Posts tagged with "weblog"

Either about my own blogging, or blogging in general. Wonder what general thinks about that.


How many comments does it take to ruin a joke?

Mount Lofty Cafe in the Adelaide Hills

A few weeks ago, Georgina on Twitter gave me some moral support for disabling Rubenerd.com's comment system in June 2012. So far, so good!

Spam

When I first turned comments off, I stated the primary reason was spam. I was getting hundreds of spam messages a day, and the law of diminishing returns started kicking in. Sure, I could comb through these and perhaps uncover a legitimate comment, but the time it took to do so was increasingly hard to justify.

Details, details, details

I'll admit, that was only part of the story. In his typical style which I now miss dearly, John Siracusa pointed this out which rang bells:

The main point is that you're supposed to be communicating something, and if you successfully communicate that idea, it doesn't matter so much about how you said it. That's the details. It's better to be better at communication without being strictly correct or formal or whatever than the reverse when you're correct and formal but don't communicate your idea.

Someone in the real world professed to reading my blog once, but claimed what I wrote was often wrong. When quizzed about what they meant, it was because I'd often fail to mention certain details, or that my definitions weren't entirely accurate.

And therein lies the issue. Unless you define every term in legalese with hundreds of footnotes, caveats and painstakingly outlined definitions for what "security" and "is" means, there will always, ALWAYS be ways to pick apart posts. After a while, it became tiring arguing over tiny, insignificant points when the broader issues I was hoping to foster conversations about went ignored.

In Siracsa's words, I was communicating an idea, but rather than commenting on that, some people just revelled in being picky. More power to them, their choice! Another way to put it is this joke currently spreading:

How many geeks does it take to ruin a joke?

Okay, first of all you mean nerds, not geeks. And it's not a joke, it's a riddle. Proceed.

I have a bone to pick with your humerus

The third problem is humour. While I spent my formative years living in Asia, my mum was Scottish Australian and my dad is German. Both these cultures, much like the Brits where a large part of Aussie culture derives, value self deprecating, dry and deadpan senses of humour that are lost on some people. Chalk it up to cultural differences, but I'd say something I think is clearly a joke, and there'd be people who'd misunderstand or get offended.

This doesn't happen as much on App.net or Twitter, because people on those networks presumably follow me because they like what I tweet, my sense of humour makes sense to them, and I pay them large sums of money. In a blog, people often found my posts through search engines, would read a bit, misunderstand, get angry, and post away.

So the question I set out to answer in this post: was it a good idea to turn off blog comments? Most definitely. I've noticed a drastically improved quality of life since doing this, and I have no intention of re-enabling them any time soon. John Gruber and Dave Winer were onto something.

That said, I've decided to look into alternative ways to allow people to contact me for feedback, maybe a disposable email address with the year in it or something.

Photo by me, at a café in Mount Lofty in Adelaide.


Minor site tweaks of doom

Netscape Navigator!

Taking a quick break from writing a development proposal, I made some minor tweaks on the site today. On the site? To the site?

  • The layout is now centred, not to the left. I preferred it the old way, but the number of tweets and emails from well meaning people asking me if my CSS was broken got to be too much. Actually, I did this a few days ago.

  • Lines from the header have been removed.

  • After two years of CSS3 rounded corners, I've got rid of those too. They looked okay, but they were inconsistent with the rest of the design. Or at least, I thought so.

I've also done some other CSS tweaks in preparation for the unveiling of something much bigger soon. Or should I say, someone much bigger. And no, it's not Netscape Navigator Gold 2.02 support.


Now @Technorati can't tell what a blog is?

Icon from the Tango Desktop Project

So I re-claimed my blog on Technorati after they stopped pulling in items from my feed. This was the response I got:

Nov 21, 2012. This site does not appear to be a blog or news site. Technorati does not support claiming of forums, product catalogs, and the like. You can review our site quality guidelines at http://technorati.com/blog-quality-guidelines-faq/.

Oh, please. Time to put my account with them to pasture, me thinks.


Technorati re-verification

Technorati

Technorati will need to verify that you are an author of the blog by looking for a unique code. Please put the following short code BWSUEMRM6QG8 within a new blog post and publish it.

I already did this in 2005, but somehow Rubénerd.com posts stopped appearing there recently. When I attempted to update the site details, it asked me to re-verify. Done and done, and I mean done.

Incidentally, I'm using the same Technorati logo image on this post as I did in 2005. It has the same awful, mangled file name that my old CMS gave it at the time. True facts. Any of this helping to verify my site, Technorati?


Goodbye blog comments!

Spam, spam, spam, spam, spam...

