Archive for June, 2005

Server Sugery

Posted Saturday, June 11th, 2005 at 11:56 am
Server Sugery

Installing the new server into the rack went rather well, at least until it met Cole on the network, our main Exchange and file server. Two hours after installation, Cole suffered an ‘unrecoverable hardware failure’ and left no hints regarding what went wrong. Sometimes you just can’t take a step forward without taking two steps back.

New Dell Server for iMIS

Posted Friday, June 10th, 2005 at 8:01 am
New Dell Server for iMIS

It doesn’t look very glamorous in its box, but the Dell server that arrived today is very cool. While the rest of the staff attends a board meeting this weekend, I get to spend my time setting up a new server.

Kip’s Farewell

Posted Wednesday, June 8th, 2005 at 1:12 pm
Kip's Farewell

The staff, today, honored outgoing chief operating officer and friend Kip Zurcher. I’ve known and worked with Kip for almost 10 years. He served Lambda Chi well and will be missed.

Print URLs can’t be clicked

Posted Tuesday, June 7th, 2005 at 7:56 pm

On Friday, the Indianapolis Star did a little story on me and my “No Repeat Lunch Week” routine. The story included a URL to my website in the forth of eight paragraphs (told you it was short).

Some of my coworkers thought my site would receive a huge spike in traffic for having it’s URL mentioned in the city paper; others didn’t care.

The result? I received only a minor spike in traffic. It was more than average, but not even close to my busiest day this year, which happened to be three days earlier for no apparent reason.

A measly 18 visitors came directly from www.indystar.com by clicking on the link in the online version of the story. Two strangers sent me emails — one to recommend a food site and the other rambled about doves for some unknown reason.

During lunch today, we came up with three reasons why my site received little traffic.

Neither the story nor I interest the readers of the Indianapolis Star

Few people read sidebars in Section E, beneath the fold

URLs don’t translate well from print to web

My guess is all three are likely reasons.

Though I can definitely guess at least three people read my website (I can hear you breathing), I’m sure more read the Star.

Which leads me to believe few people read a URL, remember it, and type it in the next time they sit down at a computer.

In contrast, when I published “Keeping Navigation Current With PHP” on a little website called A List Apart, traffic to my site quadrupled the first two weeks and eventually leveled off to nearly three times the amount of traffic I received a few months prior.

Uncle Artie’s

Posted Saturday, June 4th, 2005 at 8:23 pm
Uncle Artie's

The Taste of Broad Ripple is a good time. It’s more beer and wine than food, but that’s okay. We did find some bbq.