TT #29: Thirteen WP plugins I like (and use)

samulli on November 22nd, 2007

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As everybody who uses WordPress knows, there are lots of plugins available to extend the functions of your blog. Not only the “official” ones that are mentioned on the WP Extend page, but also loads of others elsewhere.

There are also lots of lists that try to showcase what all is possible, and help you with the decision which ones could be the most useful for you. Lorelle has got a nice list of lists, so to speak, that contains several hundred different plugins.

I myself am in no way expert enough to recommend plugins, but I can tell you that I tried quite a few, and here is what works for me:

1. Akismet

I wouldn’t wanna live without Akismet, which for me is just plain the most ingenious way to fight spam comments on a blog. I don’t know how exactly they are doing it, but it works like a charm. There is only the very occasional one that slips through, but I can live with that.

2. What Others Are Saying

This fantastic plugin by Sarah from stuffbysarah.net can be seen at work in my sidebar (you will probably have to scroll down a bit). It displays the latest post from blogs that are in my blogroll. So, once you’re finished reading my blog, go and have a look at what my blogging friends have to say.

3. DoFollow

This one switches off the “nofollow” attribute in comments, because nofollow doesn’t work against comment spam anyway (and it doesn’t have to, if you got Akismet). So I figured I might as well give out some link love to my commenters.

In case you missed the whole dofollow movement, go to Randa Clay and read up on it - and then join us and we will take over the blogosphere. Or whatever. ;)

4. FeedBurner FeedSmith

This is one of those plugins that work in the background and are not visible to the readers of a blog. Basically it allows me, through the integration of Feedburner, to track the number of subscribers to my RSS feed.

5. Google Analytics

Same thing here. I used to use StatCounter to keep track of my website’s statistics, but I changed over to Google Analytics, because it just gives me more data. (Well, it would give me more data, if I had more visitors.) That said, I haven’t checked my stats for ages, so who knows how many readers I have meanwhile?

6. Random Quotes (wp_quotes)

This plugin is another one that adds a little fun to my sidebar. I used to have this little widget with quotes from my favorite t.v. show in the sidebar:

I really loved that, but since it’s a graphic it was un-customizable and turned out to be too wide for my sidebar. So I found this plugin to keep the quotes and now I find myself adding non-t.v.-related ones as well, just for the hell of it. But I assume this whole thing is more an amusement for myself than anybody else. Then again, it’s my blog. *shrug*

7. SRG Clean Archives

This is one of the more universally useful plugins again. It adds a very nicely structured monthly archive page to your blog. You can expand or collapse every month to see or hide the single posts. It looks clean and you never have to think about your archives again. Perfect for me.

8. Subscribe to Comments

This one does exactly what it says: it lets you subscribe to the comments of single posts. So, if there is a lively discussion going on (which, admittedly is rarely the case on my blog), you won’t miss any comments following your own one without having to check back regularly. Instead you get them delivered right into your mailbox.

9. WP Database Backup

Wouldn’t wanna live without that one either. I don’t do regular backup like I should, but with this plugin at least I mostly do a quick backup before I fiddle around with something - which has saved my blog a couple of times already when I botched it once again. It is certainly faster and less hassle than signing into PHPMyAdmin every time.

10. Comment Timeout

This one is pretty new to me - I just installed it a few days ago, so can’t really say how well it works.

It closes comments on older posts automatically. You can customize the number of days before comments get closed on a post, also you can leave comments for more popular posts open for a longer period of time. And if somebody comments on an old post you can let this comment go to your moderation queue - so an occasional real comment doesn’t get lost, whereas the comment spam (that often targets older posts) doesn’t get through.

11. Enhanced WP ContactForm

What this plugin does is that. It gives you a nice and clean contact form so your readers can send you messages or questions without you having to publish your email-address for the spam bots to find.

12. Comment Email Responder

This plugin I found through Grace from Sandier Pastures (I always seem to get the good stuff from you). I had a few problems at first to get it to work, because it was clashing with another plugin I had then (sorry, forgot which one). But after I deleted the other one, it works fantastic.

