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Entries in Getting blogged down (37)

Sunday
Nov232008

Typos

Why one should never trust a spelling checker...

I admit it. I make errors. Public ones. Like writing this:

For those of us who were once English teachers, to funny not to share... Doug


And of course, the misspelling was brought to my attention:

I am a devout reader of your blog (not that I always agree with you), but I felt, as an English teacher, the need to point out the irony of the mistake in your first sentence...

"For those of us who were once English teachers, to funny not to share"

"too funny"

No offense intended!

So, OK. That was embarrassing. I replied:

Hi,

Here are the possible reasons I made such an error:

  • I deliberately left out the second “o” because my computer is running low on them and I need to conserve.
  • I’ve always been confused about to, too, and 2 (as well as tutu – both the costume and the politician).
  • This was actually a contest to see who could find the error – AND YOU WON!
  • Like the Navajo blanket weavers, I purposely make an error in each thing I write, honoring the notion that only God is perfect.
  • I suck at proofing my own writing and need to take the time to do a better job of it.

Anywho, I will leave the error in situ as a lesson in humility. Thanks for the catch.

All the best,

Doug

While making such a dumb mistake and being called on it never exactly makes my day, it doesn't really slow me down much either. Nor should concern about your own writing being perfect prior to publication keep you from writing and publishing. Fear of errors keeps too (or to) many people from contributing to the common good.

After writing I don't know how many words in books, articles, columns and this dumb blog, you'd think I would get better at crafting a decent sentence and avoiding typos. But I still can't re-read a single thing I've written without the urge to re-write - even if just a little. And deliberate or not, I bet almost everything I've written still has grammar or spelling errors still in it.

_______________________

On a completely un-related note, my buddy Ian Jukes is still suffering from a foot infection. In my last email to him, I suggested that he simply lose the foot and attach a wheel or inline skate or even a little skateboard. I listed several advantages:

  • easier to make close connections at airports with new speed
  • add a few LED lights and do a big “Starlight Express” number as a finale to his keynotes
  • big down hills = no need for taxis
  • twice the life from one pair of socks
  • add a generator to recharge the laptop and cell phone

I am sure there are other benefits as well. But I also realize that he is probably more attached to his foot than I am. This is my Heely-envy coming out. When will they make these things for my size weight person?

Could this be Ian's big finish to his future keynotes?

 

Wednesday
Aug132008

Blog Award

JIm (teacherninja) was nice enough to pass this award along to me. It now entitles me to give seven others this award.

I will draw them from the library field. A neat way to find a some other library bloggers of value!

  1. California Dreamin' by Rob Darrow
  2. Adventures in Educational Blogging by Susan Sedro
  3. Dunstanology, the St Dunstan School Library Blog
  4. Professional Thoughts by Cathy Nelson
  5. Always Learning by Kim Cofino
  6. Not So Distant Future by Carolyn Foote
  7. From Who the Bell Tolls: M A Bell's Blog About Librarianship and Technology

Oh, the award goes on my shelf next to the Whitcomb Prize for satire! The Illusion of Change tripped a trigger. I still think it is a wonderful piece of writing. Funny how I can't find any ed journal that wants to publish it.

Friday
Aug012008

Happy Birthday, Blue Skunk

The Blue Skunk Blog is now three years old.

Such milestones seem to be a good time to review and revise, so I took a good look at my Why the Blue Skunk? and My Biases pages and made a few tweaks.

In 36 months, there have been 787 posts (averaging of 22 posts a month) on the Skunk. In July 2006 I posted only 3 times and in May 2008 I posted 36 times. 

Over the past year (August 2007 to July 2008) these are the stats generated by my blog host:

Page Views606,323
Page Views / Month (Avg)50,489
Unique Visitors245,184
Unique Visitors / Month (Avg)21,197
Robot Hits491,142
Robot Hits / Month (Avg)40,968


Or in a more graphical format:

The Skunk has 2,213 subscribers and GooglePage rank of 5/10. The Technorati authority rating is 183 and ranking is 28,458. I am not sure the significance of any of these numbers and I hope I haven't embarrassed myself. I've never gone out of my way to try to increase readership or ranking. As I've opined before, the Blue Skunk is the boutique not the Wal-Mart of blogs, appealing to only the most intelligent and discriminating of readers. (Deep enough for ya?)

Enough navel gazing. The important thing is that this entire experiment is just about as much fun as one can have with one's clothes on. Onward and upward.