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Money for nothing

A Pipe and a Keyboard Posted on May 25, 2010 by RichardMay 25, 2010

About three years ago, I joined up with Google AdSense.

I installed the software on two sites and sat back to wait for the money to roll in.

I don’t like advertisements at the best of times, and ads on websites can be particularly annoying, but I hoped it would provide a little extra revenue, so I put my principles to one site. 

Sure enough, the ads looked horrible.

After a couple of years, I hadn’t made much more than about a hundred and fifty dollars, so I decided that I would remove the function from one of the sites [Head Rambles], and let the other site tick over.

Of course, the mere trickle of income dried up even more, and I decided recently that the whole thing just wasn’t worth the bother.  I decided to scrap Google AdSense completely so that my conscience could be clear once more.

I went into the other site to disable the plugin.  There wasn’t one.  I realised I must have hard coded the script in, so I went to the source code.  There was no script.  I realised that I had rewritten the site some time ago, and must have forgotten to insert the Google AdSense script into the new code.

So now I have no sites using Google AdSense.  But for some strange reason, there is still a trickle of income.  It’s not much – I made $0.84 last month!  According to Google, the income is from both the original sites, but neither have the code, or are displaying ads.

I don’t know where the cash is coming from, but I won’t bother closing my account.

If nothing else, it amuses me.

Posted in Tech stuff | 6 Replies

Stumbleupon

A Pipe and a Keyboard Posted on May 17, 2010 by RichardMay 17, 2010

I confess I know little about Stumbleupon.

I know the general principle – you like something, you Stumble it – but it still baffles me.

A couple of years ago, an article in Head Rambles was Stumbled.   The effect was virtually instantaneous and a little alarming.  My hosting company phoned me to say they were on alert because of traffic to the server, it was that bad (or good, depending on your point of view).

Since then, that article has ridden through several Stumble Storms, as I call them.  None has been as powerful as the original, but they still cause massive traffic.

Stumble Graph 1 The graph above clearly shows the initial storm on October ‘08.  The majority of the little stalagmite peaks after that are mini-storms.  They appear to occur at random intervals and random intensity.

There is a storm in progress as I write this.

Stumble2

The graph above shows hourly traffic over a seven day period.  The storm started at around eleven last night and is easing off now, but the effect is very clear.  As storms go, it was a very minor one, but I’m not complaining.

What does baffle me is where these storms originate.  I have searched Stumbleupon and can find no mention of Head Rambles.  Presumably though there is a page somewhere that people are seeing?  Has it risen up the ranks again for a brief moment of glory? 

I have a lot to learn about this Internet lark!

Posted in Blogging, Tech stuff | Leave a reply

Copying a WP site into WPMU

A Pipe and a Keyboard Posted on May 11, 2010 by RichardMay 9, 2016

I look after nine blogs.

Six of them are on my own servers and three have their own hosting.  After my last post, I thought I would try an experiment – to combine several of those blogs under one roof, so simplify maintenance and to streamline things.  Checking nine blogs on a regular basis for updates and upgrades can be tedious.

I set up WordPress MU on a test site.  For the sake of the test, I used a few spare domains I had lying around.

Installation of WPMU is simplicity itself, requiring only the basic knowledge of how to install a database [I used Cpanel] and the ability to change permissions on the server [again using Cpanel].

Having set up the root blog, I set up a subsidiary blog, and decided to try to mirror this site on it.  Once again, setting up the blog could not have been easier, but then my troubles started – how to I import all the features of this site onto the new one?  I want the two sites to be precise mirrors, so this involves copying the theme, the posts, comments, images, tags, categories and links.

Copying the theme is simple.  I just took a copy of the live theme folder, put it in the WPMU installation and activated it.

Copying the posts was relatively simple too.  All I did was to export the XML file from this site and then import into the other.  This gave me the ability to copy all the images as well which was just what I wanted.

I was now left with a problem.  The XML export/import facility does not include links or link categories.  This required a bit of lateral thinking.