It emails the commenter when an admin replies to the comment, if the commenter is not subscribed to email updates via Subscribe-to-Comment. But not only does the commenter get your answer in an email (which is something Better Comments Manager for instance does as well), the answer also shows up in your comment section. Definitely saves a lot of work when you want to answer several comments at once.

13. Adhesive

This last one is a plugin that sounds fantastic: apparently it lets you make posts “sticky” - so that they stay at the top of the first page for however long you want.

In theory this sounds great, unfortunately in reality it doesn’t work for me. Not only does it mess up my blog a little (the navigation at the bottom of the pages vanishes when it is activated), I also don’t find a way to actually make a post sticky in my admin panel. It’s probably a version conflict, I read it worked alright in older WP versions. From the look of the author’s page it doesn’t look like he’s gonna update it anytime soon, though. Or ever.

Luckily there seems to be another plugin that is a modified version of Adhesive: WP-Sticky (you have to scroll down to no. 14 on the list). I’ll try that one next.

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

So much for my list. Which plugins are you a fan of?

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TT #28: WP Themes I like (part 2)

samulli on November 1st, 2007

Here is, as promised, the second part of my list of WordPress themes I like.

Looking over the list again, I just noticed that I still have a marked preference for 2-column-designs, even though in last week’s list there were some 3-column ones as well.

Some of the themes listed here I considered using for my own site, but for various reasons I decided against them for the time being. But I am pretty sure that my current theme won’t last much longer than a few months either, so I am constantly on the lookout for new ideas. If any of you know some other beautiful, well-coded themes I’d be happy to hear about them.

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1. Coffee Stained

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2. JnB Falls

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3.Retro Book

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4. Kauderwelsch

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5. Fast Lane

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6. Light Shades

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7. Morning Dew (Download)

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8. Nostalgie (Download)

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9. Black Lime

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10. Travelogue

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11. Forest Light

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12. Slaty Reloaded

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13. Chic

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TT #27: WP themes I like (part 1)

samulli on October 24th, 2007

After I had some minor (*cough*) problems with my blog this week, I decided to do another blog design-related TT.

I recently talked to a friend, who isn’t using WordPress, and she complained that most WP themes look the same to her. Of course I told her nicely how absolutely wrong that was. :) Meanwhile, after looking through the whole contents of the WordPress Theme Viewer once again (109 pages…), I tend to admit that the impression is not wholly wrong after all. There are lots and lots of very similar WP themes out there.

On the other hand, and here is the good news, there are also some really quite well-designed and distinctive-looking ones to be found. I didn’t even manage to narrow it down to only 13, so this is Part One of my list of WordPress Themes I Like. Part Two follows next week.

. 1. Blue Origins

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2. I feel dirty

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3. Summertime

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4. Orangescale Laila/Butterfly

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5. Rusty

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6. Clueless

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7. Pink Beauty

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8. New York, New York

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9. Zen

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10. Ocean Mist

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11. Summer

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12. Fall Season

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13. Forever Autumn

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TT #26: Thirteen steps to a new blog design

samulli on October 11th, 2007

As some of you might know I have changed the design of this blog a few weeks back. I am still not quite finished with it, actually (I still want to change the header graphic).

I wish I would have done it like I recommend in this list, but unfortunately I always have to learn things the hard way. I just went ahead and tried everything out online, so there were a few hours when my blog looked different every five minutes, and then probably wasn’t there at all for a while. This was obviously not a good idea. My main advice would be therefore: Think, before you actually start doing anything. That applies to webdesign as much as to every other area in life. Unfortunately I am the first to admit having problems with that myself. The good thing is, though, that I usually actually do learn from my mistakes. So, next time I will be ready.

So, how should I have gone about it in the first place?

1. Ask yourself if you really need a wholly new design, or would maybe the change of your header graphic and/or color scheme be enough?

2. Decide on the general layout you favour: 2 or 3 columns, with or without a big header graphic, sidebar left or right etc. This narrowing down of options will help you with #3.

