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Monday, December 16, 2002

Trent Lott tripped up by Weblogs? I hope so... Davenet thinks so. This is great.. the info leakage from the 'trenches' to the 'top' is a force all of a sudden....
Comments 10:33:57 PM    

Strange: mesh on mx is a 'warez-driven site: mesh describes it self as "News, resources, info and links on Macromedia MX, with a focus on Macromedia Flash MX  from the Macromedia Flash Community Manager", but its biggest referer by (very) far is Macromedia MX Crackz and Serialz. Every link, offering 'Cracks' and 'Serial Numbers' and 'Warez' goes to mesh. Smart marketing? Or something a bit more sinister...? This showed up while I was researching Weblog metrics...
Comments 10:17:33 PM    

Bloggers come in from the cold my last column for 2002 in The Independent. 'It was the worst of times, it was the worst of times. "It" was the seemingly everlasting tech bust of the year 2002.' But wait 'til next year...
Comments 10:05:40 PM    

A new Internet service, Jon Udell's Library Lookup, is the subject of this Dylan Tweney post. It's a way to search your local library from your browser toolbar using bookmarklets...
Comments 8:38:47 PM    

Weblog Metrics: 'bots redux. Bernie Goldbach writes: "If you do this kind of analysis, ensure you are considering page views and not hits. Spiders will normally grab HTML files, real visitors will grab entire pages. On my blog site, a real person generates at least 13 hits every for every visit. A spider normally generates no more than 2 hits per visit as good spiders take robots.txt along with the page.

"I did a rough analysis of my blog traffic for December 11, 2002. At first pass, 350 blog pages were served. Nearly 60 per cent of those pages from my blog directory were requested by robots. That indicates I am at the lower end of the information feeding chain, getting more bots than bodies."

Bernie's remark and Henry Copeland's comment got me digging through www.gulker.com's logs. On busy days, there are usually a few heavy referrers (likely humans) and a gaggle of referrers with one or two accesses (likely 'bots) and a roughly equal number of search engine requests (likely humans - I don't think the 'bots crawl each other).

Which is to say Bernie and Henry are right: 'bots make up a lot of blog traffic. The relatively heavy robot traffic isn't a bad thing: if the 'bots weren't indexing your pages, you wouldn't be getting the search referrers. On gulker.com this morning, there were 42 referrers at noon: The Independent had sent 79 hits, Bernie's site had sent 5 and the rest were either referred by search engine results or appeared to be 'bots (18 searches and 21 'bots). The logs showed 1845 pages downloaded in 869 visits by 656 unique hosts and identified 'known robots' as 25% of visitor paltforms.

This is roughly consistent with gulker.com's referrers when I looked early Sunday morning, when there were no large 'human' results: the number of 'bot crawls was a bit larger than the number of people who had come in following a link from a Google or other search engine.

So the 'bot crawls are the 'tax' you pay to get the search referrals. And it takes one-and-a-fraction 'bot crawls to land one human visit. So, again, it appears inbound links are important for non-celeb sites: more links mean more crawls mean more people find you through searches.

BTW, I have been doing an analysis of robot 'noise' which has necesitated restarting my logs process... will relay when I have a better handle on it. Bernie by the way, has an interesting ISP situation... he pays for a share of 512K by buying his provider 2 pints of Guinness a week... costs him about $70 a year... good deal! Any takers in Menlo Park?
Comments 1:06:24 PM    


CalTrain style: now that I'm a commuter again, I've been noticing the rich set of styles (not to mention people) that makes up the commute corps that favors CalTrain. Here's a fellow I've seen a couple of times, who favors a full sized keyboard on his laptop. I wonder if he has RSI problems or this is just how he likes to work?
Comments 12:12:30 PM    

Northern California's weather, complete with numerous power failures, seems to have clobbered Userland's servers. www.gulker.com's pages are loading slowly because the javascript that appends the number of comments that have been posted is timing out trying to reach radiocomments.userland.com. Dave Winer says power has been out for 22 hours at his place...
Comments 7:49:35 AM    



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Updated 4/16/04; 12:13:28 PM

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Updated 4/16/04; 12:13:28 PM


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