I like the idea of connecting with people every day through this blog. I feel rewarded when I can see that hundreds of people have dropped in. At the old place, I was getting an average of 500 or so people every day, but a majority of those were folks from Google who were dropping in to see a picture of June Carter or looking for arcane information on skunk poop, or something.
It was time for Sandhill rel. 3.0 to emerge. This is a web publishing effort that is more intentional and more controlled than Sandhill rel. 2.0. It’s a chance for me to experiment and to share what I learn, a chance to do more interesting things than you can do with a Typepad blog.
The traffic here is building up. I’m glad to see real people dropping in. I don’t see many Googlers yet. But the Technorati ranking has me baffled. They say,
A few years ago, Web search was revolutionized by a simple but profound idea — that the relevance of a site can be determined by the number of other sites that link to it, and thus consider it ‘important.’ In the world of blogs, hyperlinks are even more significant, since bloggers frequently link to and comment on other blogs, which creates the sense of timeliness and connectedness one would have in a conversation. So Technorati tracks the number of links, and the perceived relevance of blogs, as well as the real-time nature of blogging. Because Technorati automatically receives notification from weblogs as soon as they are updated, it can track the thousands of updates per hour that occur in the blogosphere, and monitor the communities (who’s linking to whom) underlying these conversations.
Now if ‘rati is monitoring who links to whom, why do some of the more prominent LLs (Listics Linkeurs) not show up in the list of who’s linking here? Take RageBoy himself, and his blogging buddy Chris Locke. Both of these guys have links here, and I can see that people follow them based on monitoring my traffic counter, but Technorati doesn’t show those links at all. The Lockeian links originate as simple sidebar links, “blog rollage,” but they represent something, and it doesn’t look like Technorati notices them.
When Mandarin MEG hooks me up through her quilt (Hi Michelle!), it shows up, but it doesn’t move my ranking off the place it’s stuck. One of the things I’ve learned over the years is that the blog’s the thing, and the rankings can’t be allowed to be that important or seppuku would be the only alternative for all but a handful at the high end of the traffic curve. Even so, it would be nice to understand better how Google finds its way here, how Technorati ranks one blog over another.
Well, all this is saying, really, is that Technorati is flawed. This is nothing new to me; I’ll be searching on something and it’ll tell me at least half the time that the servers are too busy. And yes, a hell of a lot of links to my site from other blogs never show up.
Strangely, Technorati puts me relatively high up in ranking (between 30,000th and 40,000th, which is pretty good for someone who doesn’t advertise themselves) but my page hits per day are pretty low (maybe averaging 150). There’s no all-emcompassing way to determine how good/popular your blog is. Personally, I just like getting comments, and gauge my popularity/quality on comments and emails I receive from people.
Oh, please don’t get me started on Technorati. It is seriously (and perhaps hopelessly) broken.
I am reminded of the best line for its status every time I spell check. The word that is offered up to correct the spelling of Technorati is “degenerate”.
I rest my case!