3. Go and search for your new theme in the many collections of WP themes available on the net (look here - scroll down the page for a whole list of theme collections). This will be made considerably easier by having a clear idea of what you want. When you look through the theme collections don’t forget to pay attention to details like fonts, the little graphics that divide the posts, or the headers of sidebar categories etc. Make sure the theme you choose is as close as possible to the final look you had in mind. It’s easy to change color schemes and header graphics, but if you start changing around every little detail you might as well design your own theme from scratch. But in any case you will probably end up downloading several themes anyway (I found 12 that I wanted to try out).

Now from this point on it might be best if you had WP installed locally on your computer (look here for a tutorial on how to do that) or at least have a testblog where you can tweak the new design before you reveal it to your readers.

4. Upload all the themes you downloaded into the appropriate folder of your test environment and try them all on for size. For this you need some sample posts, which should include photos, lists, quotes and every other style you want to use on your blog. Also comments, so you can customize the comment form. If you already have a blog it’s easiest to copy a few of your older posts into your testblog.

5. Once you decided on a theme you should customize it for your personal needs. Look for the newest versions of all the plugins you used so far, and also get any plugin you think you might have a use for. Install them all and activate them. Add a few new posts and comments and just generally play around with all the options of your blog to see if everything works and if all of the plugins work together (which, sadly, is not always the case).

6. Change the header graphic if you don’t like the original one.

7. Change the color scheme of the theme to your liking. This site can help you with the decision which colors go well together.

8. Customize the sidebar(s): add all the things you had in your old sidebar and wanna keep. It might be an idea to just copy the stuff from your old sidebar.php, but you will probably want to change it around a bit anyway. This is, by the way, a good time to think about decluttering your sidebar a bit.

9. Once everything is added back in and all the plugins are working, take some time to testdrive the site in different browsers and with different screen resolutions. If you don’t want to install a whole lot of different browsers on your computer, you might wanna try this site, which shows you what your site would look like in different browsers.

10. If you’re satisfied with everything, upload the modified new theme to your real blog.

11. Next, upload and activate all your new plugins.

12. Testdrive this as well - if you find any bugs you can always switch back to your old theme while you repair the glitches.

13. Once everything is back up and running again, lean back, take a deep breath and enjoy the new look of your site. :)

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The purpose of the meme is to get to know everyone who participates a little bit better every Thursday. Visiting fellow Thirteeners is encouraged! If you participate, leave the link to your Thirteen in others comments. It’s easy, and fun!

TT #25: Thirteen things that annoy me in blogs

samulli on September 27th, 2007

Thanks to my recently renewed blog-reading addiction I have spent several hours each day surfing the net and hopping from blog to blog. And I have begun to notice some things that tend to annoy me each time I encounter them. Some of them are bad enough to make me leave the respective blog for good. Of course I am not telling anybody how to run their blogs. I am not trying to convince anybody to remove these features from their blog or saying they are necessarily all evil and to be avoided like the plague.

All I’m saying is that I noticed these things and didn’t like them. Now, this is of course only the opinion of one person. I might be completely wrong, so feel free to ignore me. Then again, I might have a point in some cases and if you are wondering why not more people read your blog, these things might have something to do with it, because maybe they annoy not only me. Who knows? I’m just sayin’ … ;)

So, here is my Top 13 of the most annoying things I’ve found in blogs recently:

1. PayPerPost (no link this time, they’re not worth it)

I mentioned that one already in my last TT, so I won’t re-hash my problems with it again in detail. My opinion in short: It sucks. Big time.

2. CAPTCHA boxes to verify your comments

This is wide-spread among Blogger blogs, but I know of some others who use it as well. I know comment spam is a nuisance and this might work well to keep the spammers out. Unfortunately it annoys the hell out of your human commenters. Why?