Given a spam filter of mine recently past the dubious 6 millionth spam comment filtered, I've decided to do the unthinkable and disable comments entirely. Here's my logic!

It didn't used to be this way Smithers...

Back in the bad old days of blogging, we didn't have comment systems. My first site was run off a simple Perl CGI script I wrote, but even as I moved to RapidWeaver I still didn't have blog comments. I got around the problem by running a Vanilla Forums install, and linking to my posts. It worked reasonably well.

When I moved to WordPress in 2005, I suddenly had blog comments. I liked that the barrier to entry was lower than a forum; users didn't need to register for an account to post a comment, so the upshot was more people left comments. Some posts I've written, such as font smoothing on Snow Leopard and the Canadian Hinton Train disaster have spawned entire discussions with disparate people around the world.

Like so many technologies though, it didn't take the douchebags long to realise they could wreck it for the rest of us. I can't tell exactly when it started getting out of control, but in the last few years the amount of blog spam has exploded here. My combination of TanTanNoodle's Simple Spam Filter and Automattic's Akismet do as best a job as they can to stop the onslaught, but at this stage I feel as though I'm trying to stop a waterfall by holding out a sheet of newspaper.

Some statistics

  • Since 2008, TanTanNoodle's SimpleSpamFilter reports that it's blocked 6,131,412 comments. That's right, more than 6 million spam comments. As I said on Twitter, this is absurd!

  • Since 2005, Akismet reports that it has blocked 196,192 comments, missed 1,844, and had 22 false positives. The latter I suspect is optimistic, I'm sure plenty more legitimate ones have been lost.

  • WordPress reports 3,336 legitimate blog comments.

That graphs shows why I'm not studying stats

So now I come to the inevitable question... is having comments on my blog worth it?

For the first time, I'm thinking not. With uni and family work consuming more of my time thesedays, I simply couldn't be bothered trawling through what's been caught in the hopes of finding a couple of legitimate comments. I'm tired of having my email inbox flooded with notifications of generic, bogus comments linking to dodgy websites.

Hosting sites with public facing interfaces are also harder to keep secure too, while I'm at it.

So what's the alternative? The more I think about it, the more I realise the alternative already exists, and people are using it. I get more comments from people on Twitter and the like than I ever got on my site here.

I'm also reminded of how blogging used to work, with trackbacks and the like. Before comment systems, if you wanted to comment on someone's post, you'd write a response post on your own blog and link back. Such was the promise of the early "blogosphere", a loose knit federation of writers with their own spaces. A bazaar rather than a cathedral, if you like.

So here we go!

I'm going to trial disabling the comment system on Rubenerd.com, and replacing the comment form with static, HTML links for those who want to post to Delicious, Twitter and so on, along with the permalink (URL) for this page for those who want to respond on their own blogs. Like it used to be :).

If it works for John Gruber and the like, I'm hoping it'll work for me. It'll reduce my workload, the load on my server, and the number of plugins I need to keep updated. We'll see.


The Royal Botanic Garden Sydney

Sydney Botanic Gardens

On my botanic garden photo post:

The Royal Botanic Garden Sydney says: We love your photos of the Garden, Rubenerd. Thank you.

I think this is the first time I've had a representative from a place I've take pictures comment on them! Gave me a warm fuzzy feeling, and makes me want to visit more often. Great PR! :')

I spent much of my teenage years on my iBook G3 at the Singapore Botanic Gardens, when it wasn't raining. I love urban gardens, and Sydney's is beautiful.


A query on post frequency from @Sebasu_tan

@Sebasu_tan on The Twitters, not Google Search+:

It's January 11, and @Rubenerd already has 15 posts. Is he sure he isn't doing a Post A Day 2012? :D

An astute observation good sir, and I'm flattered you counted! To prevent temptation though, I missed out on the first two days of January, to relieve the instinctive pressure to continue the PostADay2011 challenge into 2012.

That's not to say I won't be posting frequently any more! For example, aside from your tweet, this post had little substance to it whatsoever. Quite literally, I only mentioned the word "substance" twice.


Post A Day 2011 reflections

My second post for 2012, and it's on the 3rd of January! I had fun doing the Post A Day 2011 challenge, but as Georgina observed in the comments for a previous post, I'm not doing it this year ;).

Cute, pretty Madoka Magica reflections picture by ゴロー on Pixiv.

Reflections, get it?!

Erica Johnson on the Post a Day 2011 website:

Remember when you first decided to take on the Post a Day/Week Challenge?

Well, you made it to the end — congratulations! Now is the perfect time to reflect on your 2011 in blogging, and your goals for 2012.

