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gregh 2007-07-19 20:50 Blogging Law_School random searches
It's been nearly 2 years since I last looked at what brings people here. To be sure, there have been some decided traffic changes. For one thing, my regular readership is much greater than it has been. I know this in part because Google Analytics tells me that since the first of the year, 32.27% of my site's visitors are returning visitors. (Mint tells me something similar, but I've only been using it a month.) The numbers for the last month show only a 24.85% return rate. However, I've had my highest visitor counts ever in the last month. Anyhow, in a practice that those of us who follow our web access logs tend to do, I'll now arbitrarily elaborate on some of the searches that have led people here over the last 4 months. Some things never change. 3.73% of my visitors since the start of the year came through a search for "Coalition of Concerned Legal Professionals." That search usually leads to this page. 3.32% of my visitors search for "otherwise occupied." That leads to the homepage, generally. Following the clickstream, it's clear that that's how some people find me. For others, I gather they're just sorely disappointed. Searches regarding USF are huge, and they also produce very interested readers. Rather than type this up, or try to analyze the various ways people search for USF information end up here, below is a screen capture. I'd just like to do a little editorializing first. Look at all of this! This is clearly information people want. Wouldn't it make sense for the school to publish this information online?
The final one is my favorite. It's "romero exception." It brings up my first blog post. There are 7 requests, all from California. 6 from USF. We seem to have the market cornered on Romero Exception teaching.
gregh 2007-07-14 18:50 random
Some random stuff of late:
gregh 2007-03-19 22:40 bacon_cheese_fried_hotdogs random
To paraphrase Joey, "What's not to like? Cheese? Good. Hot dogs? Good. Bacon? Gooood."
gregh 2006-08-24 08:00 random
Bye bye, Pluto. We barely knew you. As it turns out, there wasn't much to know.
gregh 2006-07-20 22:39 Law_School php programming_languages random ruby smalltalk
First, I wanted to write "small talk" as "smalltalk" (or, roughly Smalltalk.) Perhaps I'll note at the outset that I've always wanted to learn some Smalltalk, just because I feel I should. It's just a little tough to take the time these days, as I find myself also wanting to learn Ruby (to play with Ruby on Rails) and PHP, which Drupal, the software driving this site, is written in. Don't get me wrong, I could download Squeak and go through some demos and then maybe I'd know something of Smalltalk. But that's not really knowing or learning Smalltalk. And light hacking of Drupal is not learning PHP. I'm closest, at this point, to feeling I'm learning Ruby, but for the most part, it's just been hacking around. I wouldn't dream of putting any of the three of them on my resume. Basically, I feel that I need to be able to sit down and actually turn out some light code off the top of my head before I'll even think of suggesting I know a language. This came to mind largely because I find I don't make small talk very well, and that leads to poor mingling skills. Now, I no longer feel like writing about that, other than to say it's a skill I need to develop. I have a feeling, for instance, that the person I was talking to about the Student Bar Association website work that I'm doing wasn't the least bit interested in the details of keeping content fresh that I found myself addressing. Maybe if I download and try out Squeak I can make small talk about Smalltalk? |
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