCal if you actually need to schedule something. This has got to be the simplest feature and the one that I bemoaned the most while I was without.

2. Fan/Temp: I guess my MBP is running cool tonight. I like the temperature at a glance. It's not like I need to know HOW hot it is when my palms are aching from the heat, but it's a good warning when the temperature rises above 150 degrees that I need to do something different. With all the information about how heat affects battery life, knowing the status of your internal core temperature is fairly important. One click and I can see all the temperature points and measurements as well as the fan speed as my machine struggles to cool itself.

iStat Pro, temperature readings, snow leopard review

iStat temperatures

3. I/O Speeds. This is a numeric and graphic readout on how fast my network is transferring data. I am using the stacked view, there are four other graphing options.

4. CPU Usage. This one shows both my COREs. And as you can see the computing power of the Core 2 Duo is well over what I need to be writing in WordPress. There are multiple display varieties for this as well. Beside the display graph is the percentage of utilization. The only time I see the processors maxed out is when I am doing heavy audio or video editing.

5. Free Ram. This final graphic shows me the usage of my available ram both in a pie chart and a free available ram percentage.

There are more options but I use a bare minimum. I was lost without these little touchstones. Some how they give me the feeling that I understand my computer performance and usage patterns better if I am dynamically aware of the feedback from iStat Menus. I don't know if there is anything like this for Windows, but with a laptop so dependent on battery life, heat and performance a little tool like iStat Menus part of my critical path.

iStat Pro, snow leopard beta review

iStat Pro Preferences - Snow Leopard Review

@jmacofearth
permalink: http://bit.ly/istat-menu

Again, my thanks to the iSlayer team and Bjango for giving me a shot at the beta. It looks good to me folks.

Gizmodo has a nice snow leopard benchmarking review:  Snow Leopard Review: Lightened and Enlightened

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Aug 27 2009

Running Snow Leopard (Mac OS X 10.6): a First Run Quick Review (updated)

Category: speed the web,tech opinion,tech reviewsjmacofearth @ 11:00 am

snow leopard review, logo, 10.6

Update 3-2-09: iStat Menus 2.0 is now available. Download.

Update 3-1-09: Cyberduck has a beta working with SN.

Update 8-28-09: SHIPPED. Here is ZDNet Update on the 64-bit kernel questions and CNet's review with video overview.

Update 8-27-09: SHIPPING TOMORROW: Gizmodo has a nice benchmarking review on Snow Leopard. YES IT IS FASTER.

Update 8-24-09: ZDNet Reports Snow Leopard will ship this Friday, August 28th, ahead of schedule. See report.

Update 8-23-09: Okay so the shut down, start up and sleep times are amazingly different and BETTER. For the most part the machine drops off to sleep in about 5 seconds where it used to think about it a bit longer before. (Don't get me started about Windows suspend timing. Yuk!) And here's a funny one. It seems that Snow Leopard isn't running the 64-bit kernel out of the gate. You actually have to start-up with the "6" and "4" keys held down. (WTF?) I know this is a developer license, but that seems odd. Something about troubleshooting and some apps that might not be ready for the full 64. So I've been doing the "64 finger salute" and noticed no real difference. Again, no crashes, and not amazing new features all add up to be… 100% good. Just not overwhelmingly GREAT. So now I'm looking for the killer app or something that's gonna give me the jazz I was imagining from Snow Leopard. It just works.

Update 8-18-09: Other than the few apps that quit working after installing Snow Leopard I haven't run into any problems. At the same time, I haven't really noticed anything. So if you are waiting to see exciting new features, I kinda was, you're gonna be in for a bit of a bummer. Nothin to it, but also, nothin to it.

What in the world possessed me to install snow leopard today I don't know. I was working on a complicated WordPress migration project for a client and something just called to me. It's kind of like a collision course: work to do and a Sunday afternoon with time to burn. And in spite of my own knowledge that things would break and time would be lost, I still pushed the install button. After a full time-machine backup I must add. But once you're committed there's no turning back.