Because a) Especially in Blogger I usually need at least 2 tries to get this thing to accept my comment. I don’t know why that is, maybe I have poor eye-sight and type in the wrong code, or maybe it just doesn’t like me. I don’t care. It just annoys me.

b) This is in regards to other sites where the CAPTCHA code hast to be entered on a separate page after sending off the comment. Usually I leave a site after I have commented (the ones I read regularly, that is, because there I usually comment on the latest post and there is no reason to stay there after sending off my comment) - I can’t say how many times I had already left the site before this CAPTCHA crap popped open, so I ended up having to re-type and re-send my comment. Annoying.

There are better ways to combat comment spam. Get yourself a WordPress blog and activate the Akismet plugin and all that dancing around is not necessary anymore (I just saw on Lorelle’s blog that Akismet is available for many other platforms as well.). And I’m sure, there are also ways with Blogger blogs and other blogging platforms to avoid this stuff.

3. Websites with 2 or even 3 sidebars

I understand that some people want to cram as much information as possible into their sidebars, and so one often isn’t enough anymore and they end up using two. (Three is just nuts, and not worthy of any comment.) Now I don’t wanna add any more to the eternal debate about 2-column vs. 3-column blog designs. There are actually some designs that look quite good with 3 columns. Also, the annoyance factor mainly depends on what exactly you fill these sidebars with.

You see, the thing is: all the stuff in the sidebars distracts your readers from your main content, especially if it’s loud and colorful. Plus, and that’s the real irony here: often it is neither really interesting in the first place, nor in any way helpful for them to find their way around your page. Which leads me to:

4. Cluttered sidebars in general

Even if you only got one sidebar, it is not really a good idea to clutter it up with all kinds of gadgets and badges and stuff, that is generally of no particular interest for anybody except yourself.

What do I, as an average reader, look for in a sidebar of a blog? Well, there’s the categories, or maybe a tag cloud instead, a link to the archives could be interesting, and a blogroll (hopefully one with not much more than 200 links, see #5). These are the essentials. Everything else are already extras.

Of course I am not saying you should add nothing else to your sidebar (I’m not trying tell you what to goddamn do here in any case) - after all I have a couple other things in mine as well. I’m just saying, don’t overdo it. Does anybody really need to know what the weather is like in your place, or what your avatar looks like (that’s more something for your about-page, I’d say), or in exactly how many communities you are involved, or how many web movements or memes you joined? Or whatever else people clutter up their sidebars with. I think not.

5. Out-of-date Blogrolls and other link lists

We all are interested, when we read a blog regularly, to check out the links in the blog’s link section, or blogroll, or whatever that section is usually called, right? Why is that? Because we think, however wrongly, that this is a list of links the blog owner likes and therefore recommends. And if we like his blog, we might also like the other sites he obviously frequents regularly. Right? Wrong.
Because often, if you click through the whole list on somebody’s blog (yes, sometimes I actually do that), you will find loads of dead links, of blogs that were updated last in 2005, of addresses that don’t even exist anymore and lots of other unpleasant surprises. What that tells me is that the owner of such a list adds links without ever re-checking them to see if they still work. Lazy.
As a blog owner, how do you decide which links to add to this section? Do you just link indiscriminately to every page or blog that once sparked your interest, or whose owner commented on your blog? Or do you really want me to believe that you are keeping up with 200 different blogs? Yeah, right. Get a life.
I actually like checking out other people’s link lists, but it works much better if you keep them simple. And short. And if you want to keep a list of web resources, or any other kind of list that tends to get longer and longer and longer, just put it on an extra page. Don’t clutter up your sidebar with it.

6. No Home-button

This one should, thanks to ready-made and easily available, templates not be a very widspread problem anymore. But funnily, lots of Blogspot blogs still have it.
How often is it that you find a blog through a link on another page that points to an archive page? There you are then, reading that post, finding it interesting and wanting to check out the rest of the blog. Now, even if there is no extra button or link, in most websites a click on the blog title or on the header graphic will easily transport you back to the homepage.
But what if that doesn’t work? (As it doesn’t in many Blogspot blogs, and I’m not all too sure about normal Blogger blogs either.) And if you’re very unlucky, neither is there a link to the main archive page. So you manually delete the archive part of the address from the address line of your browser - in the hopes of getting back to the homepage and be able to navigate around from there. Of course, by that time I often already lost interest in the blog altogether.
Clumsy? Very. Annoying? You bet.

