Blogged Post

June 1, 2008 · Filed Under Science and Technology · Comment 

This post is purely to validate this site for Blogged Blog Directory.

Blog Directory - Blogged

How Does the Google Ranking System Work?

May 14, 2008 · Filed Under Science and Technology · Comment 

I would really like to know. I take an interest in “optimising” my website so that my posts rank highly for particular search terms. I use WordPress to manage my blog so I thought that might help my ranking. I use a URL structure that I read helps the search engines find relevant posts (I cannot remember where.) The URL structure is http://tjwoodlock/blog/[Post Title]. I use the All in One SEO Plugin and the Google XML Sitemaps Plugin.

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Related Posts and Highlighted Comments

February 4, 2008 · Filed Under Science and Technology · 2 Comments 

I’ve added two more improvements to my site. I followed Nick Bohle‘s tutorials for adding related posts to The Morning After theme and adding highlighted comments to The Morning After theme. I prefer a ‘bullet points’ style for my related posts list but unfortunately I do not know how to code it.

Tags Implementation

February 3, 2008 · Filed Under Science and Technology · Comment 

 

I have managed to implement tags support in the Morning After theme (including a tag cloud) using Nick Bohle‘s tutorial. Just remember to delete the space between “<” and “?php” in the code!

Free Online Classes

January 19, 2008 · Filed Under Education · 1 Comment 

I was directed to a compilation of free online classes from a gHacks.net post titled ‘Online Free Classes.’ So far, the ones on making and using rules and judges and the law look interesting. If I go through them, I’ll include a post or an aside on what they were like.

Ghacks Article

January 11, 2008 · Filed Under Science and Technology · Comment 

gHacks.net has an article on how to properly link to websites. I am going to use this approach from now on.

Comments Threads

December 29, 2007 · Filed Under Science and Technology · 2 Comments 

Given that I have no ‘regulars’, and thus can offend none of them, I thought it might be useful to speculation on the nature of Internet comments threads. First off, definitions.

ImageShack

The above capture1 is taken from a previous post of mine2.

The top blue section is the ‘post’ and the bottom red section (titled ‘discussion’) is the comments area.

The ideal scenario would be a blog with an audience that is broadly representative of society as a whole and with all of the audience equally likely to comment on a particular post.  This is rarely if ever observed.  As blog’s move from the ‘centre’ their audience composition changes to reflect the blog authors particular ideology.

The worst scenario is one where the blog author and their audience become a mechanism for mutually reinforcing each others beliefs.  I’ve seen this occur a number of times before.  Both groups, the audience and the blog author(s), fail to encourage each other to critically assess their own beliefs and eventually the blog becomes a back-slapping exercise.  As it takes begins to take on these features, regular contributors that are not of the ‘right’ ideology comment less frequently and eventually stop commenting at all, because their contributions are ignored, mocked or lost among a mountain of opposing comments.

A good blog should encourage a diversity of contributions from readers and use the composition of the comments sections as a benchmark for how well they are doing that. 

  1. Taken with the excellent ‘thumbalizr‘ tool []
  2. And the only one so far to generate comments ;) []

A New Section – Glossary

December 11, 2007 · Filed Under Science and Technology · Comment 

I’ve created a glossary. I will add to it as I go.

Grammar

November 30, 2007 · Filed Under Education · Comment 

I really really really should learn grammar. Really.

Technorati Post

November 28, 2007 · Filed Under Science and Technology · Comment 

Technorati Profile

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