Feedburner vs Blogbeat
I’ve been playing around with the beta of BlogBeat and recently switched on FeedBurner for my feeds (just the free version). Both systems attempt to show who’s reading your blog and provide some statistics about them. FeedBurner does this by looking at the number of people viewing your RSS feed and BlogBeat does it by looking at the number of people looking at your web site.
In the end, you have to realize that the actual numbers are irrelevant because both these methods are really quite inadequate. What they do show however, is trends and comparatives. You can’t say with any real degree of certainty that 100 people read your blog, but you can say with certainty that more people read your blog today than yesterday or that Wednesday is the most popular day. It’s because of this that I much prefer Blogbeat to FeedBurner, even though I suspect that FeedBurner’s number are likely to be more numerically accurate. With BlogBeat I can see what links people are clicking on around my website, not just what entries they clicked through to. I can see the window size people use when they access my blog – though I wish that were easier to visualize – and the service has a lot of potential to pull out other data about what readers are accessing on the site, more so than just how many people are reading.
Okay I Lied
I said I couldn’t be bothered setting up my feeds to use FeedBurner. I lied, curiosity got the better of me and my feeds to go through FeedBurner. The URLs haven’t changed, there’s just a redirect in place that flicks things over to FeedBurner. If for some reason you have trouble with my feeds please let me know and if you really object I can give you the non-redirected feed URL that FeedBurner uses to get my feed.
Does Full Text Lower Your Readership?
I’ve been playing with the new BlogBeat beta (as best I can tell, you get invited to the beta by complaining that you’re not in the beta) and it’s interesting to see the traffic patterns with my current very sporadic posting schedule. The big thing I notice is that pretty much every time I write a post, despite the fact that I publish full text feeds, I see a big boost to my readership. These obviously aren’t people who check my homepage regularly since they wouldn’t know to check the page when I post so they must be RSS readers that have clicked through (BlogBeat doesn’t pick up on RSS readership, at least with the way I’ve set it up).
Eclipse WebTools Is Driving Me Nuts
At some point Eclipse seems to have decided that I shouldn’t be doing J2EE development and randomly turned off some of it’s J2EE related features like being able to Run as server or create a new Webapp project. I suspect a software update went bad and it’s screwed over it’s configuration.
Sadly, with the massive number of plugins and crap that makes up an Eclipse install it’s nearly impossible to sort out if one particular plugin got corrupted, if it’s a configuration setting some that got corrupted or if the whole thing is foobar. The log file for the workspace is particularly unhelpful just reporting that classes are missing – that’s great, where were you expecting to find them though? Which plugin provides that particular class and which plugin is requesting that particular class? Then on a subsequent run it just reports that the plugin is already loaded so it doesn’t need to load again – sadly, the plugin isn’t loaded and none of the functionality it provides is available.
I’m A Browser Junkie…
It’s a little bit scary to look at the number of browsers I have in my dock and regularly use. Mostly this comes about because of the need to test on all the different browsers but still. I have a similar range of browsers on my Windows box at work (it adds Mozilla and Opera to the mix but obviously takes out Camino, Safari and OmniWeb).
In case you don’t recognize the icons, the browsers pictured from top to bottom are: Camino, Safari, Safari (built from CVS), Firefox, Deer Park (Alpha of Firefox 1.5, needs to be upgraded to the beta still, but last week was too hectic to be testing browser betas), OmniWeb and IE.
Does Sparkle Scare Anyone Else?
There’s a lot of talk going around about Sparkle, Microsoft’s new UI design tool set, but I’ve been scared that this is the end of good user interface design since the second paragraph I read about it:
It’s the rise of the graphic designer!
(from Scoble’s blog)
At which point in time did we start letting graphic designers design user interfaces? What happened to all the user interface designers? You know, the ones that think about how to make software intuitive and user friendly, efficient and productive as opposed to flashy and cool looking.
