Keep an eye out for interesting tangential and useful links.
A vague attempt at humour |
Readership continues to grow. Rapidly. From my first full year (2010) with 5k visits, I'm now at 50k visits & 69k page views for 2013, averaging 70 posts per year - cool stuff!
I've been impressed with the growth of referals from google/yahoo/bing searches, and the top pages reflect that in regard to the year published - four from previous years.
Either people are searching for these topics (as search terms suggest), and/or people are bookmarking/remembering my blog as a place to visit - so thank you.
Other things come above raw numbers, however, and what I find enjoyable about my job is learning. Learning things well comes with trying to describe it to others.
Either people are searching for these topics (as search terms suggest), and/or people are bookmarking/remembering my blog as a place to visit - so thank you.
On blogging
Other things come above raw numbers, however, and what I find enjoyable about my job is learning. Learning things well comes with trying to describe it to others.
That being said, I think I've got the knack of blogging regularly. This year I tried to output one technical entry per week, usually on a Wednesday, but it always depends on the post. I found a oraclenerd's 2009 review, and he had an era where he was posting something every day or so. I'm happy with one a week, with maybe the odd non-technical thrown in.
As many bloggers do, I have plenty of ideas in an e-mail folder - and that thing about learning? I find converting snippets of code & thought into blog posts a good source of reference and when using a tool like APEX you need your references only a click or two away.
I think I'll be further updating my blog reference map - I'm starting to use that frequently now, along with my recently sorted APEX bookmarks that includes documentation, how-tos and sample apps.
Issues
I've switched to google+ commenting, and while I like the integration - I'm missing people's comments, not seeing accurate comment counts in the blog homepage. Searching in chrome hiccups when it detects the site you want to search on - did the same thing as the search widget - no search results.
I'm considering moving to an APEX based blogging platform - but it might tempt me to import my back catalogue using XML from Google Takeout. Wouldn't that be fun?
Top visited pages
Note which year some of these were published - only two-ish from 2013.
- Upgrading to apex 4.2 in three steps (2012) -- done on my laptop, basics only
- CSS pulldown menu (May 2013) -- common request, neat solution
- Form report tutorial (2011) -- what I mostly aim for in this blog
- Modify login page (2011) -- includes link to modifying workspace page
- A common oracle error (2012) - an experiment based on some search results. Hypothesis verified.
- Tree region use case (Feb 2013) -- honourable mentioned because of when published
Top Referrers
Thank you for those linking to my pages, talking about them, reading them, searching & opening them. I hope you find things as useful as I do. There are also some predictable behavioural differences compared to 2012.
- ODTUG - Not surprising since moving from apexblogs.info
#63 apexblogs.info - down 100% - Twitter - I post all posts here, given recent social media trends, and #oraclapex, I'd expect some throughput
- scoop.it - should bloggers be concerned? it seems to attribute authors and encourage site visits. WOT doesn't say anything nasty.
- orana.info - from nothing to something? I was added in 2009, but only 1 visit recorded from 2012?
- apex.oracle.com - I've referred to my posts a few times when answering questions
- Feedly - of course... long live google reader!
- Feedburner - must relate to greader? down 61%
- #10 oracle-and-apex.com - on all things extending apex (only a comment and backlink?)
- #12 www.oraclealchemist.com - ACEriffic all-sorts (a mention... in a massive collection of 12c articles)
- #13 mikesmithers.wordpress.com - The anti-kyte (blogroll)
- #14 oraculix.wordpress.com (a mention regarding coalesce)
- #20 sqlcur.blogspot.com (a mention about a post on trees)
- #23 dbswh.webhop.net - an APEX jQuery guru I may collaborate with this year (blogroll)
- #49 oracleinsights.blogspot.com - a fellow Aussie (mention)
- #68 jeffkemponoracle.com - many woven interactions with this fellow Perth blogger, who unknowingly seeded my drive to blog.
- #81 inside-oracle-apex.com - good internal APEX resource (a few mentions, comments)
My top 10
I perused the 2013 archive and decided on favourite posts of my own - either those I visit regularly as a reference, or those that have helped my journey as a software developer.
- Learning APEX - I'd recommend these particular books depending on where you are on the spectrum.
- Customising workspace login - I do this for training, differentiating environments or just being a control freak.
- Starting jQuery - I started to do stuff with jQuery, beginning with client side features I remembered doing in Oracle Forms. Then I moved to tarting up reports.
- Customising plug-ins - it's easy to tinker & learn with other people's plugins. I've played a lot with Enkitek's navbar.
- Lists shared component - I've really appreciated the simbiosis between lists & templates. You can APEX-ify just about anything you see on the web, typically with a List template.
- Performance - I've made a number of discoveries this year regarding performance. A few of them are in my draft folder already.
- Published! - I'm a published author, of sorts - a screencast/video series on Oracle APEX techniques. Not a bad first effort, I think.
- 12c - whether c is for cloud or consolidation - it sounds like fun - I want in.
- Off topic fav - Tim Minchin is an entertainer + educator - an edutainer, if you will. I plan to share more off-topic randomness this year, I hope you don't mind. Twitterers get it already, google+ posts are mostly science/tech.
- Consuming plug-ins - having trouble implementing someone's plug-in? Try this sample application with accompanying instructions.
A fun 'top 5' - cities
Just for giggles.
- Bangalore
- London
- Perth -- my home city
- Chennai
- Moscow
- ...
- #7 NY (top US city)
Predictions
At the start of 2013 I made promises regarding posts on mobile, RW, Ubuntu and what search terms showed me.
- I haven't explored the mobile theme as much as I'd hoped, but I've been involved in a great tablet project.
- RWD pains me and I'm still getting the hang of manipulating APEX's templates. I wonder how much this will change in APEX5.
- Ubuntu's been flowing like pitch (again), but I have been learning plenty of jQuery. I'm really loving it and plan to continue sharing things I've learnt - one in the form of a prezi.
- 4.2.y did not deliver a third user interface - but I imagine they held back to make sure it's delivered even better in APEX5.
- Search terms... meh, I just went where things took me
As hinted, in 2014 I predict heaps of posts about APEX5, looking at IDE, modals, interactive reports, templates, tablets, editing layouts & hopefully not lacking improvements in release management & page/region caching control. No doubt APEX will deliver other surprises to find along the way.
This year I also hope to implement a PhoneGap delivery; learn more about jQuery; and deliver some more public facing APEX applications. It would be nice to develop on 12c, but I'm not holding my breath.
Here's to averaging a post per week!
ps - I'm also increasingly curious about Big Data...
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