May 15, 2008

Bloggers Unite: Blogging for Hope

Bloggers UniteBloggers Unite

Today, the 15th of May, bloggers unite for a common cause which is to spread the word about human rights. (Actually it’s way past the 15th of May here in the Philippines but I guess I still have time since the 15th is not yet over for the rest of the world.) Visit the Bloggers Unite page in case you aren’t aware of this “cause” we bloggers should be blogging about.

It is true that we have made great strides in terms of technology, automating what was once a burden that prevented us from walking even further, but in terms of acting civil and protecting the rights of those who seek civility from civilization, it’s nay. Persecution, discrimination, slavery, and everything evil about man still exists and there’re no signs of stopping at all. Old ones disappear only to take or be replaced by a new form of hatred that converts even the meekest of men into an unsightly beast.

Here in our country, who would expect that the very person we appointed and gave the highest authority in our nation would be the very same person who would violate the trust her country vested on her simply because she is hungry for more power. Corruption to cover up more corruptions, extra-judicial killings by the military and even attempts to curtail the free press, of course it’s a bit less sinister as what China is doing to Tibet or on what’s happening in Burma, but it’s still violations upon violations of human rights anywhere you look at it. And now we are battered by the oil and food crisis looming over the globe, what will happen with these unaddressed problems and issues? Just old news that will be buried by more piles of the same issues, simply because we are all busy trying to survive our asses from a more pandemic problem that must be dealt with first.

I could still remember back in my college days when I was frequenting the libraries of our university trying to pay close attention to many influential and political thinkers since Plato’s Utopia to Foucault’s Post-structuralism. I don’t know what’s with me back then but it felt like the answer to all the ills of the corrupt capitalist world seemed to lie in the mouths of the radical thinkers of the time. And the right thing for me to do is discover them and perhaps enter politics or be a radical political thinker maybe. I’m not sure if I have the capacity to be one but I felt so inspired by their dissection of reality and how it could be made better.

But now I could only look back and see how stupid I was for believing them. It is, after all, these political virtues that create wars and suffering for mankind. Think about Communism for a second. Karl Marx made it as an answer to the problems of workers suffering at the hands of capitalists exploiting them to their very bone. It was made to correct so many wrongs but ended up more monstrous than the Capitalism it was meant to destroy. See how former Soviet did, or perhaps China and North Korea. How about the Islamic Fundamentalists? Why bomb so many innocents just to fight for a cause which was supposed to correct these very victims and make them right for Allah?

I now believe that, for the most part, most human rights violation are caused by these false virtues people adhere to which makes it difficult for them to see things clearly. It might be to rid your people of evil western influences, or to out phase the military might of US and blow them to smithereens to give a big Hoorah to your “anti-capitalistic” interests, or maybe to control more territories and resources to get more powerful and squish the enemies surrounding you like flies. All of these might seem reasonable at first glance but how about the repercussions it will produce, the innocent who will pay the price of the one-sided decisions made?

The best way to stop human rights violation is perhaps to make political leaders learn about human rights. I’m not sure if my observations are completely accurate but I think these leaders see their people as just pieces in a big game of chess, completely expendable to serve their purpose. They don’t care if you felt pain or die as long as they get the glory afterwards. Or maybe, they have this motto; “What’s a small sacrifice for the gain of the many?” where their “small” is their country men’s right to education or sufficient living condition and their “many” is their cronies’ oil companies, its benefits, and their pockets.

If they understood human rights the way most human rights activist understood it, do you think these racial genocides, political killings, corruption, and several other human rights issues would still persist? I don’t think so. But then again, how do we make them understand? I believe we can all as a community pressure them to yield to what we think is right for one time, but they and the people like them will still continue their odd ways no matter what, perhaps behind our backs when nobody’s looking. How about replacing them with someone who’s more observant of human rights? But how are we going to do that if at the slightest sign of opposition, you get a bullet in your head?

