rackforms | 5 years ago | on: “I’ll Finish It This Week” and Other Lies
rackforms's comments
rackforms | 5 years ago | on: Hotwire: A new old way to build web apps
Years ago I was tasked with building dozens of basic web forms. Immediately recognizing the inherit silliness of this task (boring, error prone etc), I built a form creation tool, which all these years later lives on as RackForms.
Over the years the feature set grew organically to accommodate an ever growing set of demands. Yes we still build forms, but we also call into web services, display data, and so on.
Point being, RackForms and any number of other form builders are the blindingly obvious choice for this task -- it would be down right silly to code forms by hand in this era.
And yet that's what we do with the web as a whole.
Once again Microsoft seems to have had the right idea in the good old Web Forms days. Instead of coding app's you'd simply drag and drop components and add wiring code to do what you needed.
Sure it was never that easy, but it's really hard to see how it couldn't have been better given more time.
Fast forward to today and as much as I adore say, VS Code, it's really nothing more than a hyper-powerful text editor. It has none of that tolling to allow for drag and drop development, Id propose that;s the real solution to this issue - Better Tooling.
rackforms | 5 years ago | on: My Google Traffic Has Fallen to Zero
"according to several online customers" - This phrase or a close variant is used in almost every review and it's really distracting. It feels too robotic and repetitive.
In general, it seems like "build quality" is a common complaint, which at these price points is likely always going to be an issue. I guess what I mean is with cheap prices I'm not expecting build quality to be great so repeatedly calling it out in a general sense isn't all that useful. Far more useful is when a specific part is called out, which in one case it is, the wire being flimsy. More of that!
In general, it would be nice to have more specifics instead of the constant generalities one associates with low/er-cost goods.
The phrase "noise cancelling" is used about 44 times in the article. From what I recall this may be considered "keyword stuffing", which is used to be (and almost certainly still is, a big old no-no). Of course how do you create an aggregate content page without mentioning the topic repeatedly? Well my friend that's the Google content paradox! - talk about something without actually mentioning it by name.
On general mission: it would be really nice to have the top "pick" better called out.
I read the first review and was ok, that sounds like an option I wouldn't have considered, good job site! But then said "Mpow hmmm... not a brand I've heard of", so I scanned down and came to the JLab's. I said "I've heard of them!" and read the blurb.
That's where the problem starts: For almost the same price the blurb makes the Jlabs sound "better" or at least more attractive than what I thought was the "top pick / best value".
I think some of this may have to do with the fact that in the Mpow's have two negative aspects pointed out "Others say that the battery life and microphone are disappointing", whereas the Jlabs only one: "pinch their ears". Mind this isn't about count so much as what's being called out: one may have bad battery life and the other may actually hurt my head lol.
The reason I say "problem" is sites like Wire cutter take a stand and proclaim "this is the best", even though in most cases the top 3 or more would all be just fine. As it stands, we have many low cost options presented and all with what appears to be potentially deal-breaking flaws; the end result is I don't really feel any better prepared that if I had just gone to Amazon and scanned reviews myself.
What's more, if I see something with 20 total reviews at 5 stars and a similar product with 40k 4 stars, I'll usually just go for the one with more reviews. In short, number of reviews is a strong signal for me, and I think / hope it would be trivial to add that as a metric to your site.
On Google: So in closing hopefully some of those thoughts are useful in some way, but I did want to close by saying I absolutely feel your pain.
Someone like you posts a traffic drop off story and we all rush in to say this is why, but what we forget is Rome wasn't built in a damned day. If this traffic penalty sticks it's pretty safe to say you're business and dream is dead. No google means no traffic means no site. Business is hard but what we need to agree upon is the promise of the internet was to democratize and incubate. The early internet certainly did, the modern, not so much.
I think we can all agree that the best ideas should rise to the top and be rewarded. We should also agree that a single company shouldn't have that power, but the Internet's users. Legislation is the only cure here, so far as I can see, as this exact scenario plays out time and again and it's always at our expense, both business owners and internet users.
Good luck, and keep at it!
rackforms | 5 years ago | on: Google's penalty against The Online Slang Dictionary
The 10 (or so) spam accounts posted about 30 times. The longest lasting survived a weekend, after which I enabled manual account activation. From start to finish the spam issue lasted around 3 weeks. Eventually, I got rid of the forum altogether.
