Posts tagged ‘30D2BBB’
Day 20: Go on a dead link hunt
Today’s challenge is another one that I read through on ProBlogger’s site and it immediately clicked with me. Every website that’s been around for a few years suffers from link rot to one degree or another. Sites that you linked to may disappear. Even worse, if you’ve moved your blog from one site/engine to another, many of your internal links may be invalid. Often blog posts will move over from one system to another just fine, but the links within those posts won’t be updated. Teach42 started off on Radio userland, then it moved to pMachine, and then I made the final move to WordPress which is what I’ve stayed with. Without a doubt, I’m sure I’ve got some dead links in there that I’ve just been avoiding hunting for all this time.
There’s nothing worse when you’re reading a blog post, you find just the link you were looking for, try to click through and find that it’s dead. It can be incredibly irritating to readers, and discouraging enough to drive people away from your site. There’s a few well known bloggers that have moved a few times, and I know how bothered I’ve been when I try to navigate through their archives only to find that all their internal links have gone awry. It certainly doesn’t encourage me to make a return visit.
Unfortunately, it’s one of those tasks that just feels like it’s going to be an absolute nightmare to do so everybody puts it off. However, this challenge is all about taking a good close look at our blogs and doing all the unmentionable tasks that would normally be swept under the rug. So it’s time to grab a broom and dustpan and do some dirty work.
There are two sites and one PC based tool that I’ve had recommended to me. The tool is Xenu, and the two sites are Dead-Links.com and the W3C link validator. All of them do the same basic task, which is to crawl through your site and test each individual link. If it thinks the link is invalid, it flags it for you. Based on the specific way each tool/site does this, it may come up with different results than the others. That’s why you will probably want to do at least 2 of the 3 tests. I’d suggest running one test, checking the results and making changes as needed, and then running a second test.
More than likely, this is going to take a while. I’d suggest starting the test up and then going to watch CSI or taking a nap. By the time you’re done, the spider should have some results for you. I’m going to be running this for myself overnight tonight and then making any corrections I find over the weekend. I’ll report back on what the results are and you do the same.
Let us know what the spider found. Did you have a mess to clean up or was your site all spic n’ span? If you want to have some fun, try running your school’s website through it and see how it does! Then you can add a few items to your webmasters todo list! But let’s be honest, better to know than to not know, right?
Day 18: Join the Carnival!
Some of the challenges have clearly been targeted more towards people whose blogs are more established. Today’s could be used by anyone, but will probably benefit newer bloggers the most. For those of you that remember webrings, they used to be a way for individual sites to congregate into communities and connect to each other. While webrings haven’t completely gone away, the blog world has seen them evolve into a phenomenon known as Blog Carnivals. When I was a budding blogger, I read the Carnival of Education regularly as it exposed me to bloggers outside my typical circle of friends (long before Twitter and other microblogs came onto the scene). As I grew more confident in my own blogging, I began submitting to the carnival and vividly remember how exciting it was to see my blog referenced in there. Not only that, but it exposed my blog to an entirely new audience and always saw a bump in traffic the weeks my posts were included. It was a safe way to ‘put myself out there’ and promote my blog, without feeling like I was pushing it on other people.
If you aren’t familiar with blog carnivals, BlogCarnival.com has a great description in their FAQ:
A Blog Carnival is a particular kind of blog community. There are many kinds of blogs, and they contain articles on many kinds of topics. Blog Carnivals typically collect together links pointing to blog articles on a particular topic. A Blog Carnival is like a magazine. It has a title, a topic, editors, contributors, and an audience. Editions of the carnival typically come out on a regular basis (e.g. every monday, or on the first of the month). Each edition is a special blog article that consists of links to all the contributions that have been submitted, often with the editors opinions or remarks.
There is so much stuff in the blog-o-sphere, just finding interesting stuff is hard. If there is a carnival for a topic you are interested in, following that carnival is a great way to learn what bloggers are saying about that topic. If you are blogging on that topic, the carnival is the place to share your work with like-minded bloggers.