7. Obtrusive Ads

Ok, this is probably one of the most annoying things for me in any website, but especially in blogs. I understand about wanting to monetize your blog (if I think it usually works all too well is a wholly different question). The thing is, if you plaster the whole page with ads, it looks butt ugly. If it’s only the sidebar, I might be able to ignore it. But if there are ads above or even within the posts, or those floating things that open up over the whole page, it just pisses me off. I don’t want to scroll down half a page or have to close an ad-window before I even get to see your content. Also, flashing things or stuff that endlessly moves around make me run for the hills in under 5 seconds.
If you have noisy, flashy ads on your page, you better have killer content I find nowhere else on the web, because otherwise I just won’t bother trying to find my way through all the other crap on your page to try to read it.

8. Huge RSS buttons

rss_icon.gifThis is something I have come across a few times now. Here, for instance, or here. The worst examples I didn’t even bookmark - because I didn’t know I would need them again as a bad example. [Oh, and just because somebody apparently had a problem with my opinion in this point, I'd like to add here that I don't in any way want to criticize the blogs I linked to up there. (One of them I have actually subscribed to quite a while ago.) I just needed examples and these were the first two I stumbled upon while writing this post.]

Yes, I know you want me to subscribe to your RSS feed. Yes, it is very nice of you to make that option easily findable.

But, fuck it, I am not blind. So stop shoving that bloody button in my face. The likeliness of me actually subscribing to your blog does definitely not increase with the size of the stupid button. Concentrate on writing interesting and engaging content for your blog, and I will find a way to subscribe to your feed even if you don’t supply a button at all.

9. Whole rows of social bookmarking icons under each post

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And this is one of the less awful examples again! I don’t even know half the services listed here (and please don’t try to explain or recommend them to me - I am not interested).
Two words: traffic whore.
The stuff is bad enough in the sidebar. But some people add literally whole rows of them under each post, ostensibly to make it easier for you, the reader, to digg or stumble or otherwise submit this post to the appropriate social bookmarking site.
Like hell I will. Such stuff looks just desperate.

10. Preview anywhere

Do you know sites where everytime you move your cursor over a link a little window pops up that shows a preview of the target site? Which bloody idiot invented this awful, annoying, stupid crap? Please report to me so I can shoot you.

Not only doesn’t this useless little snapshot picture tell me anything of value about the particular site, it also usually pops up exactly over some text I want to read. And sometimes moving the cursor away isn’t enough to let it vanish again right away. Besides, usually you move the cursor right over the next fucking link.
Did I say PayPerPost was the most annoying thing? I was lying, this shit is right up there with it.

11. Dark Background

Again, this is highly subjective, but I just hate websites with light text on dark backgrounds. There are exceptions, but they are few and far between.
In my opinion dark background makes the text much harder to read, no matter how good the contrast is. Even with white text on black background I feel my eyes grow tired very quickly. Especially if you, like me, read blogs for hours at a time, it can become quite an annoyance. There is a reason, folks, why black text on white background became the default for every book and paper ever printed - and it’s not just because they were short on black ink, ya know?
Also, I just don’t think it looks nice, but that is just me again…

12. Auto-Play Music

Thank god, it doesn’t seem to be “in” anymore to embed background music on websites, but some poor souls are still left who think it’s funny. On MySpace, of course, it is just the done thing. But that’S just one more reason why MySpace sucks.

It’s all very nice if you want to entertain your readers with your favorite song. Problem is, I don’t usually share your taste in music. Besides, I usually already listen to my own music when I am working on my computer. Also, when I read blogs I have between 10 and 20 different browser tabs open (I open every link in a new tab and finish reading the original site first). So, when suddenly my own music is mixed in with some other song I have to scramble around to find the respective tab, and then hopefully find a button somewhere to turn the song off. If I don’t find one, the site is history anyway, but even if I can turn the music off it still annoys me and I will likely not come back.