Alas I tried all the usual things, from the disavow tool to Webmaster forums and dozens of site changes, sadly nothing helped. My penalty felt back then and still appears to be, permanent.
It may help to know pre-penalty my rank was quite high, first page for most relevant search terms. (immediately after page 20 or lower, now around page 10).
Ironically, while the rank was nice to have I never actually did anything for it.
I simply built a fast, human first(!), site that inadvertently followed Google's site quality guidelines.
For example, my software generates web forms. One common growth tactic my competitors use is placing a link at the bottom of every form back to the parent site.
Me -- I never did that. I strongly felt that under no circumstance should the output of my software be used as a marketing tool. Sure it may harm growth, but it felt right, and that was enough for me.
Years after my penalty I read just that. Google frowns upon and may penalize sites for using such "widely distributed site links".
My focus was and always has been on user, so of course I'm the one who gets penalized lol.
Anyway, I think the most damning part of the process was not having a reasonable path for knowing what exactly happened and what I could do to help.
If I were crafting legislation that's where I'd start. I can't help that Google has the market-share it does, but it does mean we all have to play within their world.
All I ask is the rules, wherever they are, are fairly, justly, and evenly applied.
rackforms | 5 years ago | on: Google's penalty against The Online Slang Dictionary
In my case I had a forum (remember those!) in support of my software product.
Bots would occasionally create accounts and post links to knockoff handbags and watches. I'd tolerate (and swiftly kill!) them because our users really loved having a place to meet. (This was back in 2011, ironically, reCAPCTAHA landed in 2012)
Unbeknownst to me those links were part of a larger spam network where thousands of low-quality links pointed back to my site, presumably to those fake accounts(?).
When the penalty hit the process of trying to figure out what the heck went wrong and trying to do something about it -- identical.
In short, I've been penalized out of existence because of an obvious and in my humble opinion, easy to identify spam campaign. Sadly Google placed the cleanup burden on me, and try as I did nothing actually helped. The article's mention "hidden" penalties feels...accurate.
I often tell folks when you perform a Google search you're given worse results than you deserve. My site and goodness knows how many others have been placed so far below the fold that if we're not outright killed, we never reach the users and potential we should.
No biggie if the search market were more diverse, sadly, that is simply not the world we live in.
rackforms | 5 years ago | on: Automatic SSL Certificates for internal IP's for home k8 setup using LetsEncrypt
rackforms | 6 years ago | on: How much longer will we trust Google’s search results?
In my case this leaching appeared to Google as if /we/ were trying to game the system with link farms (we were not). Google penalized us in 2011 and we've yet to recover.
The point: when you use Google search you're often served sub-standard results, as over time generations of ranking penalties has lead to lower quality sites ranking higher.
rackforms | 6 years ago | on: Fancy Zones, a tiling window manager
https://github.com/adamsmith/WindowsLayoutSnapshot
Wonder if this tool would perform the same general function.
BTW: For any MS folks listening, please fix this bug, it's dreadful! :(
rackforms | 6 years ago | on: YouTube faces creator backlash
The difference of course is we don't really have active and vocal "followers" in the way YouTube creators do, so for the most part, when a website owner like myself gets penalized for some abstract and out of my hand reason, or a algorithm change destroys your business overnight, it happens silently, beyond the headlines.
I can't stress this enough -- Google has been a powerful, often positive force for the wider Internet. But they're also a cruel, heartless, and often maniacal source of pain and sorrow.
rackforms | 7 years ago | on: Pixel 3 Review
My comment was more a remark on the de-noise Apple's default camera app applies.
Again, I'd check out that image I linked to. At 100% zoom the ground detail is quite literally erased from the iPhone X image, to the point where it looks like a stylized art filter was applied.
The Pixel at least retains detail in such places (also, for example, on the roof tiles). Link: https://images.anandtech.com/galleries/6731/G_Pixel3_IMG_201...
None are perfect of course -- Samsung loves them some sharpening, and the Pixels images have a slightly garish blue cast I'm not a fan of.
rackforms | 7 years ago | on: Pixel 3 Review
That said, as an iPhone user it's annoying to see Apple purposely hobbling itself with its overly aggressive (re: terrible) image processing.