As I mentioned, Carnival’s are a great way for you to increase awareness of your blog, but also to learn about other blogs that may be outside your current circle. Anybody can create a carnival, which is both a blessing and a curse. Many don’t make it past the first few ‘issues’. However, others are very well established and publish on a regular basis. Here’s a few active Education carnivals that might be of interest to you along with their most recent edition:
- The Carnival of Education – Last Edition
- A Blog Carnival of English Learning – Last Edition
- The Carnival of Homeschooling – Last Edition
- ELL/ESL/EFL Blog Carnival – Last Edition
- Active Learning Blog Carnival – Last Edition
I’m going to throw in two honorable mentions. These two aren’t very active just yet… In fact, their on their first edition. However, if they’re topics that interest you, then maybe you’ll help provide them the incentive to put out a second edition, third, fourth, fifth and so on!
- Learning Through Music Blog Carnival – First Edition
- Everything Education Blog Carnival – First Edition
And if none of those suit your needs, then check out Blog Carnival’s Education category and see if something strikes your fancy.
So your challenge for today is to submit yourself to be in a blog carnival! Or maybe you want to consider creating a blog carnival of your own. Carnival of the Twitterverse? Education in Second Life Roundup? It’s entirely up to you!
Thinking about starting one? Share a comment letting us know! Also, I’d love to hear stories from more experienced bloggers about different ways they got eyeballs to visit their blog. As I mentioned, the Carnival of Ed certainly helped me early on. Do you have any tips for new bloggers regarding how to promote your blog without being over the top or heavy handed?
30d2bbb image by Jason Robertshaw is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 United States License
Day 17: Mobilize Your Blog
Raise your hand if you’re within reach of a a device capable of connecting to the internet for about 90% of your waking hours. Ok ok, all of you put your hands down. Between gaming devices, handhelds and mobile phones all being able to connect to the internet, there are so many ways for people to soak up the good stuff you write on your blog… besides just through your computer’s browser! However, do you have any idea what your blog looks like on a mobile device? Have you considered the potential for you to have a mobile audience, now and in the future?
Today’s challenge is going to be to prepare your blog to be viewed via mobile devices. Trust me, I understand if this isn’t a priority for everybody. But you never know how many people may be visiting you while on the move, why not make it easy for them to do so? I know my blog tends to attract a more high tech geeky audience (you know who you are), so maybe it’s not too surprising that I had over 400 hits from Symbian based mobile phones and Sony PlayStation Portables in September. Don’t worry, it’s much easier to make your blog mobile compliant than you might think.
While there are dozens of ways to make your blog mobile, we’re going to focus on three: 1) Taking advantage of plugins (if compatible with your blog) 2) Using a third party site to display your RSS content in a mobile compliant manner and 3) Using MoFuse to create a mobile mirror.
If you happen to be using WordPress, you have some extremely simple choices that will ensure that your blog is able to be read by anybody on the go. Alex King and Andy Moore have both created plugins that you can use by just installing them and clicking “Activate”. There’s even a plugin specifically for making your site iPhone compliant. The nice thing about using these plugins is that when mobile users come visit your blog, they’ll automatically be shifted over to the version of the site that is optimized for them.
The other two solutions require setting something up and then letting people know about it. You’ll have to provide a link somewhere that says “View the mobile version of this site” and shuffle people over to what you’ve created. Not a big deal, but not quite as elegant.
The easiest way to do this is to take advantage of a couple of Google tools designed for parsing web pages for mobile consumption. If you visit this tiny little Google application, it will generate a mobile compatible version of your site. Punch in your domain name, and you’re in business. Grab that URL, and make it available somewhere on your blog. Mine looks like this. Alternatively, you can use the mobile version of Google Reader to massage your RSS feed and make it available to mobile users. To do this, just take the following address and add your RSS feed to the end of it.
http://www.google.com/reader/m/view/feed/ + http://feeds.feedburner.com/teach42/weblog = http://www.google.com/reader/m/view/feed/http://feeds.feedburner.com/teach42/weblog. Once again, provide a link to that page somewhere on your site and people can get to a mobile version of your blog with a single click. And it doesn’t look half bad at all!
Looking for something with a few more power user features? Then you’ll love MoFuse.com. Sign up for an account, put in your blog URL and RSS feed, and within minutes you have a custom mirror of your site. You can take a look at Teach42′s MoFuse here. You can very easily just do the same thing the previous tip recommended, which is providing a link to your MoFuse mobile page. However, you can also make available all sorts of uber-geeky options that mobile users will freak out over. Things like adding a widget into your sidebar where people can enter their mobile number and have a link to your blog sent to them via SMS. Or display a QR code that links to your blog. Or add a chicklet that links to it. Or any combination of those. If you’re using a WordPress blog, or have the ability to add PHP code to your header (you know who you are), you can even provide automatic re-direction for any mobile visitors that visit your site. And yes, you have the ability to create a special iPhone version for all you Apple fan boys and girls!