I Hate Bookstores
I’ve really come to hate bookstores. I don’t want to buy books online because I like to peruse them a little before I fork out a hundred bucks to make sure it’s really want I want. The back cover blurb is only accurate on the good books so you’ve got no idea whether you should trust it or not. When I walk into a brick and mortar book store though they never have what I want. I was in Borders this afternoon and their computer section seems to have dramatically shrunk and now has “feature shelves” where instead of being full of books they feature just two books on the shelf, most likely to cover up the fact that they don’t have enough stock to actually fill the shelves.
Should I Be Excited Yet?
I’m with Geek News – PDC has been a big build up for an average set of announcements. I’ve got to stop reading Scoble’s blog, he over hypes everything and then the actual announcements disappoint. Here’s Scoble’s summary of the announcements:
- Office 12 demonstrated publicly for the first time. Tons of new features and new UI.
- Windows Vista features demonstrated publicly, including search integration, new performance enhancements, new sidebar.
- LINQ (Language INtegrated Query). Cool database stuff for .NET developers.
- Windows Presentation Foundation/E. “E” for everywhere.
- Start.com updates released.
- Atlas (our AJAX Web development toolkit) demoed for first time.
- Microsoft Max. A new photo sharing and display application.
- Digital Locker. A new place to find, try, and buy software.
- New sidebar and gadgets and new Microsoft gadget Site.
- Coming later today? Sparkle. A new way to build Windows applications.
- Coming later today? Lots of server stuff.
- Coming later today? More Office stuff.
- Coming later today? Workflow stuff.
All in all a pretty nice set of announcements but definitely nothing revolutionary. There are a couple of things that could have been really excited but got slaughtered by the Microsoft, gotta maintain the monopoly policy. In particular Windows Presentation Foundation/E – cool, cross platform support that includes all the major browser that’s awesome. Wait, what’s that? It’s a subset? So when I develop my application I have to have two versions – a Windows only with all the cool stuff version and a other suckers version. That’s great, for Microsoft at least.
Job Opening At Ephox
If you’re looking for a job in sunny Brisbane, Australia, and the job description below sounds appealing, send me a resume at adrian@ephox.com.
Position Description
Title
Senior Software Engineer
Description
Ephox, a world-leading, content-authoring software provider seeks to employ a Senior Software Engineer for its Paddington office in Brisbane. The position responsibilities include writing technical specifications, collaborate in design/architectural recommendations of overall systems, implement software QA practices and be the technical lead in the Ephox development team. The position offers the opportunity to work with leading technologies and software vendors including content management providers. The successful applicant may be expected to provide professional services directly to customers or partners both on and off site. They will also be expected to actively participate in other areas of the business including requirements gathering for new and existing products, mentoring and pre-sales support.
ANTLR Is Not As Cool As I’d Hoped
About 5 years ago while I was doing some part time work for my university one of my lecturers walked by, looked at the program I was developing and asked: “You’re using antlr or something like it to generate your parser aren’t you?”. I wasn’t, I’d written the parser by hand in an hour or two and it worked exactly as I wanted so I saw no need to go back and rewrite it.
Why Microsoft Gets A Hard Time
Brian McCallister gives a brief synopsis of Microsoft’s 2005 financial statement. I think it pretty clearly shows why people dislike Microsoft:
Regarding Windows sales and profits:
Well, we see a pretty nice top line revenue of $12.2 billion. The fun part of that is that the operating income (profit before taxes and interest) is a tidy $9.4 billion. It is awfully nice to pull a 77% operating margin (profit before taxes, hereafter referred to as “profit”). Regarding Office sales and profits:
Getting Groovy With Ant
In the comments for my post Ant Is Cool, Erik Hatcher points out that Groovy has ant support (see http://groovy.codehaus.org/Ant+Scripting). While that’s cool and all, I really don’t want to add a new language into the mix just to call out to Ant so not a great option for my case, but useful to know. What is more useful however is knowing that you can embed Groovy in ant scripts using the Groovy ant task (also via the ant script task since 1.5 or 1.6 I think).