|
|
|
|
In order to help other bloggers judge the popularity of their personal blogs I’m publishing the Web stats for my site. They are compiled using AWStats:
Unique Visitors – 2312 Number of Visits – 16362 Pages – 53070 Hits – 76607 Bandwidth – 2.40 GB Total Posts – 15
Most popular blog entry (by page hits with 479) – Consulting Rate Worksheet.
I’m using .Text and display the last 25 blog entries on the main page and in the RSS feeds. I did have a couple pictures and one 5 meg video file (viewed about 20 times), so take that into consideration when comparing the Bandwidth total to yours. I have no idea if these stats are high or low, just that they are my stats, and something you can use them to compare to your stats. IMHO, this is an average .Net blog site, not one of the a-list bloggers, and not a personal diary blog site, but somewhere in the middle.
DonXML Demsak
Comment Notification
If you would like to receive an email when updates are made to this post, please register here
Subscribe to this post's comments using
|
|
|
|
|
About donxml
I’m an independent consultant, specializing in .Net solutions architecture, based out of New Jersey who also doubles as an evangelist for XML, Domain Driven Design, enterprise architecture and .Net. I do not work for Microsoft, the W3C or any other big company that you may know of (at least not yet). I’ve been an indie for over ten years, and although I’ve been tempted a couple times to take a job with companies like Microsoft, I’ve haven’t found something better than my current situation. I work mostly with the large pharmaceuticals that are based here in New Jersey, and usually find myself on long term contracts. Definitely not the prototypical indie consultant, but it lets me dedicate time to my non-income generating activities like the developer community stuff, plus financing open source projects like XPathmania and MVP-XML. If you would like to talk to me about doing some contract work, just contact me via the contact page. My rates vary widely, depending on lots of different variables, but mostly distance from Jersey, and type of work. Plus, I’ve been known to donate some of my code for various projects.