What this cliché expression doesn’t add is “if you haven’t got a lifejacket, you learn to make one fast or drown”
Oh the fun of metaphoric rainy days. This week just about everything to do with databases, servers, operating systems and hard disks went a bit squirly. Luckily, it all being digital stuff, I wasn’t prone to panic
This is what I learned by fighting digital fires all frickin week.
- 1GB of RAM isn’t really enough for a million hits plus website if there are tens of thousands of complex mysql statements happening every day.
- Ubuntu can crash too.
- Linux may be more powerful but that just means the crashes are even more spectacular.
- UKFast have really awesome tech support who can answer your call in two rings and be all geeky with your server and do fantastic things while they talk to you on the phone like you called to chat about the weather.
- Crisis makes you code better.
- An external hard drive isn’t a ’safe’ place to store important data if you let other people use it to “just copy some mp3’s”
- Having another partition for your my documents folder is a really really good idea.
- Life without tweetdeck on my work pc is a bit pants
- Tweetdeck on Ubuntu is also a bit pants when you can’t unlock your default keyring
- It feels like a genius stroke to send a copy of my menu.lst from /boot/grub/ to my gmail address
- Blogging about it makes it better.
- Coding stuff because you need it, makes it worth more when it works.
- If I didn’t have my missus to ground me, I would have stabbed at least 3 people this week. seriously, with a spoon! (because it hurts more)
- It’s bloody hot in summer when you can’t go out.
What have you learned this week?
41
Why the hell would anyone use twitter anyway?
December7
The title of this post is the question I asked myself many times.. before I used it myself that is.
For the first months of Twitter being talked about I deliberately kept away from it thinking that ‘micro-blogging’ was a complete waste of time. Who the hell would want to know if I’m going for a coffee or what page I’m interested in at the moment?.. turns out, quite a lot of people do actually.
I’ve been using Twitter through an application called Tweedeck for a couple of months now and I’ve really grown used to it taking up almost all of my second monitor space. I’ve discovered many reasons to use Twitter and I thought I’d share my thoughts on twitter here;
It’s not an IM
They’re distracting too, I hate having a “tiddly-dum” noise happening all the bleedin time while I’m trying to watch something. Even though I’m committed to the tv at the time, a “tiddly-dum” will cause me to come to the computer to see what it was. 9 times out of 10 it could have waited but like brown on finger, it had to be investigated.
I’ve switched off all my IM stuff now and my productivity has massively increased! That’s why I like twitter, it’s like a thought catcher. It allows you to put up in less than 140 characters what’s on your mind without needing an immediate response.
If someone asks me a question via Twitter, it doesn’t make a flashing button on the taskbar appear demanding immediate attention. Instead, I can see it when the tweetdeck window gets the focus on my many many windows open.
You can download tweetdeck here, I really recommend using it. This is what my screen with twitter window looks like.
I use 3 columns. One for replies, one for the whole tweet stream and one for direct messages.
It can change the world (in 48 hours)
It was an amazing idea and executed wonderfully, people were retweeting messages about it all through the 2 days and before the time was up, 10 grand was raised just from the kindness of tweeters.
It’s not full of spam (yet)
There are a couple of advertising options open to twitter users but not by twitter itself. Magpie is one of them, I used it myself recently to promote some ebay listings using keywords like ipod and ebay. It generated a lot of click thrus and coincidence or not, I sold out of everything I advertised. Just before Christmas too! woohoo
It’s organic networking
You get to see what people are like a lot easier than by reading their blog, just 140 characters forces the person to not over-edit or revise their text.
From this you can see who you want to deal with and not be bowled over by a slick sales page or well crafted and heavily edited authority article. Straight to the brain is the game. I love it.
You find out what’s happening straight away
Shopper gets trampled on Black Friday sales in Walmart? I heard it on twitter first.
It really is a way to get a pulse on the world and especially useful if you’re a prolific blogger who’s hungry for news to post. If you’re early on breaking news or big things to happen then you’re on to a stumbleupon golden egg page.
If you need to know something, like, right now
My partner wanted to know how to attach a zipper to a home made woolen cardigan. I had no idea but I thought someone out there in the twitterverse (you’ll get used to these twitterisms) might know or at least, know someone who would know.
One of my followers saw the question and broadcasted it to her own network, within a couple of minutes I had a message with a link to a picture of exactly what to do. That’s the first time my pc has got some praise from ‘her indoors’
You can use the wp-twitip-id plugin!
Another reason for people to leave good comments on your site!
You can download wp-twitip-id plugin here
It’s got a really cool api
There will be more and more applications coming out for twitter in the near future, there are already some incredible 2.0 web applications that give a sneak peak of what the internet of the ’10s will be.
Follow me on twitter if you haven’t already and get up to the second updates on my plugins and offers
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