Author: Ken McGuire

  • StatCounter Boost Their Freebie Log Size

    Looks like StatCounter (tracking all my blogs and other web projects alongside Google Analytics) have boosted the size of their logs on all free accounts from 100 entries up to 500 entries which should make the drilldown a little more interesting on busier blogs – in my case here, KilkennyMusic.com & LiverpoolAccess.com

    I’ve been hoping for a while that they’d roll out some of those additional services that have been grayed out for as long as I can remember but the addition of bigger logs is a welcome one.

    Via the StatCounter blog (edit: and now subsequent email as I arrive in the office).

    We’re very pleased to let you know today that every StatCounter project now comes with a log size of 500 – you guessed it – FREE!

    This means that you can now drill down into the detail of the last 500 pageloads on your site. And, of course, you still have LIFETIME summary stats on ALL your visitors. We took the old free log size of 100 and multiplied it by 5 to give you even more info on your visitors. Please note that this increase applies to ALL StatCounter members, and to ALL projects!

    You’ll have to go in and do the log updates yourself but the blog post and email have details on how to do it within a few clicks.

  • The Final Countdown – Keep Up With IrishElection.com

    I’m up this morning catching the coverage of the general election with RTE’s exit poll this morning showing Fianna Fail (41.6%) ahead of Fine Gael (26.3%), Labour having slipped to 9.9% with the PDs under 3%. Paddy Power have been on Ireland AM (TV3) and with Bertie Ahern at 1/4 as the next Taoiseach they’re already paying out to everyone who had Bertie on the betting slip earlier in the year.

    Once I hit the office I’ll be keeping an eye on IrishElection.com who’s “blogger warroom” opens at Pearse Street in Dublin this morning. There’s SMS updates, Twitter updates, you can phone in your opinions (you’ve got a 2-minute cut off point) through MySay.com.

    Check out IrishElection.com here or subscribe to the atom feed.

  • Fired For Blogging? UK Bloggers At Risk, Are You?

    Checking in with the Beeb it looks like a third of bloggers in the UK are at risk of getting fired from their workplace. In a recent survey of 2,000 bloggers it was revealed that 39% of people made “harmful comments” that could be grounds for gross misconduct. That’s a fairly high percentage wouldn’t you think? This gives rise to a post I’ve been keeping in the drafts…

    In the Irish blog o’sphere there is a good element of transparency and a great sense of community. We’re not afraid of saying who we work for, who we represent, what our interests are commercially or personally – nice transparency. What I’ve yet to come across – and feel free to correct me if I’m wrong – are people stepping out and bad mouthing who they work for online. Sure enough, you might hate your boss or management and you might talk around the water cooler about it or yap in the pub about it but you don’t go blogging about it!

    I worked with AOL for some time a few years back, before I had any interest in blogging (but not too long before) so email was the big thing. So was professional misconduct and the two went hand in hand – you don’t bitch about staff or insider details in email, you don’t (or try not to) make personal mails from your company account, forward emails from your company account, anything that has the potential to bring the name of the organisation into disrepute.

    Whether its an organisation you’re working for employing hundreds of people, a small company with fifteen of you there or a small startup (my situation in 2005), it pays to have a little professional courtesy and a little common sense.

    From the report –

    If there is a negative impact on the organisation’s corporate image which is so serious that it breaches the implied term of mutual trust and confidence, the employee could be dismissed for gross misconduct

    And I think thats what it is, common sense. You bite at the hand that feeds you enough and it will eventually bite you back. But blogging isn’t a “new thing” any more and neither is getting fired for it. The term ‘Dooced‘ was pretty much coined by Heather Armstrong who was fired for references made about her employers on her blog back in 2002, just a year after running the blog; ‘Queen Of The Sky’ Ellen Simonetti was fired from her job at Delta Airlines because of events on her blog ‘Diary of a Flight Attendant‘; staff at Wells Fargo and Friendster have been fired in the past for blogging
    . More recently there was the case with Sam Sethi getting the flick from Techcrunch UK before Christmas.

    The three of us in the office including myself, Aidan and John blog on several different fronts and as a business trying to develop itself and its clients the last thing we need to do is go pissing people off. It might be different in our case as we wouldn’t be blogging about hating our own business, but you’d still not see us naming and shaming clients, buyers or suppliers. However, if it was me in a position over 20 other people and one disgruntled employee decides to take things to the web and bad mouth the business or but the business in a bad light thanks to his remarks online I don’t think I’d have any hesitation in taking action – its just something you don’t do. Even if you’re freelance, why would you want to go bad mouthing or showing up a previous source of work if you’re actively looking for others. Things that get published to the web have a tendency on sticking around….

    Late night rant aside, CNN.com published an article while I was finishing up in college just over two years ago and its final points as as important now as they were two years ago.

