The Real Time Web

October 27th, 2008, 2 Comments »

Over the weekend, I gave a couple of talks at the Surrey International Writers Conference. First, I wanted to say that the conference was a really friendly and well-organized event. They treated us speakers really well, and I had a lot of fascinating conversations with interesting people. My only gripe–and it’s a minor one–is that it’s in a bleak corner of Surrey. My hotel room had a lovely view of the vast Walmart parking lot. But, they get 800 people to the event, so I imagine their options are limited for venues.

And I had no idea how big a deal this conference is in the publishing industry. I spoke to an agent from New York (there were plenty of Americans there from all over the country) who said it was one of the three conferences she attends every year. So, many thanks to kc dyer for inviting me to the event, and I hope she’ll have me back next year.

One of the talks I gave was ‘Blogging 101′. It’s a little shocking to me that I still get asked for this talk in 2008–I’ve been giving it for five years or so–but the room was pretty full.

During this talk, I like to run through setting up a WordPress blog, so that people can see how straightforward it is. To choose a topic for the blog, I asked for an unusual place and a type of food. Combining the two, I created a simple blog called Sushi in Vilnius. Vilnius is, in case you didn’t know, the capital of Lithuania. I wrote a quick sample post, and moved on to other bloggy stuff.

The next day, I checked my email, and somebody–a legitimate Lithuanian–had come by Sushi in Vilnius and left a comment:

You have tried Kabuki (Didþioji 28)? Very good sushi. If not try Tokyo (Vienuolio 4). Sushi chef is from Japanese.

Their intent wasn’t to spam–it was to legitimately recommend some sushi restaurants. Hilarious, eh?

It provides a handy example for another lesson in a lot of my talks: the web is just getting more and more real time. Some of that is thanks to Twitter and camera phones, and some of it is thanks to search engines indexing new material in minutes and hours instead of days and weeks.

2 Comments »

Boring Site Note: What is With the GUID Comment Spam?

May 10th, 2008, 6 Comments »

Over the past few days I’ve been getting a new species of comment spam. They’re meaningless strings of numbers and letters, often without links. I’ve been calling it GUID (globally unique identifiers) spam because that’s what they most resemble. Here’s a sample:

Website: 811b4a322b04 (IP: 67.159.44.134 , TE01.techentrance.com)
URL : http://811b4a322b04.us
Excerpt:
811b4a322b04…

811b4a322b040f05b8d5…

If you visit that URL, there’s apparently nothing there. Seeing as there are no links or keywords, what are they trying to accomplish?

I complained about this on Twitter, and Mark noted that it was like I was being ‘tagged’–a sort of GUID mark of the beast.

A lot of is coming via Tech Entrance, a hosting company of no apparentl fixed address.

6 Comments »

Boring Site Note: Just Upgraded to WordPress 2.3.3

March 28th, 2008, 8 Comments »

I did so after reading this scary post from Doc. So if you notice any wacky behaviour around here, please leave a comment or send me an email.

8 Comments »

Boring Site Note: Only Serving AdSense Ads for Older Content

December 16th, 2007, 2 Comments »

I’ve always had a simple strategy for advertising on this site: no ads (except occasional ones for personal projects and good causes) on the home page or RSS feed, and plenty of ads on the ‘individual archive’ pages. In theory, regular readers view the front page and RSS feed, and searchers visit a random individual entry on the site. I don’t want to advertise to my dear regular readers (besides, you don’t click ads), but I do want to grab a chunk of the searchers’ attention.

This was an imperfect system. Readers see the individual archive pages when they comment, for example.

I recently happened upon a better solution: the Shylock AdSense plugin for WordPress. This plugin enables you to position ads within blog posts. Nothing too fancy there, I suppose, but the advantage is that you can set an option for ‘don’t display ads on pages less than x days old’.

For example, this entry from today doesn’t have any AdSense ads, but this older one does. No big deal, but an improved implementation of my spare-the-regular-readers-any-ads plan.

2 Comments »