45 minutes later it's all done. Seems pretty much the same. And if you look at Apple's page about the new version of OS X you will see that it's all about performance. So that's the reasoning for me. I want to be the first, or at least after the golden master is available, to get top-speed performance. [grin]

So here's what happened.

Several of my favorite apps and widgets broke right off the bat. Nothing major, but one of them set me back another hour.

First off my favorite widget that adds amazing statistical data to the menu bar, iStat Menus, has not been updated for Snow Leopard yet.

istat menus, snow leopard review

So nothing really important. But I miss my real-time display of the temperature of my Core 2 Duo chip and the speed of my fans. Real geek stuff. I can do without. But did change the preference in the iStat application to check for updates on a daily basis.  Update 8-31-09: Here is the beta of iStat Menus.

The second app that failed was Cyberduck. Now this one is critical path for the work I do on the web. It is free FTP client for the mac. So when I was needing to make some root changes to the files controlling my blog this afternoon, post upgrade, I clicked and clicked on Cyberduck but it failed to launch. Somehow the ducky knew he was not ready to run with the Leopards.

cyberduck, snow leopard review

And in searching for a replacement app, I didn't really want to pay for something else. So I downloaded an old friend Fetch. Now a commercial app, but with a 15 day trial. [wOOt!] I was in.

fetch, snow leopard review

But then the snag. All my preferences and settings and … ug … passwords for the sites I manage. Well, it didn't take that long, but I was sooooo set with Cyberduck that I kicked myself for about 15 minutes as I reconfigured for Fetch. And then I had to rewire the editing preferences for my code changes to go my favorite uber-editer TextWrangler.

text wrangler, snow leopard review

So what TW from BareBones does so well is what is known as round-trip editing.

From within Cyberduck Fetch I can double click on a file, in this case a troublesome .htaccess settings file, and it transfers to my temp code folder and opens in TextWrangler. When I "save to server" it saves the file back up to the remote server and overwrites the original.

And the last issue I encountered was my bluetooth keyboard lost it's way until I used the bluetooth preferences and reset the connection.

And that was pretty much the fix, thus far, that I've had to work through in my 5 hours or so running Snow Leopard.

And I am not noticing too many differences. I know there are a ton of them, but they are mostly under the covers. Here are a couple screenies of two things.

dock behavior, snow leopard review

The dock's click-hold preferences have more options

and

new screenshot format, snow leopard review

Screenshots have unique names based on date and time

So that will keep things a bit more organized. I shoot a lot of screenshots during the course of a week. Now I can drop them into my "screenies" folder and they won't overwrite "image 01.png" and so on.

Seriously, that's all I've noticed thus far.

better, easier, faster, snow leopard review

Oh, wait, there was one more thing. Once the install was ready to go, it started overwriting my current 10.5 install without any major reboots. There's a blurb about the new install process:

more reliable, snow leopard review

And this…

smaller footprint, snow leopard review

So Snow Leopard is actually giving you back 6 gigs of space. Having just upgraded my HD to a 500 gig 7200 rpm seagate I wasn't too concerned about that, but… Here's to an upgrade that is smaller and faster and more reliable. And a lot cheaper than WIN7. But gosh, I sure hope WIN7 is better than Vista, cause we could really use a healthy tech sector right now to help us mosey on out of this recession.

I'm about to test one of the touted features right now, but I'll have to let you know about it tomorrow.

faster shutdowns, snow leopard review

Faster to shutdown and wake up.

Shutting down now.

Updated the next morning: Okay so it does shut down much faster! And I'd say the reboot is quicker, but not noticeably so. But sleep and wake-up are much better.

@jmacofearth
permalink: http://bit.ly/snow-leopard-quickie

Gizmodo has a nice snow leopard benchmarking review:  Snow Leopard Review: Lightened and Enlightened

See also: iStat Menus Beta, up and running in Snow Leopard.

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