Here are eleven questions to help you determine your blogging strategy for the new year:

I'm part of Post A Day 2011

Questions about blogging on a blog #blogception

Why did you start the Post a Day Challenge?
Aside from drinking water, I'd never done a 365 challenge before. Given I'd already been blogging regularly for years I figured it was worth a try.

Describe the state of your blog at the time you started the challenge.
New South Wales. Bad joke. Largely the same as it is now, though with 570 odd posts less.

How did your blog evolve over the course of the challenge?
Given it's ever expanding girth, my blog mutated and grew and extra set of limbs.

Did you post as often as you had hoped? Why or why not?
I posted at least once a day! Occasionally this entailed jumping out of bed late at night and hurriedly punching up an entry, that's one aspect of the challenge I perhaps won't miss as much ;).

What type of blogging strategy works best for you?
For some reason I work best in caw-fee shops, at later in the evening at home, that much hasn't really changed. In the past I'd publish when I was done, but for the challenge I got used to scheduling posts -- which I'd like to think reduced the sudden onslaught of posts I used to inundate your blog aggregators with!

If you could go back to the beginning, what would you do differently?
More consistency, moe and pointless diagrams.

What are you most proud of accomplishing [in 2011]?
I... wrote at least one blog post a day for a whole year! :D

Name 3 great blogs you discovered through the challenge.
An unintended consequence of blogging more is I found myself reading more for inspiration for my daily entries! As a result, in 2011 I subscribed to A Lonely September, Heartdrops.org and Oshibanashiori.

What surprised you about the challenge?
That I was able to keep it up! That's what she said. Wait, I don't get it. That's what she said too. Shaddup.

What advice would you give to others who want to blog regularly?
I'm probably the last person on earth you'd want to take blogging advice from! Still, just write about what you love, care about or what makes you interesting; EVERYBODY has these whether you deny it or not. Don't get hung up about whether what you're writing is useful, interesting etc, just DO IT. Remember the cliche, whether you think you can succeed or fail, you're right.

What are your blogging goals for 2012?
My biggest aim is to try only blogging about topics and ideas that make me happy. Blogging about things that angry or frustrated only render me... angry and frustrated. Maybe one-off quotes, but no lengthy articles any more.

Conclusions

Over all, PostADay2011 was a thoroughly rewarding and fun experience, and as I said I couldn't believe I actually pulled through and did it! It was tempting to continue it for 2012, and certainly Post A Day 2011 gave me so much inspiration and raw momentum I probably could!

That said, there's something rather gratifying about posting things when I want, rather than adhering to a schedule. Posting pre-written items to fulfil the Post A Day when I had a headache or too much work also seemed a little like cheating, though that may have just been me ;).

Thank you to all of you for your support, kind words and patronage!


Made it through Post A Day 2011!

To celebrate posting every day this year, here are some highlights from each month!

January

Little did I know that I'd be quoting this Steve Jobs retiring from Apple post later in the year though. Or perhaps, I did.

Dear Steve,

Even with a similar recent family experience with health, I won't pretend to relate with what you and your family are going through right now, particularly with a tasteless media circus chasing you.

Please don't let them get to you. Stay strong, and get better in your own time, for yourself and your family. *manhug*

Peace, health and happiness,
Ruben :)

Sent from my iPhone

February

Towards the end of the month, my old man, sister and I took a trip into inner NSW to visit the Taronga Western Plains Zoo, which gave me a great excuse to try out some new DSLR skills I'd picked up.

A professional could have done a lot better, but it was great to get out of the city for a few days and go exploring :).

March

An easy choice, we fulfilled one of my lifelong ambitions and dreams since I was in primary school: seeing Weird Al Yankovic! Now that I look back, I only wrote a stub entry, clearly I need to upload more photos from it! Best. Concert. Ever.

April

Ben Sidram's Cool Paradise

For some reason I can't fathom, I decided hilarity would ensue if I quoted lyrics from each and every song from Ben Sidran's 1990 album Cool Paradise. This post was representative of this entirely pointless series:

"Hot, like the yellow sun;
Uh oh.... FIIIIIIIIRE!"

As far as I know Ben, the sun isn't on fire, its undergoing a sustained fusion reaction.

May

A lot happened in May. Allegedly Osama Bin Laden was killed without due process, and the rapture was supposed to kill us all.

Most importantly though, I was obsessed with the Yumekui Merry anime series, and was blogging each and every episode! I don't have time to do that any more, perhaps series summaries are called for?

June

Lots of one off posts in June, though I was most excited about being accepted into the University of Technology in Sydney despite a several year absence from tertiary education for family reasons. It's good to be back!