These are just my thoughts about human rights which I’m sharing to you as part of my contribution to the whole human rights community in their fight to make the world a safe and cozy place for each and everyone of us human beings. Still, the best thing to combat complete disregard and ignorance of human rights is raising its awareness. The more people know, the more it becomes power to reshape the future with future leaders who are more sensitive to these issues compared to the “crappy” ones we have today. Please support human rights. Let us unite and blog about it to help in the fight. Believe me; you’ll help make a better world for your kids in doing so.



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May 8, 2008

Anatomy of a Super Digg Front Pager


You’ve guessed it right. It’s another one of my “attention-baiting” methods. But I believe you’ll learn something from here if you just follow the links I will be pointing you to. I’ll try to provide enough description about the links so that you can decide for yourself if you’d click it or not.

I know this is old stuff, but it’s funny since I have this conception and “sort of” short-hand observation that many bloggers today don’t even know how to get even a handful of traffic from digg. I’ve based my observations, of course, from my regular drops of entrecard. This idea, and perhaps my month long pre-occupation of digg, is fueled by my attempt to join the digg community. I’ve asked a friend about how to get that many diggs in an instant and, I believe, that also somehow strike a chord in me to research further about how to better improve my digg experience. So, expect more of these kinds of digg-crazy articles later on.

And now for the things you need to know. What makes an article a Super Digg Front Pager?

Anatomy of a Super Digg – An experiment that got massive diggs. Learn how they did it and their analysis of the cost and benefits of the traffic they got from it.

How to Create a Blog That People Really Digg – Here you will learn how to write for digg and how to turn your passions into something digg-friendly.

How to Write the Right Title for Digg – This, on the other hand, will teach you how to form titles that will give your post a shot on digg’s front page.

10 Steps to Guarantee You Make the Digg Front Page – Topics that digg users really digg. Humorous and worth the read.

Analysis of Digg top 100 articles – An analysis conducted to equate what works and what doesn’t on digg based on its top100 articles. If you’re not into statistics and numbers, I believe you can still understand this. It’s more on averages, you see.

A Comprehensive Guide to Going Viral on Digg – Like the title says, a comprehensive guide on how to get dugg more often. The article is about a step by step approach on building a viral article that works well on digg.

The 100% guaranteed way to get a front page story on Digg! – A short tip on how you’ll be a guaranteed front-pager in Digg. You just have to get dugg by this digg founder and chief architect and you’re on your way there. Trivial and in case you know how be dugged by him just drop a comment here. That’s a really big help for everyone.

75 Suggestions, Best Practices & Resources for Digg – A nice digg resource, but if you’re only interested on what works and what doesn’t in digg, look for this sub heading, “Examples of What Can Work Well on Digg”.

How to Write a Top 10 List for Digg – Possibly just a link and digg baiter that didn’t worked out good for the author’s intended purpose, which is to get dugg. But, nonetheless, there are some points here that are worth exploring. It’s basically about crafting top 10 lists that appeal to geeks.

What is the most popular “top (number)” list on Digg? – Another perspective on the numerological value of your list in digg. If you’re guessing why your top 75s or top 66s didn’t work, this is your answer.

Do you know of other articles that could help define the perfect digg front pager? Please drop it in the comments and I will add it on the list here.



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May 4, 2008

More Sites to Get Backlinks to Your Blog for Free

Remember the Million Blog List I was talking about before? Guess what? There’s another one like it where you could place a link to your blog for free. No need to register. Just edit the list and add your blog in there. Here’s the link: Wiki Blog Directory.

And here’s another social media site similar to Blogsvine where you could submit your blog posts too; Yearblook. I found it through my regular commenter Chelle. Here you can submit your post for its members to vote on. The catch in this voting system is, besides getting popular which instantly catapults your post to the front page for other people to see, the best post each day gets to be complied into a book that is a record of the year in blogs. What’s more is that each month the post with the most votes will receive $100, which is incentive enough for “poor-bloggers” (like me) to hop in. The person who submited the post will receive $50 and the person who wrote the post will receive $50. If the same person wrote and submitted the post, that person will receive the full $100.



