Not including this post, I posted 50 blogs this year, which received 67 comments. Clearly, I’m not prolific (!), but I’m happy to see more comments than posts, and I’m content with roughly a post-a-week average for 2008. (For those with a young, active families and with jobs that aren’t centrally about blogging, I’d love to know how pull-off a higher posting average without impacting your quality of life and quality of work.
)
Blogging is a discipline, and it’s something I intend to continue pursuing in the coming year. So, with that in mind, here is how things online ranked here in 2008:
Top 10 posts written in 2008
- DFS tutorial
- CMIS – Content Management Interoperability Services – received the most comments this year
- DFS best practices
- Download PDC2008 presentations – i.e. essentially a public service post
- Blue Ocean Strategy – i.e. one of my book reviews (and not the one I expected either)
- Documentum 6.5 with services in mind
- DFS Object service consumer #1
- DFS Object service consumer #2a – second most comments this year
- DFS Object service consumer #2b
- DFC, Microsoft developers, .NET and DFC PIA – i.e. a post about pre-DFS development using Documentum in a Microsoft environment
Top 10 posts (ever)
- Documentum Foundation Services (DFS)
- DFS tutorial (see above)
- CMIS – Content Management Interoperability Services (see above)
- Ruby coding conventions, standards and best practices
- Spell checking Java source code
- Great NASA observatories
- DFS best practices (see above)
- Download PDC2008 presentations (see above)
- The Starbucks Experience- i.e. another book review of mine
- What’s new in DFS 6.0 SP1
Top three pages in 2008
As 2008 comes to a close, I hope that you have a safe and hopeful new year.
Craighttp://craigrandall.net/
Twitter: @craigsmusings







I found it interesting that Music is your top hit, because a music related post was also the top on my blog – http://nohype.tumblr.com/post/47383813/album-per-year
I wonder if it’s the images or just that so many more people look for information on music than about software architecture or storage networking.