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Archive for the 'Blogging' Category

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Sunday, June 10th, 2007

Cheapest zoloft, ubuntu In my quest to whip my feed reader’s Ruby/Rails related content into shape a bit, cheapest zoloft, I made a little research to find out which Ruby/Rails blogs are the most popular at the moment. Cheapest zoloft, I had given up on following most of the blogs systematically a long time ago - it is becoming increasingly hard to keep track of even the aggregators, cheapest zoloft, not to talk about the blogs themselves. Cheapest zoloft, There are hundreds of Ruby/Rails blogs out there right now (I am talking about the ones found on the few most popular aggregators - in reality there must be much more of them), cheapest zoloft, so it is clear that you need to pick carefully - unless you happen to be a well-paid, cheapest zoloft, full time Ruby/Rails blog reader (in which case you still would have to crank a lot to do your work properly).

Cheapest zoloft, OK, cheapest zoloft, enough nonsense for today - let’s see the results counting down from the 10th place! If you are interested in the method they were created with, cheapest zoloft, or a longer, cheapest zoloft, top 30 list from technorati and alexa, cheapest zoloft, check out this blog entry.

Cheapest zoloft, 10. Cheapest zoloft, http://weblog.jamisbuck.org/ by Jamis Buck.

jamisbuck

Cheapest zoloft, Jamis Buck “is a software developer who has the good fortune to be both employed by 37signals and counted among those who maintain the Ruby on Rails web framework”. Cheapest zoloft, He is mostly blogging about (surprise, cheapest zoloft, surprise!) Rails - of course on a very high level, cheapest zoloft, which could be expected from a Rails core developer. Cheapest zoloft, Very insightful posts on ActiveRecord, cheapest zoloft, Capistrano and other essential Rails topics delivered in a professional way.

Cheapest zoloft, 9. Cheapest zoloft, http://weblog.rubyonrails.org by the Rails core team

weblog_rubyonrails

Cheapest zoloft, This is the “default” Ruby on Rails blog, cheapest zoloft, used for announcements, cheapest zoloft, sightings, cheapest zoloft, manuals and whatever else the RoR team finds interesting :-).

Cheapest zoloft, 8. Cheapest zoloft, http://www.slash7.com by Amy Hoy.

slash7

Cheapest zoloft, This is a really cool little site - Amy is a very gifted writer and designer, cheapest zoloft, publishing very insightful articles as well as the nicest (hands down!) cheat sheets about different Web2.0, cheapest zoloft, Ajax, cheapest zoloft, Rails and that sort of stuff. Cheapest zoloft, Definitely worth checking out!

Cheapest zoloft, 7. Cheapest zoloft, http://errtheblog.com by PJ Hyett and Chris Wanstrath.

err_the_blog

Cheapest zoloft, A very serious blog of two Rails-geeks about advanced topics (but very well explained - so if you are not totally green (#00FF00) you should do fine). Cheapest zoloft, Among other things, cheapest zoloft, they have contributed Sexy Migrations to Rails recently.

Cheapest zoloft, 6. Cheapest zoloft, http://nubyonrails.com/ by Geoffrey Grosenbach

nubyonrails

Cheapest zoloft, Geoffrey is the author of more than twenty of Rails plugins, cheapest zoloft, (including gruff, cheapest zoloft, my favorite graph drawing gem), cheapest zoloft, a horde of professional-quality articles and the PeepCode screencast site. Cheapest zoloft, Do I need to say more?!

Cheapest zoloft, 5. Cheapest zoloft, http://redhanded.hobix.com/ by _why the lucky stiff.

redhanded

Cheapest zoloft, _why is probably the most interesting guy in the Ruby community. Cheapest zoloft, He is the author of (among tons of other things) Why’s Poignant Guide to Ruby, cheapest zoloft, HPricot, cheapest zoloft, the coolest Ruby HTML parser, cheapest zoloft, Try Ruby! (a must see!) and Hackety Hack, cheapest zoloft, for aspiring wannabe programmers who want to hack like in the movies! The list goes on and on… Cheapest zoloft, This guy never stops. Cheapest zoloft, If someone will ever invent the perpetuum mobile, cheapest zoloft, he will be it (in Ruby, cheapest zoloft, of course). Cheapest zoloft,

Cheapest zoloft, 4.http://hivelogic.com/ by Dan Benjamin.

hivelogic

Cheapest zoloft, Dan’s recent work include Cork’d, cheapest zoloft, a web2.0 wine community site or the A List Apart publishing system. Cheapest zoloft, He does great podcasts with various guys.