    1. Know where your employer stands on blogging
    2. Blog on your own time
    3. Practice safe blogging (like not giving away business secrets)
    4. Don’t hide your blog from your boss – be open
    5. Use good judgement – don’t use your blog to talk about things you’d never say in real life
    6. Others will disagree with you – be aware

    I’ve had people approach me this year asking “should I tell the manager if I end up telling a funny story from work” (or something along those lines) – I say you better. Be honest and upfront about it. Take from it what you will but for those people getting into blogging, open your eyes when your blogging. People are reading, people are visiting, search engines are keeping track of your posts and you can be held accountable at the end of the day.

    Don’t get me wrong, this isn’t a code-of-conduct type thing, its just common sense in relation to your employer and your own job security. If you value your job, don’t put yourself in the firing line.

  • FeedBurner Will Sell To Google In 2/3 Weeks

    This is one sale that I’m happy to see anyway, the two providers a perfect marriage in integrating FeedBurner’s statistics and feed management with the likes of Google Adwords, Google AdSense and Google’s Analytics. I had mentioned earlier in the week that the sale was rumoured to be going ahead, as first mentioned by Sam Sethi at Vecosys.

    Spotted the news breaking this morning though on TechCrunch that the deal has been agreed and looks to be in the region of US$100m which represents a great result for a company going into their fourth year who’ve taken US$10m in capital funding over two rounds two years ago.

    FeedBurner really is a quality service and my first port of call when setting up a blog, happy to say I’ve got it managing 26 of feeds from across my own blogs and blogs that I’m managing for one or two other people. I like the stats, like the control over my feeds, republish-ability, friendliness to podcasts – the whole lot. Couple that with the statistics provided by Analytics plus the likelihood of additional revenue generation through your RSS feeds and the whole package looks to be onto a winner from the get go.

    Tip of the hat to FeedBurner, hopefully it brings about an improvement in everything as opposed to dropping any parts of the service but I guess we’ll have two weeks or so to wait and see what happens.

  • Mobile Roaming On Mount Everest

    Do you think the new EU roaming agreement would extend to the Nepalese border? Or maybe a Roam4Free sim, get a good price before you go mountain climbing? Looks like there’s no problem making a phone call from the summit of Mount Everest anyway. Good to know in case you ever get stuck there!

  • Big Brother For Irish Startups

    Here’s an idea (stemming from my day-long thoughts about video podcasting)…. something like Big Brother for Irish startup companies? Take a co-working style environment, film the whole thing, run it for about ten weeks, at the end of each day you get a video blog post from each of the representatives of the startup. Coupled with that you also have daily video podcasts nicely edited together with interviews from the startups, business advisers and consultants, along with footage from the day throughout the centre. Massive online presence, healthy capital reward at the end of the run for investment in your business….

    Would put a massive focus on the startups in question, shed some good media spotlight on the businesses prior to launch and make for some interesting TV. Throw in a few chickens and cocktails (read comments on previous post) and some fun ways to unwind after a 16-hour work day…. you never know!

    If anything it would make for some interesting TV don’t you think?

  • Irish Video Podcasting – I’d Like To See More

    I’ve downloaded and watched Tom Raftery’s video interview with Conor O’Neill at PodLeaders.com (direct download link) this morning and I think its a great debut attempt for a video podcast, hopefully there’ll be more of it from Tom in the future.

    I’m hoping that by the end of 2007 that KilkennyMusic.com will have ventured into video podcasting. We’ve managed to take the Sound System Podcast weekly and seen as we’ll be on a weekly gig basis for a large portion of the summer, a video addition would (I think) make a great boost to the podcast.

    Shopping around on Komplett this morning for video cameras (Komplett, not an affiliate link) it seems now more than ever that digital video cameras, whether shooting to hard drive or dvd or mini-dv are becoming more affordable. Throw the video up on YouTube, or Google or Blip.tv and you’re set.

    Personally, I’d love to see more Irish video podcasts (I’m not currently subscribed to any). While it might not suit everyone, are the Irish podcasts you’d like to see make the leap to video? Or would you even bother with it? After all, it is something that you almost ‘have’ to watch while a lot of the time with other podcasts I can bang on the iPod or leave iTunes playing behind me while I work on something else.

  • Irish Company Buys MindLeaders.com for US$18m

    RTE are reporting that MindLeaders.com, a US-based e-learning company has been snapped up by Thirdforce, based in Blackrock, Dublin (with locations in the UK, Australia and New Zealand as well).

    The deal is worth US$9m in cash with a further US$9m in shares as the story goes.

    In a statement to the Irish Stock Exchange this morning, Thirdforce said the consideration comprises of $9 million in cash and $9 million by the issue of new ordinary shares in the merged company. The company also intends to raise up to €13m through a share placing at a price per share of €0.19, with the proceeds of this placing used to fund the acquisition.