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May 1, 2008

Bounce Rates, Bounce Rates, and More Bounce Rates

Most of the people leaving entrecard always have this word in their mouth: BOUNCE RATE. They always complain that the traffic it produces is junk simply because they have lots of bounce rates which makes their blog stats ugly. I’m one of the guys who actually believed that bounce rates can really damage my blog’s performance leading to no search engine appreciation at all. But instead of removing my entrecard, I still cling on because of one reason. Most of my traffic comes from entrecard. And it’s like, remove it and my blog will die. That was until I read this post by Turnip – Idiots and Bounce Rates – and it somehow altered my perspective regarding bounce rates, but not entirely.

Basically, bounce rates, from my research, have two possible definitions. One is how long a visitor stays in your page, the lesser it is the more it is conceived as a bounce rate (if it’s 15 sec or less). The other is the number of page views your visitor made while in your site. If one, then it’s also a bounce. Bounce rates, along with several other factors about your website, are used by search engines to measure your visitor’s "engagement" to your site. (You can see more of it, if you have a metric tool that measures your visitor’s activities in your site, such as Google Analytics). Now, most of these discontented entrecarders might have thought that the bounce rates they are getting suggest that entrecarders are just dropping by with an absence of “engagement” on their part. How these people arrived to their conclusion is based on the metric tools installed in their blogs to see the performance of their site. Perhaps it is true, but there must be some other explanations regarding high bounce rates.

For the most part, information produced by metric tools about your site can produce inaccuracies as well. User engagement, I believe can’t be entirely explained by numbers alone. These tools, although a critical tool for some, can only put together a few pieces of the whole puzzle. You could have a visitor which could register lots of page views and a longer time spent on your site but that doesn’t mean this particular visitor found the answer he/she was looking for. Maybe this visitor doesn’t even have a clue why he’s in your site, in the first place. Also, you could have lots of single page view visits but that doesn’t mean there’s no quality in it. These visitors could have been reading your post for an hour and a half but these metric tools will register the time they spent reading on your site as “0” simply because it has no way of knowing how long that visitor has been there without accessing another of your page as reference.

Additionally, the advent of tabbed browsing did a lot of mess to the computations of these metric tools. Let’s take for example I got to your site from entrecard. Suddenly, I noticed a banner about a contest and immediately clicked on it to open in a new tab (which I always do). And then after a few seconds, I saw a good headline in your “popular posts” and decided to click it in a new tab again. I then decided to read each of the 3 tabs I opened. As you can see I’m really engaging with your blog; but with the metrics, it will only register as three page views with a time spent as somewhere under 10 seconds. Very poor calculation as compared to the actual time I spent to try and comprehend your site. That’s the reason why you shouldn’t completely place your blogs value on the metric tools alone since more often than not it’s very far from the reality. To fully understand how these metric tools measure the time spent on your page and site, see this article: Standard Metrics Revisited: #4 : Time on Page & Time on Site

Also, other social networking sites, besides entrecard, are one of the main culprits for huge bounce rates websites get. Digg, Stumble, and several other social media traffic are usually one time drop only. This is because they will only try to read or scan through your post or blog if it’s worth their review and vote or not. Perhaps it’s possible that some of these entrecard users are submitting your posts to these social medias which in turn gives you traffic that are always bouncing.

With these things in mind, I would say you shouldn’t be that worried about bounce rates. Of course, it’s worth looking for some loopholes in your blog design, navigation, and content etc; but if all of these are okay, then maybe your subscribers and comments will tell a different story don’t you think? Finally, here are some helpful articles about bounce rates and stuff: Stop Whining About Bounce Rates; Bounce Rate as a Ranking Signal; Measuring Visitor Engagement: Tools + Tips; How to Reduce Entrecard’s High Bounce Rate.

If in any way you felt that I'm wrong about something, or just want to add to the conversation, please leave a comment below. Thanks.



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