Site icon naschenweng.eu

2009 – a year in review

The last 12 months have been quite interesting for most.

On my blog I wrote this year 148 articles which attracted 68,000 unique visitors in the last 12 months (about 7,000 new visitors each month), used 2TB of traffic, received on average 300 unique page-views per day (ranking me in the Top-50 South African websites) and made me an (awesome) USD 120,00 in Google advertising revenue.

Among the most popular articles were:

  1. My CV / job file: This was really the main reason why I started my blog. I wanted to get a high enough ranking on Google to have my CV visible. A Google search for “cv websphere architect” still ranks me as #1. I have launched my CV online 3 years ago and have received 52,600 hits to it (60 views per day; scroll to the bottom of the CV to view). I never had to job-hunt, as I would typically get 5-10 queries per month.
  2. OS X: Time Machine backup to Synology DS107+: How to configure your Synology NAS (or any NAS for that matter) to work with Mac’s OS X TimeMachine. This has been a valuable feature in my life, and saved me plenty of time in restoring from backup.
  3. Marlboro License Department rocks: I posted a personal experience about this in 2008 and I still get a high count of visits. I received so many emails/comments asking me for directions, that I eventually updated the article with GPS-coordinates. Since GPS-coordinates have not been sufficient, I post now also a link to Google Maps.
  4. South African HTC Dream Hacked: This was intended to point more experienced users in the right direction to flash a custom firmware onto the G1 (or HTC Dream). This article alone attracted 2,000 hits within the first 12 hours of posting. Still one of the best phones I owned so far.
  5. Android: Too Many Pattern Attempts. Phone is locked: One of the most helpful articles for me. Android has a cool pattern locking feature, but with all the clowns in the office, my phone was locked in no time. With GPS and WILAN disabled, there is no way to unlock the phone, other than doing a hard-reset and loosing all data. The instructions (for a rooted phone) reset the lock and unlock the phone.
  6. Jailbait: It’s obvious – sex sells.
Exit mobile version