In the end, I decided to use the sledgehammer approach. Using PHPMyAdmin, I exported this site’s entire database excluding “wp_options”, “wp_users” and “wp_usermeta”.  I then opened the downloaded file and made a simple change.

To explain the change I made, it is necessary to understand the construction of the WPMU database.  The root blog will contain its records in, for example “wp_posts”.  Anything starting with wp_ pertains to the root, or the global site.  The individual sub blogs contain a numerical prefix, so you will end up with “wp_2_posts”, “wp_3_posts” and so on.

I ascertained which prefix my sub blog was using and then did a simple find and replace on the entire database dump, replacing “wp_” with “wp_2_” or whatever the prefix is.  I then imported this file into the new WPMU database.

It may seem that I have duplicated things here, as I had already imported the posts and comments, but I did that essentially to just import the images.  I overwrote the information to maintain the integrity of all the ‘meta’ tables.

The result is rather effective – you can see it here, though please don’t leave any comments on it, as they will be dumped!

My next problem [and it’s a big one], is how to map my domain to pont as an alias to the new site.  So far, I can only point a domain to it, whereas I want the domain to act as an alias and to mimic precisely the URLs of all the old pages.

Any ideas?

Posted in Blogging, Tech stuff | 6 Replies

WordPress 3

A Pipe and a Keyboard Posted on May 6, 2010 by RichardMay 6, 2010

For some time now, I have been playing around with WordPress 3, and I must confess I am disappointed.

I have nothing against WordPress itself, but I expected something pretty radical with the advent of a major release, and for the general user there is very little there.

Of course, one of the main features is the integration of WP with WPMU, but I wonder just how many use WPMU in the first place?

For the ordinary user, one of the major changes has been the departure from some of the default settings on installation.  From the security standpoint, this is a good thing.  No longer is Admin the default user, and the prefix to the database tables is now customisable, but the problem here is that it affects new installations only.  An upgrade from V2 to V3 is going to leave the old defaults intact, and to avail of the new settings one would have to scrap the old site and do a fresh install.  Even then, importing the old database into the new is going to be difficult, as all the table names will have changed.

Apart from the above, there are very few things that stand out.  A new default theme?  The ability to bulk update plugins?  As I said, I expected more from a primary upgrade.

I still love WordPress as a package, but this isn’t something I would queue all night for.

Posted in Blogging, Tech stuff | 7 Replies

Analysing Alexa

A Pipe and a Keyboard Posted on May 5, 2010 by RichardMay 5, 2010

Dedicated followers of this site (i.e. Me) will have noticed that I have a passing interest in Alexa and its ranking methods.

My main reason for this interest is because Alexa seems to be the benchmark of choice in advertising.  I suppose they have to chose some method of ranking sites, but the choice of Alexa is a little baffling.

I have been charting the progress of several sites over the weeks, to see if I can spot a relationship between traffic an ranking.  So far, the relationship has eluded me.  For example, one of the sites has daily visitor numbers in the single figures, while another has daily visits of around 150, yet the two sites are running neck and neck in the rankings, and in fact the latter site is trailing the former, which is completely illogical.

Some weeks ago, I set up a test site.  It is self hosted, with its own domain, but as yet its existence has not been advertised.  As far as I am aware, there are only two people on the planet who know of its existence.  About three weeks ago, I decided to add it to my Alexa monitoring list.

When I started monitoring it, it had a ranking of 1,341,686, which struck me as being quite high for a site that essentially doesn’t exist.  Over the weeks, it has been climbing the ranks at an alarming rate, and now stands at 620,853.  I have seen quite popular sites that are still ranked in the millions.  What the hell is going on here?

One possible theory is that I am skewing the figures, simply by visiting the site to read the stats.  If that is the case, then I would contend that it’s like judging newspaper circulation by counting the number of times that paper is bought in one particular shop.  If one person is a representative sample of internet usage, then what value are the statistics?

My advice?  Unless you are an advertiser, forget Alexa.

wwtraffic
The Philippines accounts for about 0.4% of traffic!!

Posted in Tech stuff | Leave a reply

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