July

I was informed of Kyary's PonPonPon. Nothing more needs to be said, or should be said.

August

A rather packed month from a blogging perspective, traditionally that's always been the case on Rubenerd.com for some reason! We finally said farewell to the old Twitter, I did a series of UTS-inspired posts on what I couldn't live without, but most importantly of all I joined the UTS Anime club where I've made friends with so many nice, lovely people.

Registered for Anime@UTS!

September

A big month for the site as I reached 4000 quality entries! I also started obsessing and blogging about Gurren Lagann after so many had told me to watch it.

October

October was the month we lost Dennis Richie and Steve Jobs. RIP.

dmr

November

If I can be a hapless consumer for a moment, November was the time I finally caved and bought a Kindle. Between then and now, I've read more novels and non fiction books than I'd read for the whole rest of the year!

For me though, the month will be remembered for the fact it contained the epic, once in a lifetime 11:11 on 11/11/11 which I celebrated in a binary-esque pointless way.

December

A month of ups and downs. On the one hand I remembered the passing of my beautiful late mum, and the intellectual and humanistic world lost one of its heavyweights with the passing of Christopher Hitchens. On the upside, we celebrated Yuletide as a family again after a four year absence, with tree and all :).

Our Christmas Tree

2012

It seems folks are thanking their deity of choice (or lack thereof) for the fact 2011 is over. Personally it was a year of development and progress for me, though I'm under no illusion the year went well for most. Here's hoping 2012 will have more peace, health and happiness for all. *Cheers*

As to the challenge itself, I wrote 587 posts of varying length and quality, maybe more given I often forgot to tag each post with the postaday2011 tag. Undecided whether I'll try for 2012!


The @GoDaddy to @Hover move begineth

Goodbye GoDaddy, hello Hover

I'm a month early, but I decided to get ahead on my NY resolutions and start transferring my domains from GoDaddy to Hover. So far, so good.

Screenshot by me on Flickr.

The Moves like Jagger

I was about to launch into a technical discussion of what transferring entails, however I'm half asleep and the super fabulous Dave Winer already wrote all you need to know. He's complimented me once and insulted me twice, which if you know the guy well enough is high praise ;).

His steps in a nutshell:

  1. Log into GoDaddy
  2. Unlock the domain
  3. Request an authorisation code
  4. Go to Hover
  5. Transfer the domain using the authorisation code
  6. Confirm with GoDaddy

The only step where I differed was his assertion that GoDaddy's transfer confirmation email only includes a link to cancel the transfer, not approve it. This is no longer the case; they provide a link to the page where you approve or cancel transfers.

That's a lot of email

Icon by the Tango Desktop Project

Every man and his dog is talking about this, so nothing I really could say would be anything new. What I will mention however is the difference between the number of emails I received from Hover, and from GoDaddy.

These were the messages from GoDaddy:

  1. DOMAIN STATUS NOTIFICATION (unlocking)
  2. DOMAIN INFORMATION YOU REQUESTED (code)
  3. DOMAIN NAME TRANSFER - Confirmation of Registrar Transfer Request
  4. AN IMPORTANT NOTICE REGARDING YOUR TRANSFER (successful transfer)
  5. SORRY TO SEE YOU GO. WE'LL ALWAYS WELCOME YOU BACK.

And from Hover:

  1. Please confirm your contact address
  2. You transfer of [domains] to Hover has completed

I suppose the onus is on GoDaddy to confirm what could potentially be an elicit transfer, but still an interesting comparison. I'll be expecting far less spam from the folks at Hover.

Before you go, here's some upselling!

More surprising though was GoDaddy's effort to keep my business till the very end... by doing the same sales tactics that drove so many of us away. From their second last email:

P.S. Visit GoDaddy.com and SAVE 15%* off your order of $50 or more. Just use source code [gibberish] when you check out to get your special savings. Start shopping now at GoDaddy.com or order by phone at (480) 505-8821.

And the footer of the final email:

SAVE 15% OFF* YOUR NEXT ORDER OF $40 OR MORE AT GODADDY.COM!
Use offer code [gibberish].

That was the same offer code as the $50 dollar deal above. It's as if they're bargaining with me.

.XXX IS HERE!
Block others from getting your domain name.
Register your .XXX NOW!

Yay, extortion!

CASHPARKING(R)!
Make money with your parked domain!
Let us show you how...

Yay, domain squatters!

I wonder if they expect to win much business back with those exact same tactics? Not that I'm suggesting anything, but the sign of insanity is doing the same thing and expecting different results.

In the meantime, I'm really enjoying Hover :).