blogmoves
Blog moves
This section is part of something like a blog. To contact me or comment on this, see my email page.
The "Money-making Spamming RSS Tips Legal Podcast Blooper Flame Tags"
Update
Today I continue my backlog-clearing series of link lists with ones about blogging and podcasting, including style, technicalities and legalities. If you blog or podcast and want to learn from others, I hope you'll enjoy some of these:
College Startup: Blog Revenue Part 2
How to make money from blogging
10 Ways To Lose RSS Subscribers | Performancing.com
To make money, you need readers. The best readers are subscribers. Take care of them. Surprisingly, this list doesn't include using summary feeds. I moved my RSS feed to a summary-only format a few months ago. Not to make money, but I know I write a lot and I didn't want to spam Planet Debian so much.
Oh great. The comment spammers are using real commenter details that they read from websites.
I disagree with Erich. He needs an item-per-thread RSS feed for his forums, dc:subject support and/or to get over the Newsgroup-hate. Different tools are better at different things.
RSS vs. Atom: What's the Big Deal?: ProBlogger Blog Tips
Atom doesn't thread either. I think I prefer RDF Site Summary (RSS 1) but I'm not so bothered about it.
An XSL to convert Atom 0.3 to RSS 1, which I must get around to using.
How to Write for Busy People: ProBlogger Blog Tips
On from the technical: some writing tips...
Vitaly Friedman | Blog: 20 Rules Of Smart And Successful Web- development
...some design process tips
...and another weblog is removed because its author is threatened with being sued for reproducing copyright material. Really, watch your back.
hippygeek: Be Careful what you Blog
hippygeek has noticed the problem too
Martyn Drake posts a disclaimer. I was disappointed/surprised when I needed to add one to [my debian pages](http://people.debian.org/~mjr/) too.
Podcasting is on the rise. You need to watch the legalities with that too. I expect we'll see some legal menaces of early adopters soon, if not already. Beware: this links to a wiki page.
Modern Communicator: The First Podcast: Mergers and Acquisitions
An interesting business podcast. Not sure whether it'll be a series or not.
Y.uk? Interview with Miles Berry about Moodle
A podcast about the Moodle learning web application (aka courseware)
Steve Pavlina: "Five million women have just been told that I'm a sex expert"
Just because the story cracks me up. Any more blog bloopers?
Drake.org.uk: Flame wars .. flame bores..
Amen
Top-posting... see the comments... Do all blogs top-post?
tom: tagging blogs and other text
Tagging isn't as good as it could be
But some tags are useful for following events.
Tips to improve your blog
Why I fold my blog feed
Update: Eventually, there was a useful post about not folding blogs [Vitavonni] (since refined on Digital-Scurf Ramblings ) which addressed the first and third of the bullet points I made (topic split and text length). I was disappointed how many people (on planet debian in particular) seemed to jerk the knee on this and follow the crowd with simple "No" posts that added little useful to the debate. Blogging isn't a simple vote: you need to justify yourself to have most effect. Worst of all were the few who seemed not to notice how long this blog's feed has been folded - without complaint from anyone!
If you subscribe to the feed for this blog (RSS 1.0), you'll notice it contains a summary description rather than the full text. I do this for several reasons:
- My blog covers several topics, not all subscribers are interested in all of them and I don't want to split it yet;
- According to the web logs (and I know they're imperfect), a surprising number of my readers use tools which don't support full-text delivery well IMO, such as Firefox's live bookmarks;
- I prefer it in other blogs I read because it lets me choose whether to read the full text, rather than scroll down a lot;
- It's a little simpler for me to generate;
- It gives me a little more idea which topics are popular;
For a round-up of other arguments each way, see The latest Full vs Partial Feed Debate [ProBlogger Blog Tips]. This item was inspired by why i hate the fold [Joey's blog].
Want to better your blog?
It seems that new year 2006 is the time to do it. I've seen a few lists recently that I'd I recommend:
- First, from a few months ago, but very good: Jakob Nielsen's Alertbox, October 17, 2005: Weblog Usability: The Top Ten Design Mistakes - I sometimes deliberately use mistake 4 (mystery links) for effect, I've only recently addressed mistake 5 (classic hits) and I'm still working on mistakes 7 (irregular frequency) and 8 (mixed topics)
- Find those too hard to start with? Try Performancing's Quick and Easy Blog Improvements (via Dave Briggs) - I feel I've only one of that list left to do.
- Lastly, a very new one: How to Build a High-Traffic Web Site (or Blog) by Steve Pavlina - if you just got your confidence back with the "quick and easy" changes, this one is a noble but ambitious list to stretch you again!
Remember my remarks about comment images and moving blogs on this page too, please. Happy hacking!