13. Dead blogs or ones that are only barely alive

By which I mean, of course, the frequency with which they are updated. It annoys me no end if I stumble upon a blog that has some great posts, but was last updated sometime 2005. Or if a new post gets written every 3 months or so. Or there are 15 posts in one week and then silence for 4 weeks, another 5 posts, then half a year hiatus and so on.

That’s just useless. If you, like me, have the blog just for fun, nobody asks you to post 5 long articles every day. It’s fine if you don’t have much time and post only once or twice a week. But if you do, please try to be halfway consistent. It’s fine with me if I have to check on a blog only once every two weeks to find new posts. But if I have come back twice and there was nothing, you’re off my radar for good.

And if you tried blogging and found out it just wasn’t for you, or you don’t have time for it anymore, or you just don’t have anything to say: for god’s sake, delete your dead blog. It’s not that hard, really.

Another one of my pet peeves are repeated “I don’t know what to write about”-posts. We all have, at one time or another, posted one of them. Mine is not too long ago, actually. And, I guess, once in a while (according to Stephen Fry once in your life!) it is ok. But there are actually blogs out there that seem to consist of not much else than such posts. Little hint: if you can never think of anything to write about, writing may not be the best hobby for you, ya know? ^.^

TT #24: Thirteen new blog gadgets I found recently

samulli on September 20th, 2007

Thursday Thirteen Header Graphic - Firefly Starting

Of course, none of them are really new - for all I know everybody else might have been using them for years. I just call them new because they are new to me and I am still not certain most of them have any big value for me personally.

1. RSS feed subscription buttons or links (like the one above my own header picture)
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I know they have been around since forever (in terms of the internet probably since 1998 or so), but I never bothered with RSS feeds until just very recently. I always thought, if I like to read a blog I also want to visit it. I like blogs in part because of their design, which also implies that if I hate the design (especially if there are lots of ads) I will likely not come back very often, no matter how good you write. Well, all that is past now, thanks to RSS feeds. Because when I only read the feed I don’t see the blog’s design. I don’t see the ads. I only have to click through if I want to comment, and on many of the new blogs I read nowadays I don’t want to comment.

2. LibraryThing script showcasing random books from blog owners’ collection

This is one little gadget I obviously like, which is why I have it in my own sidebar. I use LibraryThing only to keep track of the last 200 books I have read and liked (although at the moment it also still lists some others of my collection, I will replace them over time), so after a few years it should show only my 200 all-time favorites. I also like to see this widget on other people’s sites, because I am always interested in finding new books to add to my already overwhelming Mount TBR.

3. MyBlogLog pictures of recent readers recent readers mybloglog widget

This is one of those things I regard as totally useless. The one I show here was taken randomly from another blog, because obviously I don’t have such a thing. This is actually one of the nicer varieties of this widget. There are other, uglier, much bigger versions around. I was just too lazy to look for one right now.

The widget supposedly shows you your recent readers. But of course, it only shows you the ones who have an account at MyBlogLog themselves and have uploaded a picture. The others are either ignored or it shows this black silhouette, whatever.

But what good is that anyway? It’s just one more of those hundreds of social bookmarking sites, where you can join a community. A community doing what exactly, is what I’d like to know? What is it good for? Except cluttering up your sidebar? I just don’t see the appeal.

4. FeedBurner

So, Feedburner burns your feeds. Please don’t ask me, what exactly that means. But apparently it’s the cool thing to do nowadays with your feeds.

The really cool thing is that I can monitor the number of my subscribers (which, for this blog, is surprisingly in the double digits - I still can’t believe it). and, and this is the reason I signed up in the first place, you can offer your feed by email as well, so people who don’t use an RSS reader can read it, too.