One last advanced tip for all of you who host your own blog and want to get really geeky. If you want to go the extra mile, you can even create your own mobile URL, using the standard m.Example.com formula. It’s really not that hard. You just need to add a cname record that links m.yoursite.com to whatever link you’re using for your mobile site. This page by Google has tips for doing so for a great many common hosts. MoFuse provides some instructions for connecting up your own domain in this way. Once you make a change like this, it takes about 24-48 hours for the change to actually go through, so be patient. I’m making m.teach42.com point to a mobile version of this site tonight.
So there’s a few possible solutions for mobilizing your blog. And this doesn’t even touch POSTING to your blog via your mobile device! That’s a story for another day (won’t be a part of this challenge).
Have you ever visited any blogs from your mobile phone? Did you check out your own? Do you anticipate having any mobile readers, now or in the near future? Any tips for using mobile devices for accessing the internet? Share your tips in the comments below!
Day 16: Your Greatest Hits
On Teach42.com right now, I have 764 blog posts. I’ve written a few more, but they got lost between transitions before I settled on WordPress. Of those 764, 10 appear on the landing page. So when someone comes to visit my blog, those are the posts they see. If they have some time, maybe they’ll scroll back a few pages, but there may be some visitors that have no idea that I used to be an active podcaster. Or that I aggregated the top free WordPress themes for education. Or that I wrote up a summary of the things I learned from Twitter in a 24 hour period. Or that I built an iPod battery pack… out of an Atari 2600 cartridge!
The point is, as wonderful as a blog is for sharing your thoughts and ideas, information does tend to get buried rather quickly. Some of those posts, like the ones I mentioned above, are just as valid now as they were a 12, 24 or even 36 months ago. So today’s challenge is going to be adding a spot on your blog for your greatest hits, the posts that you think are your best, your most significant, and the ones that you think visitors to your blog should check out. Idea being, if they’re only going to be on your blog for a few minutes, what are the things that you’d like to show them?
So what posts should you provide links to?
- Posts of yours that have received the most comments
- A post where you describe your ‘blog’ mission statement, or why you got into blogging in the first place.
- A blog post that you’re extremely proud of, whether it got comments or not (some of my favorites have gotten zero comments)
- Any posts that you think would be worthwhile for people new to the blogosphere to read
- In a nutshell, your favorites.
I want to re-emphasize, number of comments does not equal quality of post. There are a few posts I’ve written that have received a decent number of comments, but frankly I’m rather ashamed of. Others generated a lot of conversation, but I don’t necessary feel are all that significant or worth pointing out to people. Perhaps the information is dated and not relevant anymore.
Take some time to scroll through your archives and try to figure out which posts you think are worth sharing with people. There’s no magic number here, but I’d say between 5-10 are a good number. As to where you put them, you really have three options. You could just post it on your blog, which is great to remind current readers of your greatest hits, but doesn’t help future readers. Once again, in 10 posts, it’ll have scrolled off the front page. The second place is to put it in it’s own page. If you do so, you can link up the post as well as write a brief description of why people might be interested in it. Then you add a link to that page in your blogs navigation bar (many blog engines do this automatically).
The third option, which is the one I’ll be doing tonight, is to add it in to your sidebar. If you do that, then those links will appear on every page throughout your blog, so regardless of how people arrive, visitors will still be able to see them. This gets those posts the most exposure, but it also takes up real estate in your sidebar, something we’re trying to keep concise. So long as you don’t let it get out of control though, it shouldn’t take up too much space.
If you’re a new blogger, then maybe this is something that you may want to create space for, and update as you go along. Veteran bloggers, this may take some time to dig through.
Either way, once you’ve done the groundwork, share a comment here with what you think was your most significant blog post to date and why. And don’t forget to share a link to it!
