TOPIC: OVERKILL
An alternative use for Woopra
4th August 2008While the once a day reporting cycle of Google Analytics is all very fine, the availability of real time data does have its advantages. WordPress.com's Stats plugin goes some way to serving the need, only for Woopra to trump it in every way apart from a possible overkill in the amount of information that it makes available. The software remains extremely useful despite being in the beta phase and occasionally crashing.
One of its uses is seeing if there are people visiting your website at a time when you might be thinking of making a change like upgrading WordPress. Timing such activities to avoid a clash is a win-win situation: a better experience from your visitors and more reliable updates for you. After all, it's effortless to make a poor impression and an unreliable site will do that faster than anything else, so it's paramount that your visitors do not get on the receiving end of updates, even if they are all for the better.
Correcting or updating blog posts
29th November 2007Recently, I have grown to notice that certain bloggers are not removing old content from a blog, only striking it through using something like CSS. Though there is a place for this, it does strike me as overkill sometimes and can look untidy. Sometimes, that lack of neatness is a trade-off, since the highlighting of a correction itself conveys a message. While I have been known to tweak posts immediately after publishing without leaving the previous content on view, my changes generally are readability improvements more than anything else. Typos and spelling mistakes also get corrected like this; nobody needs them highlighted for all to see. I am not trying to fool anyone and, if I want to update the content, I either add another post or use another tactic that I have seen others use: updates at the bottom of the post that are denoted as such. It's another transparent approach that preserves the authenticity of the piece.