Also, you get all kinds of stats, which I have to still play around with a bit to make sense of them. and if you’re proud to have lots of subscribers you can also put nice little thingies like this on your site: feedb-icon.gif - this one is obviously not relating to my site. I will add something like this only if my subscriber count should ever break 100. In other words, probably never. ;o)

5. Google Analytics

I have so much more fun with that than I had with StatCounter. Firstly, because GA has just much more functions and tells you a lot more things about your visitors than the free version of SC does. Secondly, at least for my site, GA shows me more visitors. I don’t know why that is, but I choose to believe the statistics I like more, which is in this case GA’s. There’s even a plugin for WordPress, so that you don’t have to put the code into your template files by hand. I just love WP plugins.

6. StumbleUpon, Digg, del.icio.us, or any other of the gazillion social bookmarking sites out there.

I don’t have an account with any of them, and considering how much time I am wasting with reading blogs already, I am not sure I should sign up at all and risk finding even more good reads. Plus, I am not such a traffic whore that I would spend ages socializing and building a community and doing whatever just to get a few hundred more page impressions. Since I don’t monetize my blog, and I also have an offline life, it just isn’t worth the effort for me.

Besides, I am really not a community type of person. I have enough trouble to keep in touch with my real-life friends, so why should I join dozens of virtual communities? I would neglect them all in a matter of weeks anyway. That said, if I have a little more free time again, I might give StumbleUpon a try sometime. It’s always nice to find potential new favorite blogs.

7. BlogLines and Google Reader

Ever since I discovered RSS feeds I needed a reader as well. These two were the obvious choices to try. In the end I decided on Google Reader, mainly because I liked the interface better and I use Google all the time anyway, so I won’t need to remember yet another login and password.

8. Technorati tags and buttons

I am still not quite certain if I really need this (I mean, let’s be honest, I will never be one of the A-list bloggers, nor do I have the slightest inclination to even try, so why bother with Technorati at all?). I don’t even know yet how to interpret all the data Technorati can give me about my site. (What does this authority figure mean, for instance? Haven’t got a clue, but like to play around with it anyway.)

9. pay per post

Ok, this one is a thing I really really hate with a vengeance. In 95% of the cases reading the sentence “this is a sponsored post” or whatever it usually says, will not only make me disregard everything I read in this particular post, it will also in all probability make me leave this blog and never come back. I understand that many people want to make money with their blogs, and in an attempt to not plaster most of their site over with pesky ads that nobody ever clicks anyway, some people might think this is a good alternative.

Well, good luck, if you think it works for you. I read blogs, especially personal blogs (you know, the ones that are written just for fun and not mainly with profit in mind), because I am interested in the opinions and the outlook on life of the people who write them. If I see a sponsored post (especially if I notice this fact only after I have read to the end of the post) I just feel cheated. That’s not personal content in my eyes, that’s advertisement, pure and simple. If I know that you are paid to endorse a product, how can I trust what you have written? Because I don’t think people would usually write a bad thing about a product they’re reviewing. It’s just crap and one of the sure-fire ways to chase me away forever.

10. Donate to PayPal button
paypaldonatebutton.gif

Now I think, this is a hilarious idea. I wonder how often people, even in well-frequented blogs, really use those buttons to donate money to the blog-owner. If you’re interested to try it out yourself, I found a step-by-step instruction here.

11. My still beloved ScribeFire plugin,

Which I use incessantly just like I predicted in this post. This little thing makes posting so much more hassle-free and easy. Aditionally it allows me to save stuff as notes. Those don’t get published to the blog, but are just saved in a list in the browser. I use these notes instead of my bookmarks nowadays to save interesting links, because in a note I can also add a sentence or two about why I found it interesting in the first place, and I can remember on which site I found it, so I can give credit. Often the note is half a blog post already, so later I only have to go back and revise it a little before I can post it. The best plugin I have.

12. The CoComment Firefox plugin

I have found that one just today. Apparently it tracks all the comments you leave on other people’s blog, and the ensuing conversations.

