Archive for ‘Online’

29
Sep
2009
Categories
Online

Not such a steady decline

Something is amiss.

Look at this:

Web visitor stats

That nice big peak at the beginning is the regular number of unique visitors a day I was getting at blagger.co.uk. The sudden dip was the point where it was up and down for a few hours as I changed servers and, when the switch was over, it all went back up to where it was before.

Breathe a sigh of relief.

But since then it’s been a sudden, dramatic decline that has now pretty much bottomed out, leaving me with just 5% of the number of daily visitors I used to get before the switch.

‘Move to our professional hosting package,’ they had said. ‘It’s easy, and you won’t trip your bandwidth limits any more.’

Little did I know that the reason I wouldn’t trip it was that moving servers (while keeping the domain and everything else the same) would kill the hits.

That makes the increased bandwidth somewhat redundant, doesn’t it.

17
Aug
2009
Categories
Online

Twitter estimates

From the BBC:

2009-bbc-twitter.gif

Really? As little as 40%?

Apparently ‘only 8.7% of messages could be said to have “value” as they passed along news of interest.’

24
Mar
2009
Categories
Online
Tags

Google Street View banished from London

What a lot of fuss has been made over Google Street View. Perhaps I’m only saying that because it’s not taken a picture of my twitching curtains yet. Seems the London spies were warned about the camera car’s approach as it headed up the Westway, though…

Google Street View

06
Feb
2009
Categories
Online, Television

One of those days…

Have you ever had one of those days…

I love the way that the woman at the desk doesn’t even look around.

22
Jan
2009
Categories
Media, Online

Obama’s inauguration

It’s a couple of days now since Obama took office and the dust has settled. On the day itself, we watched the inauguration at work, sat at our desks with Sky’s excellent HD stream in a window in the corner as we got on with our work. Very impressive. It shamed the BBC.

Talk is that the event provided a much-needed boost in newspaper sales right around the world, probably on account of people buying extra copies to keep, but with newspaper circulations in seemingly terminal decline you have to wonder whether Obama’s will be the last-ever front-page inauguration. When more readers turn from paper to pixel every day, there can’t possibly be as many print-based news outlets left when president 45 takes the oath.

Does that matter? Probably not. There’s something nice about holding printed material, but you can’t beat the immediacy of the web and, let’s face it, news outlets are information producers at the end of the day, not printing firms. A lot of them don’t even own their own presses.

So if we’re going to start collecting home pages rather than front pages in the future, what does this year’s coverage tell us about the future?

The Guardian provided exceptional coverage, redesigning its front page around lunchtime to give the main story almost all of the space above the fold. This was updated throughout the course of the ceremony and supplemented by a slideshow gallery and an offer of live video.

2009-obama-1.jpg
The Guardian in the morning, and the afternoon

CNN did the same thing, but not to quite the same extent. It still changed its regular front page to give the main story more prominence but it didn’t have the impact of the Guardian’s approach.

2009-obama-2.jpg
CNN before and after the inauguration

Al-Jazeera didn’t give the story much prominence on its front page at all. You had to click through to the Americas section to find its full treatment.

2009-obama-3.jpg
Al-Jazeera relegated most of its coverage to a sub-page

Pravda, the most recognisable Russian news source, wasn’t entirely unbiassed in its coverage. Obama got the top billing on its English-language pages, but the tone was more opinion-led than factual:

Barack Obama takes office as Republicans’ scapegoat
USA’s new President Barack Obama is taking office January 20. George W Bush was a big headache for the whole world, although his successor does not seem to be a man who can become the saviour of the great nation. Those thinking that the USA will have many positive changes in its politics after Obama comes to power think it wrong. It touches upon the US-Russian relations too. The Republicans simply decided to move over to make Obama become an intermediate figure. John McCain was too conservative to win. If Obama does not manage to extricate the nation from the crisis in two or three years, the Reps will unveil their real candidate.
Obama can hardly be described as Russia’s friend

The next biggest story on the page was about Hillary’s appointment as Secretary of State:

Hillary Clinton to bring four years of war as Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton as the US Secretary of State will not change anything. The colour of the skin does not change the essence of aggressive politics. She definitely enjoys great respect in the United States as a woman who returned to big politics after the infamous scandal with her husband. Unlike Condoleezza Rice, Clinton has a more subtle perception of the moment. She realises that life is not based on the American dream but follows a completely different motto: ‘We either swim or drown’.

2009-obama-6.jpg
Pravda’s approach was more opinion-based

Of the UK’s three main broadcasters, the BBC, ITV and Sky, Sky won out. Its top strip, which takes up roughly the same amount of screen space as the Guardian’s, was a bit uncomfortable as it didn’t really have enough content to fill it out, but it did make an ‘event’ of the story, unlike its competitors.

2009-obama-4a.jpg

The BBC didn’t depart greatly from its regular template, which was a shame as it has knocked the right-hand section of headlines down to give important stories full width in the past, but I guess those headlines, relating to the inauguration, were still pretty important.

2009-obama-4b.jpg

ITV’s showing was the poorest.

2009-obama-4c.jpg

The best before-and-after changes were those on the White House website itself. At the end of the Bush era it was a boring Web 1.0 design where the content was fighting the boxes and furniture for attention. It lacked any clear heirarchy. Ugh:

2009-obama-5a.jpg

With Obama installed it was colourful, inviting, and somewhere you might actually want to visit. There’s even a blog:

2009-obama-5b.jpg

George W Bush’s personal site wasn’t much better than the White House one. You’d think that it would be trumpeting what he considers the best achievements of his time in office, but instead it was selling calendars. And it didn’t even have his name at the top of the page, opting instead for the Republican National Committee:

2009-obama-7.jpg
The scene at georgewbush.com

In all, I’ve got 80 screen grabs from the day of the inauguration itself, and others from the day before and the day after, and they’re interesting to look at now that it’s all over. Whether they’ll ever have the same meaning as a newspaper front page, only time will tell. At the moment, though, they do little more than illustrate how different outlets covered one of the most important stories of American history.

2009-obama-comp-1.jpg2009-obama-comp-2.jpg2009-obama-comp-3.jpg2009-obama-comp-4.jpg2009-obama-comp-5.jpg2009-obama-comp-6.jpg

20
Dec
2008
Categories
Online
Tags

Dogs are stupid

If ever we needed proof:

(Via)

09
Dec
2008
Categories
Online

Hairdryer prank

The ultimate case of don’t try this at home. Very funny, though.

06
Nov
2008
Categories
Online
Tags

Two Photoshop portrait processing tricks

15
Oct
2008
Categories
Online

Building art

I am addicted to Photofunia, which lets you make quick and dirty art from your photos like a true Photoshop-wannabe.

Look – here’s me on a building:

Nik on a building

And here I am during the last depression:

2008-nik-depression.jpg

09
Oct
2008
Categories
Online
Tags
,

Simon’s (real) cat

Simon’s cat is fantastic. It’s a line-drawn cartoon of a mischievous cat that for anyone who has a cat of their own has more than a little truth to it.

Well now someone has filmed the real life equivalent – a time lapse of how your cat uses you as a climbing frame all night long if you let it sleep on your bed (as we do). It just goes to show how right Simon is about his naughty little cat.

The live-action time-lapse:

And the original Simon’s cat:

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