Reblog: The Return of My Unsolicited Annual Plug for WordPress.com

Nice post from John Scalzi:

Today marks the third anniversary of Whatever’s association with WordPress.com, via its VIP hosting service, and the best compliment I can think to give WordPress.com in this regard is that it’s been three years since I’ve had to think about whether my blog is up and running.

via The Return of My Unsolicited Annual Plug for WordPress.com – Whatever.

Retro MacOS WP.com Theme Enabled

My colleagues worked overnight on making this theme available to all of WordPress.com, and I just enabled here on raanan.com:

Yesterday one of the tributes I noticed was the website Boing Boing (WordPress powered) switched their theme to one reminiscent of the original Macintosh interface, one of the several times Jobs would make a ding in the universe through his work. It seemed fitting, and we wanted to make it available to all of you, so our theme team worked through the night and here it is:

More details on the announcement post

Why don’t we take much vacation in the U.S ? A few theories

On this labor day holiday, saw a tweet from Bill Maher that caught my eye:
https://twitter.com/#!/billmaher/status/110894807060193281

And then happened to catch a short video clip from Fareed Zakaria on CNN on the same topic. In this video he summarizes that:

Nowadays the average European gets about three times as many days of paid vacation as his counterpart in America. Italy has the most vacation days, with the average worker there getting 42 paid days off, according to the World Tourism Organization. Next was France with 37 days, Germany with 35, Brazil at 34, the United Kingdom at 28, Canada with 26 and Korea and Japan both with 25. The United States was near the bottom of the list with the average worker getting 13 days off.

He goes on to say:

Why do we do this to ourselves?

The conventional answer is that this attitude toward work makes the American economy the envy of the world. America has a hectic, turbo-charged system that builds, destroys and rebuilds, all at warp speed. It’s what created the information revolution, Silicon Valley, hedge funds, biotechnology, nanotechnology and so on. And there’s no time in it for lolling on the beach!

In fact, it’s not clear at all that working for a few extra weeks in the summer is what makes a nation’s economy hum. The consulting firm Ipsos gives us numbers on the percentage of paid vacation days that were used up by the end of the year. The French predictably lead the pack, taking 89% of their vacations days. But Germany, which is growing briskly, takes 75%. Indonesia, which has been booming, takes 70%. And the U.S. – just 57% – and it has fewer paid vacation days than almost all major countries. But even with those 13 days off, only 57 percent of Americans take them all. To remind you again, 89% of the French use all of their days off.

As someone who is terrible at taking vacation I have a few theories of my own:

  • The days before a vacation and the days after a vacation can be so bad that it’s not worth it. In the run up to a vacation you try to squeeze everything in, and if you really disconnect while away, you come back to 20 fire-drills and an insane week that wipes out any relaxation you may have had.   Now that I work for a distributed company (love it, and we are hiring !) – I find that when I do “take a few days off”, I generally just work reduced hours, working a bit in the mornings and in the evenings, and then disconnecting during the day. Much more manageable and less chaotic, but also not a true ‘disconnect’ which would be nice from time-to-time.
  • Most US companies are pretty thinly staffed compared to European and South American ones. In the US it’s pretty common that there is no backup to a person when they are out – so the idea that work will grind to a halt may cause some people to forgo vacation.
  • And most importantly in my mind, there isn’t that accepted summer break that is common throughout the world. In parts of Europe it’s all of August, in some countries it’s the last 2 weeks of August, and I’m sure there are variations on that. In the US if we could all just agree that August 15th -> Labor day we ‘shut down’, it would make things much easier. Instead what I found in my previous jobs is that we planned launches and big projects right around September 1 — only to have most of the senior staff away those two weeks up in the Hamptons 🙂

TechCrunch relaunched on WordPress.com VIP

From Dave Feldman of TechCrunch/AOL:

THE CMS
One of my favorite things about WordPress is its extensibility. We’re on the same platform today as yesterday, but have built new tools for writers and editors. Featured and pinned articles get expiration dates, so editors don’t have to go back and manually un-feature things. Selecting a post layout is as simple as clicking a button. Automated resizing of images means faster load times and fewer distorted photos. And choosing which articles go on the home page is a single-click affair.

Impressive work by everyone involved. More details on the announcement post Redesigning TechCrunch: We Picked This Logo Just to Piss You Off

Major League Baseball Blogs Migrate to WordPress.com

Very cool to see this live. All the blogs from MLBlogs.com are now on WordPress.com, including ones from players, fans, and commentators such as Keith Obermann. These blogs were previously on a MovableType installation.

In addition, three new MLB branded baseball themes are available today to over 20M publishers on WP.com via the WP.com theme gallery.

Play Ball ! And check out the full announcement post here for all the details.

Linkedin Share features live on WordPress.com

Linkedin is one of my all-time favorite services, and continues to generate great value ever time I use it and rolling out innovative features such as Linkedin Today. Their iPhone app is pretty cool & useful too.

Back in November 2010, Linkedin launched dynamic share buttons and have been steadily driving traffic to various publishers — something Business Insider noticed recently:

So the other day, the team at WordPress.com took a lot, and decided to add the Linkedin share buttons to our Sharing feature:

It’s enabled on my blog as well right now — just look an inch below this line of text.

WordPress.com Now iPad Optimized

Super excited about our new launch of the Onswipe theme/plugin today.

Here is Matt’s food blog viewed from an iPad:
.

A few more details:

There are some fun options to play with too. If you browse to Appearance -> iPad in your Dashboard you can:

– Have the theme use an image from your recent posts as a cover.
– Upload a logo to showcase your brand or personality on the cover.
– Upload an image to be used as a loading graphic when visitors add your site to their home screen.
– Switch fonts.
– Choose from 9 different skin colors, to best match the feel of your site.
– Enable or disable the whole thing.

So fire up raanan.com on your iPad and let me know

Read more on the announcement post on WordPress.com.

raanan.com 2010 in review

Pretty cool summary below, which each user of WordPress.com received recently. Interestingly, I posed 42 times in 2010, with my overall goal of posting once per week — so a bit off that pace — but fairly close.

The stats helper monkeys at WordPress.com mulled over how this blog did in 2010, and here’s a high level summary of its overall blog health:

Healthy blog!

The Blog-Health-o-Meter™ reads Wow.

Crunchy numbers

Featured image

About 3 million people visit the Taj Mahal every year. This blog was viewed about 41,000 times in 2010. If it were the Taj Mahal, it would take about 5 days for that many people to see it.

In 2010, there were 42 new posts, growing the total archive of this blog to 259 posts. There were 26 pictures uploaded, taking up a total of 8mb. That’s about 2 pictures per month.

The busiest day of the year was October 9th with 1,772 views. The most popular post that day was Two Factor Authentication.

Where did they come from?

The top referring sites in 2010 were stumbleupon.com, ma.tt, automattic.com, twitter.com, and Google Reader.

Some visitors came searching, mostly for google apps personal, google apps personal use, blackberry numbers letters, raanan bar-cohen, and gps.

Attractions in 2010

These are the posts and pages that got the most views in 2010.

1

Two Factor Authentication September 2010
5 comments

2

Quick Tip For BlackBerry Users When Calling Phone Numbers with Letters February 2008
21 comments

3

Sync Skype Chat History on Multiple Machines With Dropbox June 2009
11 comments

4

Switched to Google Apps for Personal Email January 2008
37 comments

5

Upgraded to iPhone 3GS from 3G. Veridct: Worth it ! June 2009
4 comments