“Despite the attention blogs can get, the poll said 56 percent of Americans say they never read blogs that discuss politics. Another 23 percent read them several times a year, the survey showed. While blogs are largely considered the realm of young people who are most Internet-savvy, only 19 percent of people ages 18 to 31, and 17 percent of those ages 32 to 43, regularly read a political blog, the poll said.” A new Harris Interactive poll finds that most people don’t read political blogs. Believe me, I’ve noticed. :s
Category: Blog Nation
A Pause for Breath (and a Plug for Spinoffs.)
Hello, all. So…can you guess who I’m supporting in Tuesday’s NH primary?
In any case, now seems as good a time as any to plug some GitM spinoffs I’ve recently put together, if anyone is interested. First up, if you usually come here just for the movie reviews, I’ve created GitM Reviews as a separate review site (although — don’t worry — they’ll always be posted here first.) Second, if your interest was piqued by any of the entries on civic progressivism of late, I’ve also created Small-R Republic as a central clearinghouse for that information. (Again, everything will be either posted here first or linked to as written.)
Both of these are projects I’m only starting to develop online, but they’re enough off the ground that they can bear page views and/or advice from the regulars. (Also, while I’ve refrained from putting advertising here and plan to continue to, I may decide to put up ads on GitMreviews…so if anyone has had a particularly good or terrible experience with an ad provider, please let me know.)
Eight is Enough? Doubtful.
Way to shield the hated heat. Way to put myself to sleep. Ghost in the Machine is 8 years old today. [0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7.] Time to take a break? Nah…I can still reach my destination (tho’ it’s still a ways away.) Until then, as always, whether you’re a long-time reader, a first-time visitor, or (most likely) just a lost Googler, thanks for coming by.
An Early Adopter?
A hearty congrats to former Columbia colleague Ted (of The Late Adopter) and his wife Reshima on the birth of their daughter last Thursday. I expect she will be well-versed in both American history and movie lore from a very young age.
A dot.com boom?
With the aid of an eagle-eyed reader, whom I met at my friend Steve’s wedding in Louisville last August and who saw it on sale, I went ahead yesterday and procured ghostinthemachine.com. The blog’s been here at .net for five and half of its almost eight years, and is pretty well-established here. (Put another way, it seems like GitM already has all the readership it’s ever going to get.) Still, I figured it couldn’t hurt to finally pick up the .com addy I’d been eyeing since ’99, and which now bounces to this site. At any rate, if you’ve been using ghostinthemachine.net to get here, go ahead and keep doing so. But, if .com strikes your fancy more…well, now that works too.
Did you cut your hair?
Movable 4.D’oh! update: Ok, with my limited knowledge of css and a lot of trial and error testing of MT 4’s template system, this is the new look I’ve managed to piece together for the front page. Let me know if it’s a strain on the eyes or otherwise unpleasant to peruse. Now, time to fix the archives…
4.D’oh!
Hmm. Ok, as you can see, things look slightly different at the moment. I’ve been trying to update to Movable Type 4.0, and, while trying to get the individual entry pages to update, it seems I’ve gone ahead and switched back to the default style. That’s recommended anyway, but things might look funky around here for a few days while I get everything working again (and try to figure out how to get my individual entry pages to appear.) Bear with me…and hope I don’t permanently break anything.
Update: Well, shoot. I think I broke it. Individual entry pages used to be listed by number. Now they’re listed by name. So that means every entry that links to another entry is now riddled with “Page Not Found” errors. This is not good.
Update 2: Ok, that problem is fixed. I had to read up on archive mapping and then navigate my way around this bug, but that seemed to do the trick. Now, to start playing with the look around here. Sigh…MT 4.0 better be something else, ’cause right now I’m feeling like Gob Bluth…I’ve made a huge mistake.
Update 3: Ok, MT 4.0, autosave be damned, just ate the In the Valley of Elah review I’d been working on for the past hour. And, when it comes to fixing the templates, cutting and pasting is absolutely afflicted. I’m really starting to hate this “upgrade.”
After the Flood: Captchas.
Also, since I came back to find over 10,000 spam comments plastered all over the Ghost, I’ve decided to take drastic action and installed a Captcha system, in the form of Jay Allen’s comment challenge. So, if any of y’all want to leave a comment from now herein, you’ll need to answer the not-very-tricky “challenge question.” (The answer, as the hint basically tells you, is Berkeley.) As a result, the spam ratio around here has gone from 10-15 a minute to none, zip, zero over the past 24 hours. Can the war on spam finally be over? I’m not rolling out the Mission Accomplished banner just yet, but I’m cautiously optimistic.
Point to the Legend.
By way of Quiddity, Matthew Perpetua of the always enticing (and mp3-stacked) Fluxblog has dedicated himself to writing on every R.E.M. song over at Pop Songs ’07. I’ll definitely be checking it out, even if I think he’s way off on “Saturn Return”…(it made #15 on my own list awhile back, and is still up there in my esteem.)
Oscar’s Dreamsocks.
Cineastes and sock monkey enthusiasts take note: Kris’s annual Oscar contest at WebGoddess is now officially open, and the prize this year is as cool in its own way as last year’s Brokesock pair. I came really close last year (grrr, stupid Crash) so I think I’m going to hold off until the buzz solidifies before making this year’s picks.