Cheapest zoloft, 3. Cheapest zoloft, http://mephistoblog.com/ by Rick Olson and Justin Palmer

mephisto

Cheapest zoloft, Personally I was quite surprised that a blog concentrating on such a narrow topic (in this case the mephisto blogging system) could grab the 3rd place - so I have checked both alexa and technorati by hand just to be sure, cheapest zoloft, and it seems that everything is OK - mephistoblog is ranked very high on both of them, cheapest zoloft, justifying this position. Cheapest zoloft, After all, cheapest zoloft, mephisto is the leading blog system of Rails!

Cheapest zoloft, 2. Cheapest zoloft, http://www.rubyinside.com/ by Peter Cooper.

rubyinside

Cheapest zoloft, This blog is my absolute favorite from this top 10 list (actually, cheapest zoloft, from all the Ruby blogs I have encountered so far). Cheapest zoloft, I am definitely with Amy Hoy, cheapest zoloft, who said If you had to subscribe to just one Ruby blog, cheapest zoloft, it should be this one. Cheapest zoloft, If you would like to know what’s happening in the Ruby/Rails community, cheapest zoloft, rubyinside is the place to check. Cheapest zoloft, If there is no new post here, cheapest zoloft, it’s because most probably nothing happened!

Cheapest zoloft, And the winner is: http://www.loudthinking.com/ by David Heinemeier Hansson.

loudthinking

Cheapest zoloft, Well, cheapest zoloft, what should I add? David is the author of Ruby on Rails, cheapest zoloft, so no wonder his blog topped the list!

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Conclusion
It’s interesting to note that nearly all the blogs listed here are mostly pure Rails ones - rubyinside (mixed Ruby/Rails) and redhanded (pure Ruby) being the two exceptions. Cheapest zoloft, It would be interesting to generate such a list for Ruby blogs - though I am not sure how. Cheapest zoloft, The sources I have used (most notably rubycorner) aggregate both Ruby and Rails blogs) - so it seems there are much more Rails bloggers out there (or they are much better (with the exception of _why) than the Ruby bloggers).

Cheapest zoloft, I would really like to hear your opinion on this little experiment - whether you think it makes sense or it is completely off, cheapest zoloft, how could it be improved in the future, cheapest zoloft, what features could be added etc. Cheapest zoloft, If I’ll receive some positive feedback, cheapest zoloft, I think I will work on the algorithm a bit more, cheapest zoloft, and run it once in say every 3 months to see what’s happening around the Ruby/Rails blogosphere. Cheapest zoloft, Let me know what do you think!


If one is thinking about creating a site for affiliate marketing to earn some extra cash they should thoroughly research a few things. Cheapest zoloft, To start with look for a cheap company that sell domains for your domain name registration. Cheapest zoloft, Next get a cheap, cheapest zoloft, yet reliable web hosting company to host your site on. Cheapest zoloft, These can be easily distinguished as they hire many cisco certified professionals. Cheapest zoloft, The generally carry 642-371 certifications. Cheapest zoloft, Then look into online backup for your files to avoid data loss. Cheapest zoloft, More over perform directory submission to get indexed in the search engines. Cheapest zoloft, Getting a+ certificate yourself is not a bad idea since it will help you get through the process with much ease.


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Wednesday, January 10th, 2007

For the sake of future comparison, cheapest viagra, out of plain fun and for just whatever else, cheapest viagra, here are some statistics of my first about-half-a-year of blogging:

Global Statistics

  1. 1, cheapest viagra,057, cheapest viagra,638 successful requests for an average of approximately 4000 requests/day
  2. 622, cheapest viagra,776 page views for an average of approximately 2300 page views/day
  3. 34 posts and 364 comments, cheapest viagra, contained within 15 categories. Cheapest viagra, This statistically means a post gets about 11 comments on average
  4. Data transferred: 10.54 GB, cheapest viagra, which is a daily average of approximately 40 MB
  5. Current AdSense CPM: 2.04$ (is this good or bad? It is hard to get such info on the net…)

Content

  1. Most popular post (i.e. Cheapest viagra, most page hits): Data extraction for Web 2.0: Screen scraping in Ruby/Rails (nearly 10.000 reads)
  2. Most debated/controversial post (i.e. Cheapest viagra, most comments): Sometimes less is more (45 comments)
  3. Most referenced article: Install Internet Explorer on Ubuntu Dapper in 3 easy steps (9 references)
  4. Best runner-up: Implementing ‘15 Exercises for Learning a new Programming Language’

Platforms

  1. 57% Windows (quite surprising for a site where the most popular search terms were ‘ubuntu ruby rails’ and ‘dapper ruby install’ :-))
  2. 27% Linux
  3. 16% Mac

Browsers

  1. 74% Firefox & Mozilla
  2. 14% Internet Explorer (83% IE 6.0, cheapest viagra, 16% IE 7.0)
  3. 7% Safari
  4. 3% Opera

Top 5 referring sources

  1. google.com
  2. direct
  3. stumbleupon.com
  4. dzone.com
  5. del.icio.us

Given that rubyrailways.com is my first attempt at blogging, cheapest viagra, I am studying Ruby for just a few months now (I even started this blog earlier than I wrote my first Ruby script), cheapest viagra, I have really little time for blogging and that I am not a native speaker, cheapest viagra, these figures are not that bad I guess :-). Cheapest viagra, Of course I would like to improve them even more, cheapest viagra, so please leave a comment with suggestions on this - what would you like to see here in 2007?

