DISCLAIMER: Sorry, this post may be a little more indulgent than the
others have been – if you can believe that!
Having just passed a hundred posts, I thought I could spend
a little time reflecting on what’s happened: when I started writing this blog
at the end of February this year, I saw it purely as a means of writing about
the puzzles that I enjoyed – it was all rather selfish, but hey, you didn’t
have to actually read it, so I thought I might get away with it...
Okay, so the hundredth post went up at the start of November
– which I reckon makes it about 12 posts a month, or a post every couple of
days or so (I’m not great with numbers!) – not a bad average, although I’m
rather aware that over the last couple of weeks I’ve been letting that average
slip quite a bit. (Sorry. Bit of lurgy.) But that just says I’ve written a lot,
and we’ve already agreed that was just me being selfish ... but the thing that
has astounded me has been the reaction to the blog – there are actually people
out there who seem to like it, and read it. Regularly even! As of this afternoon it had 21,700 page
views, which given that I haven’t actually done anything to try and drum up any
support, kind of astounds me. Heck there’s even a bunch of people signed up to
follow it – admittedly I know a few of them – I’m guessing that the family kind
of feels obliged to, and I can kind of understand some of the MPP guys wanting
to keep up to date on MPP-stuff, but there are a bunch of names in there that I
recognise from the wider puzzle-world that I’ve never met. Real puzzlers. Puzzlers who actually design things, not just
play with them like me. And that’s all rather humbling actually.
A couple of weeks ago at the DCD I was more than a bit taken
aback when I met folks for the first time (you know, real puzzle folks!) and
they referred to my blog – that sort of blew me away a bit and made me wonder
if I needed to take this whole thing a bit more seriously, after all I’m still
just doing this because I enjoy it ... the fact that some others choose to read
it as well is simply a bonus.
What has been quite interesting is watching the stats on the
blog, and in particular what posts are more popular than others. There’s
one page that got way more hits than any other. The Shapeways Shopping page,
but that was pretty much all driven from somebody tagging it on Stumbleupon – presumably somebody
connected to Shapeways (don’t call me cynical!). Anyway, what I find
interesting is the pattern in the stats after that – all the posts that get a
lot of traffic are the ones that are really about people – the one about the
visit to Wil’s place was undoubtedly boosted by Wil’s mentioning it in his
round robin email, but the series of posts about our MPP meetings consistently
come out high in the page stats – and that, I think , confirms my old suspicion
about puzzlers – they’re a good bunch and they like to hear about other
puzzlers having fun with puzzles – possibly even more than just hearing about
the puzzles themselves. Those are also the posts with the longest list of
comments on them ... and speaking of comments – over 150 of them have been
added to the blog – and that’s great – it’s kinda nice hearing people’s
thoughts or having them share their stories and experiences in here as well. So
thanks to those of you who’ve taken the trouble to do that.
One other thing I hadn’t realised was quite how much
non-standard English has crept into my language in general, and my casual
writing in particular. Quite a few times I’ve found myself having to explain a
phrase or two in an email to someone who’s just been totally confused by my
turn of phrase. [I blame my South African upbringing and spending 5 years in
Glasgow before moving down to England.] Given quite how much I’ve managed to
confuse some folks in the States with my version of English, I have no idea how
my French and Russian readers (yeah!) are managing to put up with my writing.
It’s been interesting watching the referring links change
over time – at the start most of my traffic was coming from other puzzlers’
blogs (Thanks Brian P, Oli and Kevin) but over time there’s been a marked shift
to the search engines (Thanks Google!) – and the search phrases have been quite
telling in their patterns – I was still amazed when a little while after
writing about a particular puzzle, I was Googling it to try and find some more
info and found that my review of the puzzle came up as the first link! It was
kinda nice to notice over time that the search engine hits I was getting became
less and less for puzzles that I’d written about and more and more for people
looking for my blog – weirdoes! ;-)
OK, so where are we: I’m amazed at the reaction my selfish
little project has had, but hey, I’m still doing it because I enjoy it, so I
intend to carry on in the same vein. You can expect to hear about the puzzles
that I enjoy (and only about the ones that I enjoy, because this is my selfish
little blog!) and any get-togethers that I manage to arrange or get along to –
I like writing about those because they help me to re-live them and keep them
fresh in my own mind – the fact that you folks seem to like reading about them
as well is just the icing on the cake.
OK, there are plenty of puzzles on the desk to be played
with and several will no doubt make it into a post coming your way soon –
thanks for reading my blog and indulging me in a bit of navel-gazing – I enjoyed that ... normal programming will
resume shortly!
Cheers
allard
où est la Smart Egg?
ReplyDeleteWhat do you mean your "not great with numbers"?
ReplyDeleteYou are an actuary! This automatically means you are one of the best with numbers in the UK!
There is obviously a huge interest in puzzle blogs out there. My blog has 85 posts and has just reached 20,500 views in 7 months. It makes all the "hard work" worth while!
Kevin
Puzzlemad
Bruce, back left hand corner mate - in the Smart Egg bag!
ReplyDeleteKevin - nah, I'm rubbish at arithmetic! - but we are agreed on the thirst for puzzle-related information and stories out there ... long may it grow!
allard
Only a couple of years ago there would be practically no puzzle information out there at all, and now there is so much available! This is a Golden Age of puzzling I reckon. I'm glad you decided to write a blog Allard, it's always one that I look forward to reading.
ReplyDeleteNavel gazing? A new term for me. I'm learning lots of British expressions reading your blog! I've enjoyed reading your posts over the past 10 months.
ReplyDeleteWatch out: that beer crate packing puzzle I see in the photo is a real doozey. Don't get too chuffed about it. Is that the proper use of 'chuffed'?
Oops, I have failed to use the term correctly. I thought 'chuffed' meant frustrated. I see now it means to be happy with yourself.
ReplyDeleteCheers for that Oli! Right backatcha!
ReplyDeleteGeorge - that crate puzzle keep me quiet for a while, but not for as long as Rob's Annoyingly Squary Puzzle - that one was a killer for me! [but thanks for trying to use my flavour of English!] ;-)
Got to say that you guys make my days :-D
ReplyDeleteOdd minutes are spent picking up either Allard's, Kevin's, Neil's or Oli's latest posts.
Keep up the good work guys :-D
People were complaining when little - or no - information about mechanical puzzles was available on the internet. Which lasted quite some time. So I just cannot figure out how they could be complaining, now that puzzle bogs are multiplying like bids on an auction for a TW puzzle!
ReplyDeleteMoreover, I seem to remember that the point in blogs is just in sharing ideas about what one likes. This is very nice and enticing, especially when it comes to lazy people like me, who just never could manage to start anything serious about puzzles (except for stacking huge piles of the damn' things within such a limited space).
So I'll keep on reading your peers and you. And thanks for helping me remain such a lazy guy!
Lionel
Its an awesome read each time. You do make me smile mate with how you write it....spot on!
ReplyDeleteI see a little corian box! Mr Chambers I belive?
Cheers for that guys ... and yip, it's a Matchbox - Excellent little bit of humour in there!
ReplyDelete