30d2bbb image by Jason Robertshaw is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 United States License
Day 15: Find Thyself
First of all, before we even get started, congrats to everybody who is participating in this challenge! Today marks the halfway point. Some of the challenges have been easy, and others I know have stretched some of you. The second half will be more of the latter than the former. We’ll be building on some of the groundwork we laid in the first half and taking it to the next level. Don’t worry if you have joined recently, or have missed some days. Join in when you can, pass when you can’t, catch up if you want, or just skip over ones that don’t appeal to you. If you take any of these challenges and learn something from it, then I consider it mission accomplished. If you’ve kept up and done every challenge every day (or the next day when I post them late at night!), then my hat is off to you. This stuff ain’t exactly a cakewalk, and I’m thrilled to have so many people along for the journey!
Today’s challenge may seem a little egotistical, but believe me when I say that it’s a worthwhile activity for a blogger to do. You’re going to go on an ‘you’ hunt! Visit some of the different blog search engines, and see who’s linking to you, ensure that you show up in searches, and see which searches you appear in. One reason that we want to take the time to do this is to ensure that our blog is actually being submitted to different search engines every time you update it. Most blog engines will automatically submit your posts to search sites, but ONLY if you have it set to do so. We also want to see whether you actually appear in the searches that you think you do. If you search for you name, do they show up too? And if they don’t, why don’t they? These tasks aren’t hard to do, but they’re often overlooked.
I don’t think you’d find to many people that would disagree that there are two big boys when it comes searching blogs, and those are Technorati and Google Blog Search. Sure there are dozens of others, and some of them like IceRocket have got some great feature sets, but we’re going to focus on the major players.
Let’s start off by finding out who’s linking to you. Some blog engines do a decent job of letting you know whenever someone links to your blog by letting you know that you received a ‘pingback’ or ‘trackback’ on a post you wrote. If someone links to that specific post, it’ll show up listed along with comments. WordPress and EduBlogs does that automatically. However, even that will miss out on time when someone links directly to your blog in general, but not a specific post. You search for these links by typing your entire URL into the search box. So I would search for http://teach42.com. One thing you do need to be careful of is that you may get different results if you include the ‘www’ than if you exclude it. On both Google and Technorati I got more results by leaving the ‘www’ off. In theory, they should be the same, but reality is that they aren’t.
If you’re a brand new blogger, don’t be discouraged if you don’t have many, or any, links to your blog yet. It takes time and persistence. Regardless, all of these searches have RSS feeds associated with them. I suggest adding both a Google and Technorati search for links to your blog to your aggregator. That way you can keep an eye on any that might otherwise escape your notice.
Next up is to see how easily people are able to find your content. For this, we’ll be doing a variety of searches. Start off broad and do some searches for your name. In this area, I’m lucky. Dembo isn’t all that common a name, so it’s easy to browse through every hit for that word. If you’re last name is Smith or Jones or Nguyen, you may have more trouble and need to zoom in a bit more. Add your first name, and variations of it. For example, I’d search for Steve Dembo, Stephen Dembo, Steve Denbo, and even throw it into quotes, “Steve Dembo”. Without quotes, it’s finding any blog post that has the word Steve and the word Dembo. With quotes, it’ll just find ones that have Steve right in front of the word Dembo. Generally, one or two of those searches will work better than others. This is useful to see who may be mentioning you in a post, but was too lazy to link you up properly!
Besides just other people’s mentions of your blog, you SHOULD find your own blog posts. It may sound silly, but you do want your own blog posts showing up under your name. If somebody sees your name in a comment or social site, you want them to be able to find you in search engines. That’s why I always tag my blog posts with my blog name, my last name, and have included my full name in the actual title for my blog… to ensure that people can find me if they try to look. Just something to think about. We’ll be coming back to tagging later in the month.
The last set of searches that we want to do are for your blog name and keywords. Once again, that’s the benefit of me having a blog name like Teach42. There aren’t too many other Teach42′s on the internet. If your blog has more common words like 21st Century Open Education 2.0, then you’ll be competing in searches with more people. Hopefully, if somebody types in your full blog name, they’ll find your posts.
If you aren’t finding your posts, then poke around in your blogs settings. In WordPress and EduBlogs, if you go into the Settings->Writing menu, you’ll see at the bottom of the page a box where you can in include what sites to ping when you post something new. While there may be several listed there, make sure Pingomatic‘s http://rpc.technorati.com/rpc/ping is there. It’s a general, all purpose pinger that hits most major (and minor) blog search engines. Most blog engines have a similar functionality somewhere in there, so poke around if need be.
