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The death of Pageviews

Posted by | technology | No Comments

Evan williams has a great post on why Pageviews are Obsolete In summary he shows that Page Views are often lower for better designed sites, and this therefore lowers Alexa rank. Last week I posted that Alexa was only 5% accurate for sites outside the top 1000, as a relative measure, based on the sampling error being so high outside of this range. The Page View problem further reduces this accuracy. In short, if you want to appear low in Alexa, appeal to an audience of non-techies and have a well designed site. (Etsy’s real traffic data is porbably spectacular, by this measure). This problem, however, is not just an esoteric one. Page views are being replaced by Ajax ‘page flakes’ but there is no advertising system for Ajax. To do this for Google Adsense, would require creating a complete ad preloading and caching system which would violate Google T&C’s….

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Alexa rankings are only 5% accurate for Web 2.0 sites

Posted by | technology | No Comments

The sometimes delusional cycle of Web 2.0 companies and VCs looking at Alexa rankings, does often acknowledge that Alexa is a bit skewed, as if its out by perhaps 50%. Well its a boat load skewed, Alexa is actually only about 5% accurate if one uses data from Gawker. Because Gawker is transparent about page views, and has a property whose readership is part of the Web 2.0 scene, Valleywag (Trivia fact – I chose the name Valleywag) and one that definitely isn’t, Deadspin, Alexa’s accuracy can be correlated to real data other than Comscore. Valleywag traffic: 600 thousand page views per month Deadspin traffic: 4.5 million page views per month According to Alexa, however, Valleywag ranks twice as highly as Deadspin, with a rank of 5,000, compared to Deadspin’s 10,000 ranking. Which means that Alexa skews tech. sites such as Web 2.0 favs by a huge factor of 15…

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The Relativist Blog

Posted by | media | No Comments

The Relativist is an hilarious piss-take of New York Times Magazine’s priggish, pompous ass, ‘The Ethicist’. Very structured, short-form content like lists or questions and answers work well on the web, so the Agony Aunt format is a great idea for a blog. “I recently instructed law officers to deport an immigrant to his home country, where he was to be interrogated until he provided information useful to our government. I

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Amazon EC2

Posted by | technology | No Comments

Amazon’s EC2 is the most exciting thing I’ve seen in a while – If it were Google that had launched this, I imagine there would have been more fuss. EC2 allows you to put a disk image of a Linux machine onto Amazon S3 (their remote storage service) and create a virtual machine by installing from there onto EC2. From there on you pay only for CPU time and bandwidth. This is the grid computing that Oracle has been bullshitting about, and chenges the landscape for hosting – allowing instant, on-demand scaleability and no upfront hardware costs, or per unit rackspace fees. I need to investigate more. However, for startups this potentially solves the ‘launch’ problem, where you need extra horsepower for a traffic boost at launch, but the cost of setting it up is prohibitive if you only need that level of service for a couple of weeks. I…

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Has Digg Been Hijacked

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Has Digg Been Hijacked, by FUD Today a largely factually based story with referenced quotes and run by the Associated Press, which was also reported in most US newspapers is flagged by Digg as potentially Inacurate. I’ve noticed recently that a large number of political stories, particularly left of center ones, get slapped with the ‘Warning: The Content in this Article May be Inacurate” – Because enough people who want to deliberately create uncertainty in light of the truth, say so. This is the way wikipedia does it, and to be honest, with no other option for wikipedia, it means that Wikipedia is largely useless and hopelessly banal for contentious political issues. But news is not like Wikipedia – users are directly linking to a source not editing it. If people on the political fringes moan, that does not necessarily mean that the source is innacurate. The Wikipedia reputation system…

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Gas and Houses are still cheap.

Posted by | business | No Comments

Average house price in the US, Aug 2006: $230,000 Average house price in the UK, Aug 2006: $376,600 Average gas price per gallon in the US, Aug 2006: $3.04 Average gas price per gallon in the UK, Aug 2006: $6.46 There will almost certainly be a recession in the US soon, caused primarily by inflated gas and house prices. One will continue to go up and the other will crash – a problem for people who own houses and drive cars, i.e. are long in real estate and short on gas. But these prices are actually very, very cheap compared to places like the UK, which didn’t go into recession with much larger costs and similar wages. The principal difference being the rate of consumption. average home sales prices in all regions of the united states

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America was secular in 1776

Posted by | religion | No Comments

Percentage of Americans who identified themseves as ‘church members’: 1776: 17% 1990: 62% The statistics for Britain now (10%) and at the height of Empire (possibly 70%), are similar. It is possible that Christianity in America today is a form of nationalism rather than spiritualism, rather like Victorian Britain. Exclusive Graphs

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Dave Winer on the JonBenet story.

Posted by | crime | No Comments

Dave is right on to keep banging on about the morbid obsession with the JonBenet story. My take is that this is somewhat apallingly taking the place of a light relief story, like a dog on a skateboard clip. Current geopolitical stories in the Middle East in particular are difficult to grapple with or find a clear cut answer to – so when a Paedophile is wheeled in, people find no moral ambiguity there, and just react on gut without having to think, venting their anger with a ‘burn the witch’ chorus. To saturate the news with this makes Paedophile baiting a form of light entertainment distraction, although nobody will admit to the fact, which is very disturbing.

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Bad Science

Posted by | science | No Comments

Kathy Young for Capital News 9: “By the end of the week, the universe could be expanding, with the addition of three new planets to our solar system.” Hilarious. Given the relative size of the known Universe to our solar system, this is the equivalent of saying: “By the end of the week, the earth could be expanding, with the addition of three grains of sand on a beach in Florida.” Capital News 9 | 24 Hour Local News | HEADLINES | A cosmic change

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