But what I thought I'd do is have a look at last years stats - it seems to be the thing to do this time of year...
Off the bat I'm happy with over 50% increase in page views compared to 2010. I don't care so much about specific numbers, but it's good to know whatever I'm doing is expanding. I'm quite motivated to write more often this year - I already have a bunch scheduled - once a week every Wednesday is the aim. Plus any random stuff I might put up, usually on a lighter note on Friday.
I'm happy I had the motivation one week while on the road to re-design the blog to bring it into this decade. It looks less tacky and a little bit more thought out. There's still a few little things I want to touch up, but it will do for now. Other projects on the go first...
As for what people are reading, in 2010 here are the top 5 pages (behind root)
- Short circuit evaluations - I promoted this topic a bit, I'm a big fan of COALESCE
- Another Apex 4.0 feature for Forms - Tree view in Apex 4.0
- Why I use Google Chrome for Oracle Apex - because it's awesome and light!
- Using JQuery dialog boxes - Very handy
- Automating Apex backups from DB - backup backup backup
In 2011 we moved along to more focused pages
- Presentations - I think my Apex Security one bumped those stats up
- A mash of Oracle related thoughts - lots of distinct topics, looking back
- Automating Apex backups from DB - up from fifth, good work backing up!
- Useful Oracle Apex URLs - Popular with those learning
- Apex in Amazon Cloud - Listen out this year, I'll probably be doing a cloud implementation in 2012 and I'll be sure to blog about it - and probably do a prezi in October.
Most weren't hugely out of the ball park, although last year 1st had 50% more hits than 5th, but it does show what people specifically read I guess, as opposed to strolling past on apexblogs.info
Most visitors are from US by far, Australia distant second, then UK, India, Germany just pipping Netherlands. Canada-Russia equal, then drops away.
Top mobile devices - iPhone, iPad, (not set), Samsung Galaxy S (probably me ;-), HTC Sappire
Windows order magnitude more than Mac, then Linux.
And finally top search terms - all fairly obvious. "Oracle" three times more than "oracle apex jquery datepicker"; some not provided; "triangle circle square", "oracle apex", "apex amazon cloud", "apex post calculation computation", "apex login page", "oracle apex 4.2"
The last one is interesting since it I published my wish list in early Jan, but accidentally published it as December when I first drafted it. It falls in the 2011/12 archive - so I wonder how that gets counted in their queries ;-)
There are no major milestones to come, I haven't reached 200 posts yet, so in time... I'm glad I started.
There are no major milestones to come, I haven't reached 200 posts yet, so in time... I'm glad I started.
I'll have to remember to do this next year and compare!
Photo by Robbert van der Steeg - check this one out!
Photo by Robbert van der Steeg - check this one out!
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