Of course, the other half of this challenge is that when you find people who are linking to you, click through those links and see who they are and what they have to say. While you’re not obligated in any way to respond, it’s always a nice and polite thing to do. If nothing else, you just want to be sure that you’re aware of what’s being said about you, who’s connecting to you and ensuring that you’re hard work is circulating in a way that enables it to be found.
What did you find when you searched for yourself? Was it about what you expected? Any surprises? Did the different search engines have pretty similar results? Any search engines that I’m not mentioning that you think are worth sharing? Share your experiences below, and don’t forget to visit the wiki and list yourself there!
Day 14: Leave a Message at the Beep
Since I’m posting this one on a Friday evening at 10:00pm (yeah, the day kinda slipped away from me), and this week’s challenges have been fairly ‘meaty’, I figure it’s time for an easy one. In order to pass this challenge, all you need to do is look at your front page and ask yourself the question, “If somebody wanted to contact me, is it incredibly obvious how to do so?” If a total technophobe couldn’t figure out how to contact you directly from your front page, then it’s time to correct that.
Throughout the course of my blogging career, there have been dozens of times when I’ve needed to get in touch with somebody directly and been unable to find a means for doing so. There are several very prominent bloggers who do not have contact information for themselves readily accessible. To be honest, I’m stunned by that. If you’re taking the time to publish and share publicly, why wouldn’t you give people plenty of ways to communicate with you as needed?
There are some people who have tried to tell me that’s what comments are for. The only trouble with that is when the message I want to pass along has NOTHING to do with any of the posts on the blog. I hate leaving a comment that is completely unrelated to the post I’m leaving it on. Call it a pet peeve if you will, I call it poor blogging etiquette.
There are a few ways you can rectify this. Some people put their contact information in the sidebar, which is obviously the easiest for people to find. Personally, since I like to provide a variety of ways for people to get in touch with me, I created a Contact page and listed it in my navigation bar. On that contact page, I have two emails, my IM information, my Skype name and an embedded form that will get sent directly to me via email. People do use that constantly as it saves them the trouble of copying and pasting my email address into a mail application. It’s just a plugin I found that works for WordPress, but there are a number of other solutions. I do consider that to be an ‘extra’, and certainly not required. So long as you have at the minimum an email address for people to use, that’s plenty.
Some people I know are very worried about spammers and spiders grabbing their email address or link off of open web pages and flooding their accounts with junk. This would be particular worrisome for a work or school email account. Personally, I’m not so concerned about it, which is why I keep my address public. But if you ARE worried, stop by the Email Icon Generator. Put in your email address, style it, and it’ll generate an IMAGE that spells out your email address. That way people can see it clearly, but there is no text there for spammers to grab. Sneaky, eh?
You never know when or why people might want to contact you, why make it difficult for them to do so? Check into your contact information and make sure it’s easily accessible from the front page!
30d2bbb image by Jason Robertshaw is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 United States License
Day 12: Declutter Your Sidebar Part I – Blogroll Audit
Well, today’s challenge is the first of a two-parter. The longer you have a blog, the more cluttered your sidebar winds up. New social site? New widget! And it all adds up. Pretty soon your sidebar is a veritable circus of colors, banners and links. It’s time to reign it in, but if we’re going to do it we should do it right. And that means taking a thorough look at what we have there, determining what can be eliminated, what can be consolidated, and what should be… pruned. Which leads us to your blogroll.
The blogroll is one of the most popular sidebar items with good reason. It let’s people know who you read, where you get your information from and who you recommend to other people. There are many tools that make it easy to keep up… But therein lies the problem. For example, I use Bloglines for my blogroll. Anytime I add an EdTech blog to my aggregator, *bam* it appears in my blogroll. Delicious, Google Reader, and many others allow you to do the same thing. Trouble is, that means it’s just a little too easy to keep adding blogs to it, and after a while it sorta of loses it’s value. Looking at my blogroll as it stands right now, it’s just a series of links to a bazillion EdTech blogs. Unless it’s deliberate, it’s meaningless. So it’s time to do some trimming.