    What or who are MindLeaders.com?

    MindLeaders is an employee and individual performance-improvement company with nearly 25 years of experience in the technology-based, self-paced training field. We provide personalized learning that supports organizational success. Our e-learning tools cover topics ranging from networking in an enterprise environment to personal use of the pc and from healthcare privacy issues to business skills.

    They also provide over 2,000 online training courses online. Overall it looks like a good buy for company who have had some ups and downs in the past year or so.

  • Modded Xbox Consoles Banned From Xbox Live

    I took a delivery of a Linksys WRT54GS router just before the weekend which meant I could finally connect up all the computers / laptops / consoles in the house to the web. Seen as I’ve do most of my work at home to one side of the bedroom it also meant that in-between sites or updates to different projects I could start dabbling more in Xbox live (mcguireken if anyone is interested).

    I’ve been reading of Conor O’Neill’s tweets on modding an original xbox and while I never got around to putting the Aladin mod chip I bought for my own original Xbox (traded in against the 360), I have been giving thought to modding the 360 and doing a little more with the console.

    Until I read that they’ve banned modified consoles off Xbox Live. Isn’t half the fun of an Xbox the fact that you can modify them? Replace the dashboard, upgrade the hard drive, add some water-cooling, completely ‘geek it out’? I don’t see how extra disk space or a modified dashboard is going to corrupt your online play, so why ban people willing to try it?

    Anyone using a modded Xbox (180 or 360) online or see a way around it?

    Update: Engadget has screens from the story from before the weekend.

  • Now Liverpool Access Gets A Makeover

    Another of my blogs, LiverpoolAccess.com, has received the same makeover kenmc.com picked up leading into the weekend. Same theme (as this), modified stylesheet and new logo. I had been using my own variation on the 3 column K2 theme for the site but figure that after a year it was time to freshen it up a little.

    Actually quite happy with the way both kenmc.com and liverpoolaccess.com now look.

  • Good Lord – Might Google Buy FeedBurner?

    Back in the day (what, 2005 maybe?) when I started using FeedBurner there was talk of being able to integrate AdSense into your RSS feed. Then FeedBurner went along and launched the FAN (FeedBurner Ad Network) which would allow you to run CPM ads on your RSS feed, integrating them with your blog content as well. All those months on and RSS advertising has become more popular, I run some ads through my Liverpool Access RSS feed thanks to Text Link Ads (affiliate link) and it pays off.

    Advertising is a hot commodity at the minute, Google monetising YouTube, then buying DoubleClick; Microsoft lobbing six BILLION down for aQuantive and this afternoon Sam Sethi reports (through Vecosys) that Google are possibly going to wrap up the purchase of FeedBurner? Steve Rubel talked about it around this time last year but if the story turns out to be true it will mark a massive turnaround for FeedBurner and I think a great boost for Google’s already massive catalog of web services.

  • Looking At The Spam Statistics

    Massive percentage increase in the number of spam comments towards kenmc.com in recent months. It had taken me from October 2005 to February 2007 to amass 5,000 spam comments in Akismet.

    Since that date in February (6th) to this morning, May 17th there’s been over 25,000 more comments with the current figure Akismet is spitting out standing at 31,254. Thats a fairly big percentage increase in just over three months wouldn’t you think?

  • Irish Photographer/Blogger On Nationwide Tonight

    Soviet-born photographer Philip Pankov who is now living in Ireland and has provided header images for a few Irish bloggers will be appearing on Nationwide tonight. Philip has an extensive collection of images online from in and around Dublin, Irish pubs, the Irish countryside as well as a range of images from around Italy, France, Germany and Croatia. I’m really into black and white photography myself (and have been for years) so I do like his work.

    If you’re near a TV at 7pm switch it on and see what you think for yourself, I won’t actually get to see it at all but fair play to Philip for getting the slot on the show, hope some good comes of it.

  • Optimus Keyboard Gets A Release

    This one first caught my eye late in 2005 and it has taken until now to get it off the ground but from this weekend onwards you’ll be able to place pre-orders for the Optimus Keyboard. 200 keyboards are expected by the beginning of December this year with a further 200 by the end of the month with 400 going into production in January of next year.

    Optimus Keyboard

    Word has it that the keyboard itself is going for over US$1,500 so it might be a little out of reach just now. By a little I mean f’n loads.

  • Buy, Sell and Do Business Online This Thursday

    The IIA National Congress happens this Thursday in the Fitzpatrick Castle Hotel in Killiney with ‘buy, sell and do business online‘ being the theme of this year’s congress.