OtherWayUp listings
To be carried on OtherWayUp, my aggregator site, your blog should be:
- Interesting and useful (see the tips above for some suggestions)
- Mostly on a topic I'm willing to carry (make a category feed if needed)
- Valid, preferably RDF Site Summary (RSS 1) - I drop broken feeds and wait for owners to report they're fixed
- Under a sane copyright licence: at least free for non-commercial, but preferably free software, in case I stop subsidising the site in the future
- Submitted to the site
Just now, I'm contemplating dropping Economics (no good feeds left) and downgrading/splitting Culture into Culture and Business Columns pages instead of a top-level page.
Planet Debian: bad colour, bad email
Planet Debian doesn't set the browser link colours for anything other than a:hover, so they're unreadable on some computers. To fix it, it needs
a:link,a:active { color: blue; } a:visited { color: purple; }
in boxless.css, but the email link given on the page is invalid! Please, if you're going to obfuscate the email, make it obvious or don't make it a link.
My comment provoked an article from a fan who attacked strawmen. The article is All Rights Reserved, so here are just the responses:
- Planet.debian.net's email address has a comma used instead of a period? My eyesight wasn't good enough to spot that. Before anyone asks, my eye exam is booked for next month. I didn't claim it was an attempt to target me personally.
- I never suggested Madduck thought cookies should never be used. I agree entirely that people shouldn't use cookies if they don't need to and I also say sites should ask/tell before using cookies.
- I'm no conspiracy theorist about google. It just has some annoying bugs. One of those is a subtle effect of google's ranking method, where sites with lots of equal mirrors (like the Anarchist FAQ) are penalised a little for it, and there's a feedback loop if google is used to help select wikipedia sources.
- Infoshop is a pretty credible publisher about one type of anarchism. Your use of google to decide credibility is ridiculous. If wikipedia does that, no wonder it's in a sorry state.
- The rdf link wasn't the problem. There was just a fun content-negotiation failure with certain versions/settings of Gecko-based browsers.
- And the fan's commenter should reread the CSS spec. That code will cause a warning in some tools, not invalidity. background-color defaults to 'transparent'.
Calling progenitors of interplanetary spam
It's been over a day (21 Jan now) and still all the livejournal users are spamming planet debian.
- Livejournal: you are nuts. Is it really so difficult to leave feeds and non-login-required content on the old addresses until it expires? Breaking links is really annoying. You're even changing the guid contents instead of setting isPermalink='false' on older entries, which rather defeats the purpose of guid. That's so braindead that you deserve a fork in the head! (and RSS 2.0 is silly anyway - let's use RDF Site Summary instead...)
- Planets: Why is it taking so long to get over this? Are livejournal moving users over slowly?
- Livejournal users: going to move to a stabler system yet? At least if you screw up wordpress or a blosxom-like system, you do it one user at a time.
NP: Carpenters
People who move blogs: please don't break links! (8 Jan 2006)
Seeing as Brett has made it a blog a grumble day:
It's a bit annoying when people move their blog feed without announcing it in the old one. Please don't break your links. Brownie points to David for doing it right (well, nearly... I continue with RDF, not the advertised RSS2).
Really, I don't care that much. I'm watching The Living Daylights, so it's all cool. Sort of odd to see the Brosnan Bond's CIA pal as the villan - Die Another Day was shown only last Wednesday.
Multilingualism
How do you blog in more than one language? Variations on the same question arise at conversationblog and problogger. Anyone got any good suggestions or further links?
Annoying blog comment misfeatures: letter images
Just tried to leave a comment on Sasquach wears a yellow hat at blogger.com - it has one of those annoying "type the letters from the distorted image" screens (which don't work well [w3c]). Even when I switch images on, I can't get the letters accepted. I don't know if it's a problem with the site or my eyes, but it's really annoying.
How not to do it: The blog of Alexis Sukrieh not only uses broken letter image tests just now, but sends rude error messages when you fail and has a broken trackback system that returns 403 Forbidden. If that's the Spam Karma 2 mentioned in the footer, I suspect someone will be reincarnated as flame-roasted tinned meat soon.
How not to do it (2): Just a blog: Benjamin Seidenberg's Blog: New Anti-Spam
Measures uses a simple maths test, which should
work, but it produced a rambling SQL error for me. I emailed it as requested
and got an error back saying Command died with status 1:
"/usr/share/doc/spamassassin/examples/filter.sh"
That may block all spam, but
also blocks other mail, snatching defeat from the jaws of victory.
Possible ways to do it: Indymedia Centre Tech recently reviewed available CAPTCHAs and alternatives.
Please, if your blog uses distorted letter images:
- Make sure they work
- Offer an email address or email form too
- Get a blooming clue about accessibility (and maybe hire me to teach you...)
...and don't rant about no-comment blogs [etbe] when your blog has stupid eyetests and returns 404 Not Found if someone asks for the audio alternative.
- Top of this "Letter images" section
- Top of this "blogs" page
- Latest blog posts
Comment form for non-frame browsers.
Comments are moderated (damn spammers) but almost anything sensible gets approved (albeit eventually). If you give a web address, I'll link it. I won't publish your email address unless you ask me to, but I'll email you a link when the comment is posted, or the reason why it's not posted.
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This is copyright 2006 MJ Ray. See fuller notice on front page.