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Friday, September 29th, 2006

Tagline: Blogging is a very easy looking activity, cheap tramadol, until you actually begin with it…

Most probably even the irregular readers of rubyrailways have noticed a 3 month period of silence during the summer, cheap tramadol, which has just ended a few days ago. Cheap tramadol, In my opinion it is generally not a very good idea to temporarily abandon a blog, cheap tramadol, without even announcing a summer holiday or posting a note like “to be continued after an undefined period of blogger’s block” or something. Cheap tramadol, Why did I allow it happen then?

Well, cheap tramadol, there are a handful of reasons for this: summer holidays, cheap tramadol, though days at the work, cheap tramadol, lot of stuff to do on my PhD but mainly a kind of a blogger’s crisis. Cheap tramadol, Although all the reasons are very interesting, cheap tramadol, I would like to elaborate on the last one a bit.

The first problem stems from the relative success of my previous entries: Tutorials like Install Internet Explorer on Ubuntu Dapper in 3 easy steps, cheap tramadol, Data extraction for Web 2.0: Screen scraping in Ruby/Rails or Getting Ruby on Rails up and running on Ubuntu Dapper were quite popular and set a standard which was not easy to top (or at least to maintain) in terms of equally interesting topics. Unfortunately I can pursue Ruby, cheap tramadol, Rails and even screen scraping/web extraction only in my spare time which is a scarce resource (it’s kind of hard to work full time, cheap tramadol, roll a PhD and blog simultaneously :-)) and therefore I do not bump into an interesting topic just every second day. Cheap tramadol, However, cheap tramadol, this eventually got me into a kind-of an inverse Concorde-effect: If I have waited a week, cheap tramadol, then I can wait another to deliver something sexy. Cheap tramadol, After a month: Now that I have waited a month, cheap tramadol, I surely have to come up with something really juicy… Cheap tramadol, You get the idea.

I believe I am not the only one around with this thinking pattern, cheap tramadol, and I am not sure how are others handling this problem, cheap tramadol, but I have decided to give up this habit - in the future I would like to blog regularly, cheap tramadol, even at the cost that not every post will be a top-notch blockbuster :-).

The second problem is that I am kind of a renaissance guy: I am interested in new technologies, cheap tramadol, programming, cheap tramadol, science research, cheap tramadol, economics, cheap tramadol, reading books just about everything, cheap tramadol, photography, cheap tramadol, traveling, cheap tramadol, computer games, cheap tramadol, sports… However, cheap tramadol, since rubyrailways is my first attempt at blogging, cheap tramadol, I am quite unsure how to deal with this amount of information: what should be the ratio of not-necessarily-correlated topics (e.g. Cheap tramadol, Ruby, cheap tramadol, travelling and PhD research). Cheap tramadol, I am nearly sure though that it is not a good idea to blog about everything, cheap tramadol, since then every post will be uninteresting for most of the readers. Cheap tramadol,

Yes, cheap tramadol, I know that categories were invented to workaround this problem. Cheap tramadol, However, cheap tramadol, in my experience most of the people today are using feed aggregators and/or personal start pages like bloglines, cheap tramadol, netvibes or pageflakes, cheap tramadol, and hence are facing this problem nevertheless. Cheap tramadol, Yes, cheap tramadol, they could ignore the posts that are not interesting to them, cheap tramadol, but after doing so a few times they will potentially ignore your whole blog. So how to find the golden mean?

A possible solution is to have a separate blog for everything: In my case this would mean at least a software development (mainly Ruby/Rails), cheap tramadol, general technology, cheap tramadol, Linux/Ubuntu, cheap tramadol, Science/PhD research and a travelling blog. Cheap tramadol, Well, cheap tramadol, I certainly would not have the time to keep up all of them since I am struggling even with rubyrailways :-)… Cheap tramadol, I could of course ignore what people think about my blog and just write it to myself, cheap tramadol, but that would deprive me from knowing what other people think about the things I am after, cheap tramadol, which is a very valuable information for me.

I would be very much interested in your opinion on this topic: How do you solve this ‘feature creep’ on your blog - by maintaining more blogs, cheap tramadol, focusing on just one topic and ignoring the others, cheap tramadol, or trying to balance somehow?

Please leave me a comment or send me a mail, cheap tramadol, I’d really like to hear your opinion…

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