I can’t say yet how well it works, but I thought it was just a great idea, especially in regards to TT. Because I don’t know how it is with you, but I can never remember on which sites I left comments that I might check again later to see if the blog owner answered me. You know, sometimes you ask questions in a comment, or there is a nice discussion going on and you tell yourself “I have to come back here later to see how it developed”. But, of course, if you have visited 20 other blogs meanwhile, you will just not be able to find the one you’re looking for again, unless you’re looking through them all once more.

This plugin now is supposed to help you keep track of all your comments. I will test it in the next few days and report back at a later date with my opinion of it.

13. The iFollow and the iReply movements

Both are pretty much self-explanatory. iFollow means that I have a plugin that deactivates the no_follow attribute for links in the comments. So, if you leave a comment on my site, it is a proper backlink to your site, one that search engines (and probably Technorati as well) will actually “count”.

iReply is about interacting with your visitors. It basically is the commitment to, as much as possible, reply to comments, and to encourage discussion.

And both have got nice buttons you can put in your sidebar.

ireply_litebg.gif I follow movement badge (this one even comes in several nice colors)

As you will undoubtedly have noticed, I have only one of them in my own sidebar. I do think, both of them are things worth encouraging. But for me, the iReply thing should be a thing one can take for granted at a blog. It is common courtesy to reply to comments, or at least acknowledge them. So, considering the fact that I want to keep my sidebar as clutter-free as possible, I abstain from adding this button, but I fully endorse the notion.

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TT #23: Thirteen things I did last week

samulli on September 12th, 2007
I have been busy again this week, so I just should have skipped TT this time. But for some reason I am stubbornly refusing to do that, and instead keep coming up with last minute topics like this one. Well, here we go:

  1. As you might have noticed I changed the design of the blog. After reading many new blogs recently I thought it was high time for a change here. Those blogs have a lot to answer for, but that’s a topic for another post.
  2. To do that I have looked at about 547.843 different WordPress themes all over the net. Most of which, let me tell you, look basically the same and not even very good, but that is a topic for another different post altogether. I am very happy with the one I chose in the end and I hope that you like it, too. If not, well, too bad.
  3. I have come to know that I was accepted for the refresher course in molecular biology for which I had an interview a few weeks ago. So it looks like I will start studying again at the beginning of October.
  4. Because that course is gonna take place in Leipzig I will have to move there, so I have begun looking for a flat.
  5. Because I wasn’t sure if I even could afford this bloody course I had a talk with my case manager at the employment office about the financing. He didn’t sound too promising to put it mildly.
  6. A day later I heard from the foundation that’s running the course that they will pay for my accomodation, so I guess I can make it work financially. It’s gonna be tight, but that’s nothing new to me.
  7. So, in the light of me having forgotten just about every damn thing I ever learned about molecular biology, I went to the library and took out some books about genetics.
  8. Now I only have to stop procrastinating and start to actually read them. Did I mention that I was never really all that interested in genetics in the first place? (Please don’t ask why I am doing this course then! I have no fucking clue, to be honest.)
  9. At the same time I took out a book called “PHP for Dummies” because I had the sudden urge to finally begin learning all this PHP crap so I could design my next template for this website myself. (I don’t have to mention that I didn’t start to read that one either, do I?)
  10. Instead I hang around on ebay for hours, because I had the fixed idea that I needed a new laptop for this whole study thing. One that runs Windows XP, which my old little one doesn’t.
  11. Today I finally realized that, even though the going rate for the ones I was looking for is only about 300 Euro I just plain can’t afford it. And really, I don’t actually need another one. None of those things has a touchscreen anyway like my little one does, so why should I exchange it for one that’s faster, but not nearly so much fun to play with?
  12. I just finished downloading all 4 seasons of Blackadder, so that I will have something fun to watch when I am hanging out all alone at night in my flat in Leipzig in a few weeks. - 12 hours of glorious british humor, I had giggling fits already while watching the first 2 episodes this afternoon.
  13. Now I can’t think of one more bloody thing to write here, so I just won’t. :)

Oh yeah, and some of you will no doubt be happy to see that the comment link in this new template is below the post - exactly where it is apparently supposed to be. Isn’t that just marvelous?