Google Reader Stats II
I love Google Reader and like to check out my trends every so often to see how many items I’ve been reading & sharing. My guess was that the number of read, shared and starred items would have decreased over the last 5 months. I spend more time getting my information from sources like Twitter & FriendFeed and just assumed that I was stealing it from Google Reader. Apparently, that isn’t the case.
It would have been fruitful to have installed a monitoring app on my system to determine what I have given up over the last 5 months. I suspect now that Wikipedia, Snopes, and Facebook have taken the brunt of the loss.
The last time I posted my stats (June 18th) I had read 4,672 items from 110 subscriptions, starring 22, sharing 217 and emailing 4 over the previous 30 days.
In the last 30 days, I have read 6,053 items (29.5% increase) from 116 subscriptions (5% increase), starring 56 (154% increase), sharing 209 (3.6% decrease), and emailing 34 (675% increase).
I have also noticed that what I am sharing has changed a bit over time. Initially I was focused on GTD and lifehacks, now I don’t really have a strategy other than sharing what I find interesting.
Recommendations weren’t in my top 10 last time, now scobleizer.com’s recommendations & chrisbrogan.com’s recommendations are high on the list. Probably one of the reasons I find FriendFeed & Twitter so interesting.
I am not sharing items more frequently than I used too, but I am starring & emailing them more often. I typically star items to reread and/or research and email those that someone else will find interesting. While I add feeds on a regular basis, I also prune them frequently too and have resulted in only a net gain of 6 feeds during the last 5 months.
There is a tech focus to what I am reading & sharing right now, it might be time to expand my RSS subscriptions. However, most of the non-tech info (politics, sports, news, general interest) I read comes from FriendFeed and Twitter, so maybe I don’t need to broaden my RSS horizons just yet.
If you are a Google Reader fan, it’s worth taking a look at your trends, if only to get to know yourself a little better.
Windows Live Writer CTP
Late last year I posted about my first impression of Windows Live Writer -- to summarize, I was pretty impressed. I’ve used it numerous times over the last 6 months to write and post entries to the blog and it has worked very well for me.
Microsoft has released a Technical Preview with some pretty snazzy new additions. Frederic @ The Last Podcast has already covered the best ones:
1) Improved Category Control (now you can search)
2) Word Count
3) Auto Link Glossary (auto adds links to popular terms that you’ve previously linked to, like FriendFeed)
4) Lightbox support (if your site uses lightbox)
5) New image controls (like tilt)
I was already impressed with Windows Live Writer and these new features seal the deal. Tip of the hat to Frederic for posting about the Technical Preview and thereby bringing it to my attention.
Blogging Stats
According to the BIGresearch Simultaneous Media Survey this is how U.S. bloggers stack up against the national average (adults 18+).
- Slightly younger [37.6 years old vs 44.8 years old]
- Slightly better edicated [14.3 years vs 14.2 years]
- Slightly lower income [$55,819 vs $56,811]
Practically a dead heat with the median.
The ethnical breakout of bloggers versus national average:
- White/Caucasian [69.7% vs 76.1%]
- Hispanic [20% vs 14.8%]
- African American [12.2% vs 11.4%]
- Asian [3.7% vs 2.0%]
Of the 26% of U.S. citizen who indicate they blog at least occansionally:
- Gender [53.7% Male - 46.3% Female]
- Marital Status [44.7% Married]
[via MediaPost]
WordPress Plugins Directory
Jeremy over at ShoeMoneyâ„¢ posted on "eye opener" for me regarding public browsing of the WordPress plugins directory. As you can see via Google, many folks aren't as secure as they probably should be.
I immediately checked and my directory was open to public browsing. Using the instructions Jeremy posted about modifying the .htaccess file, I have resolved the issue. Thanks Jeremy!