    The Congress will analyse the upward trend in eCommerce and other online business activity. International and local speakers from leading eCommerce ventures such as Google, Bebo, eBay, Microsoft, Hostelworld and Realex Payments have been lined up. The congress will feature case studies and delve behind the online trends tracked by the IIA.

    The keynote address at the end of the day should be interesting with Mark Charkin (Bebo’s head of sales in Europe) speaking about monetising Bebo. Other speakers include Dermot Nolan (BOI Business Banking), John McElligott (MD, eBay Ireland), Ray Nolan (CEO of WRI and Hostelworld aka the crowd who have gotten Boo.com back off the ground).

  • On The Radio – Sunday May 13th

    I’ll be appearing on Rob O’Connor’s show ‘Irish Beats’ on Beat 102-103 this evening. Due into the station for the 6pm start, show going out live so no idea whats going to happen. I know it will involve some kind of element of KilkennyMusic.com, the One Take Sessions and monthly gigs. Just have to wait and see what happens!

    You’ll be able to pick it up on the radio pretty much anywhere in the South East of the country or stop by the website to listen live. Rob’s show is usually a great one, nice focus on Irish acts, local music etc., something I’m wishing will start in Kilkenny (if I get the finger out).

  • Mind Farts On A Friday Evening

    Today is certainly “one of those days”. Its been a mental week in trying to catch up with blogging, between work and gigs, podcasting and more gigs and the fact that it turned out to be a short week. I actually lost a day somewhere during the week, started work on Tuesday and by the end of the evening thought it was Monday, threw me off completely.

    Mind farts seem to be the course of the day though, I’ve 11 drafts waiting on kenmc.com, four of which were started today but by the time I get to the end of the post and hover over the submit button, I’ve lost my train of thought completely and think “ah yeah, I’ll come back to that one later”.

    Have had some interesting blogging ideas because of it though and with the weather the way it is for the night there’s no time like the present to put pen to paper.

  • Google Bends To Thai Government?

    They might not want to bend over for Viacom, but in light of recent trouble with the Thai government or for a wanting of some peace surround recent YouTube law suits, Google have decided to ‘draw the line‘ over 12 videos that appeared on YouTube deemed insulting to the King of Thailand or the Thai government.

    Four of the videos in question were pulled in breach of Thai law, six were removed by their previous uploaders while two of the videos remain on YouTube, Google deeming they haven’t broken the law.

    Not a bit pointless seen as YouTube is already unavailable in Thailand and Google and some of the major players are already heavily censored in the far east? Think the Irish government would kick up a storm about videos like this, or this?

  • I’ve Adopted FeedSmith – It Helps

    A few days ago I installed the FeedSmith plugin, now under FeedBurner management and its been a help. FeedBurner stats showing an additional 40 readers or so, now edging that bit closer to the 200 mark.

    Installation is a breeze

      1. Upload FeedSmith plugin to your plugin directory
      2. Activate it in WordPress
      3. Enter your FeedBurner URL

    Using some WordPress plugin magic, and user-agent detection, this plugin simply forwards all your feed traffic to FeedBurner. The plugin will detect all ways to access your feed (e.g. http://www.yoursite.com/feed/ or http://www.yoursite.com/wp-rss2.php, etc.), and redirect them to your FeedBurner feed so you can track every possible subscriber. It will forward for your main posts feed, and optionally your main comments feed as well.

    And thats it – all blog feeds now redirected back through FeedBurner. The whole process can be done (timed) in under a minute – improve your stats, track them better, make sure overall that you’re tracking all your readers. You can set it up for your comments feed as well if you’re doing that kinda thing…

  • Premier League Now Gunning For Google

    Must be a busy weekend in Google land, you can imagine the fun their lawyers have been having, what with the Premier League slapping them with a class action suit in the US, something which will likely spell the end of premier league highlights on YouTube.

    The latest action against “deliberate” and “rampant” copyright infringement by YouTube was filed on May 4, 2007, by the Football Association Premier League Limited (the “Premier League”) and Bourne Co. (“Bourne”) to:

    The Premier League describes itself as the top division of English soccer that is viewed by audiences in over 200 countries worldwide and estimated at 2.59 billion people. Bourne describes itself as one of the leading independent publishers or music in the United States with notable classics “Let’s Fall in Love” and “Smile.”

    I hold an e-season ticket for LiverpoolFC.tv, something I enjoy as I get access to all the Liverpool highlights, goals etc. throughout the season but I’m not going to fork out 60 quid for every Premier League club each season to get highlights, my alternative as a resource therefore to look them up on YouTube – whether coming from BBC, Sky, French football networks, Chinese football networks or otherwise. But, given that YouTube make money from the videos thanks to the new bond with Google, the Premier League have become a camp of very unhappy bunnies and have challenged YouTube to a battle in court. Interesting days ahead on this story.