In this image, for example:
https://images.anandtech.com/galleries/6731/A_iX_IMG_0308.jp...
The cobblestone ground is literally left unrecognizable, a shame considering the sensor is capable of so much more.
Since iOS 7 we're able to shoot raw, and Apps like ProCam show just how much better our sensor can be if it weren't for all that blurring.
If you shoot with an iPhone I highly recommend using RAW, your shots will easily match the Pixels excellent results for basic point and shoot detail.
rackforms | 8 years ago | on: Against an Increasingly User-Hostile Web
rackforms | 8 years ago | on: Against an Increasingly User-Hostile Web
rackforms | 8 years ago | on: Blender 2.79 released
[Edit, somehow dropped h from [h]ttps in link)
rackforms | 9 years ago | on: If the Moon Were Only 1 Pixel – A tediously accurate map of the solar system
Also fun to see how slow even the speed of light is. Start at the sun and head for earth. Once you reach Earth marvel at how fast you had been going.
Head towards Jupiter and, once again, marvel at how impossibly slow your going compared to even the nearest background stars.
rackforms | 9 years ago | on: iOS and MacOS Developers Can Now Respond to Reviews
rackforms | 9 years ago | on: Google and Facebook ad traffic is 90% useless
rackforms | 9 years ago | on: Google and Facebook ad traffic is 90% useless
So I've never done any "SEO" work on the site outside of Google's own recommendations with regard to site content, ease of use, etc.
In other words no link building, keyword stuffed pages, etc.
I'm still in the dark all these years later, but my best guess is:
a. I had a blog and forum that, like most of that time (2012's), has occasional spam posts.
b. Those posts would often, but not always, be referenced by the spam links pointing to my site.
c. I had very high rank in Google for several years leading up to the penalty.
Because of this I don't think it was a necessarily a competitor, but rather spammers trying to leech off of that high ranking.
rackforms | 9 years ago | on: Google and Facebook ad traffic is 90% useless
I paid for ad's through HotScripts, and this was a solid source of leads. This mixture, along with a fast, secure, easy to use site and great word of mouth lead to an annual growth rate of around 30%, ending up in 2011 with a monthly income of just over $5000. Not bad for what started out as a side-project. I took none of this for granted, and worked by butt off every day.
It's key to note from 2007 to 2011 a great consolidation was taking place, with Google eating, for me at least, 90% of all search traffic.
Then the spammers hit. My site was targeted with millions of low quality links, which lead to a Google penalty in 2012. I lost 90% of my traffic and along with it, 90% of my revenue.
4 years on and I've never actually recovered from my penalty, with traffic being manually limited to under 30 clicks on any particular day.
I've done my best to advertise, with Google capturing the lions share. Unfortunately I too have very little luck with this channel, with only 1 $4 conversion after hundreds spent.
The real kicker here, and my reason for posting, is the difference between what was my organic traffic then, and my ad traffic now, is nowhere near the same in terms of quality and obviously, conversions.
I guess my point is the current situation, basically 2 companies controlling so much traffic, seems, well, bad for small business in this country. I value what they bring to the table and fully understand why they're so popular. But is things keep on this way where does that lead the guys like me? Is this just the way it has to be? Is the dream of the open Internet already dead?
rackforms | 9 years ago | on: Apple cuts Tim Cook's pay 15% for missing sales goals
In every market segment Apple plays in they're facing incredibly stiff and in many cases, superior competition. To make matters worse Apple "playbook", that attention to detail, the advertisements, etc -- yes it's taken a while but it's been mostly cracked. To be clear that's good for any of us who've been fans of that book, but it's absolutely not good for Apple should they choose to remain stagnant.
The result is a situation where Apple's hard won customers -- like me -- are looking to other companies and they're "speaking our language", offering products and services that are on-par and in many cases, simply better.
And it's not just desktop -- Siri is stagnant/broken, the iOS App Store is a mess, Email, on and on.
My point is at a time where competition and strategic advantages are under incredible stress, where incredibly obvious mistakes are being made in core product lines, Apple releases an outrageously high-priced picture book. It's totally fine, understandable, admirable even, if you think all's going well, but I do not think things are going well.
Almost always and ironically, when something's interesting to me it's usually more difficult work and thus, contains far more unknowns, hence making estimates that much less reliable.