There are several ways to do a blogroll. WordPress, Blogger, Typepad and Edublogs all support blogrolls natively. Or you can use third party tools like Google Reader, Bloglines, Delicious, or any number of others. To be honest, the tool that use doesn’t matter so much. The important thing is selecting what you want to list there, and how you want to organize it. Do you want to list a few of your favorite blogs to read? Do you want to list bloggers that you admire? Perhaps you just want to share your favorites in a specific niche, like Special Ed or ESL. Really, it’s entirely up to you and there’s no wrong way to do. So long as you do it deliberately and maintain it.
Maintain it? Absolutely. Sometimes good blogs go stale. And if the blogger hasn’t posted since 2006, does it really still deserve a spot on your blogroll? Most likely not. While your pruning, you just might find yourself feeling a little guilt. You really like ‘John’, but you haven’t read his blog in who knows how long. Should he still be in your blogroll? In my opinion, if you even have to wonder, go ahead and take it out. If you share a sprawling list of 50 blogs there, it’s overwhelming and deters people from exploring them. If you have a concise list of 10 blogs, people see that these are personal recommendations from you and will be more prone to clicking through. It’s more meaningful that way. So don’t feel guilty. It’s your blog darnit! Do what you need to do. And if you’re going to have more than 10-15 of them, consider breaking them up into multiple categories so they’re more manageable.
If you don’t have any you want to remove any, at least do a ‘freshness’ check to make sure all of the blogs you’re linking to are still up and are active!
Good luck! And don’t forget, if you haven’t joined the wiki yet, stop by and list yourself there. And get ready for tomorrow, when we give the rest of your sidebar the royal treatment!
And now I’m off to do some trimming myself!
Day 11: Introduce Yourself to Another Blogger
I gotta say, I’ve been blown away by how many people are participating in this challenge! Absolutely fantastic so far, and more people are jumping in every day. It’s never too late to start, and you can always work through these challenges at your own pace. Don’t forget to list yourself on the wiki as well. That way everybody can support each other’s efforts as they make their way along in this journey. I’ve heard from a few people who are keeping up with them every single day that they could use a relative break, so today’s challenge is going to be an easy one. All you need to do is introduce yourself to another blogger.
When I first read this one on the Problogger site, I have to admit I was a little dubious. Introduce yourself to another blogger? Why bother? Why waste their time. Then I started thinking about all the times people have emailed me over the years, just to say how much they’ve enjoyed something I wrote or broadcast, or just dropped me a note to say that something I posted made them think a bit. Considering the amount of junk mail we all receive or how much email we get that is job related or requires us to actually… well, DO something… It’s really wonderful to just get an email from somebody who is just saying hello and letting you know they enjoy what you write.
To be honest, this one doesn’t really NEED to be a blogger, it could be a Twitterer or a Plurker too. Pick somebody that you may have followed, read, or listened to from afar but never made contact with before. Then introduce yourself. Let them know who you are, and why you read their work. Perhaps you want to reach out to someone you saw at a conference recently, a keynote speaker who you thought had an interesting point of view, or an author in an educational magazine that wrote an article you enjoyed. Up to you. But go ahead and make a personal connection with someone that you ‘follow’ in some way. If they write back to you, that’s wonderful! If not, no worries. Consider it a good deed, a mitzvah, a little bump in your karma for the day. And if the personal connection is reciprocated, all the better. But either way, it makes all the future connections that much more meaningful.
Have fun and report back who you contacted!
30d2bbb image by Jason Robertshaw is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 United States License
Day 19: Who do you love… and why?
The idea here is to get an idea of what are your options. It was doing this sort of activity that really made me realize that I should be inviting more guest bloggers (I actually have two lined up) and also drove home the point that if I wanted my blog to be more active, I had simply had to make the commitment to be more active. There are other bloggers that I respect that have full time jobs and families too…. actually most of them do. And I could do if I really wanted to, without any excuses. There are times when as a result I’m posting this challenge as midnight approaches (ahem, right now), but I’m still getting it done because it’s important to me and a priority.
So take a look at some of your favorite blogs and see what exactly it is that you like about them so much. From both a technical aspect as well as a ‘spiritual’ aspect. And see what you can learn from them.
As a follow up activity, leave a comment here pointing out a blog you really like and what specific things you happen to like about it. Are there any aspects you’re going to try to take back to your own blog to try to add in or incorporate?