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Since many of your users fall into the early adopter crowd and probably have similar browsing habits - you may want to take a quick poll before you invest too much time/effort on a blog redesign.
I'm wondering if Disqus has 'most popular' features for all of their stuff (both related to your specific blog and related to the overall world of blogs they are plugged into)...seems like they should.
I know they haven't released all of their API yet (I'm especially waiting for them to get the 'get_user_posts' part out so I can let people fubnub it), but once they do I'm pretty sure there are going to be a lot of really interesting things people will do with mashing up of comments and using the related data to filter, sort, and improve upon everyone's blog experience...
Too bad people don't rate comments more. Perhaps if the publisher responded by e-mail with "+1" that could count for a vote, and then I could Fubnub my "Comments of the Week" automatically with the ones that had gotten extra votes on.
i get about 4k visits per day on the web and about 3.2k visits to my feed
so the web is slightly more popular
Surely, more interesting would be a blog aggregator that looked across a large number of blogs and ran what for the want of a better word would be a "CommentRank" - clearly having more "interesting" bloggers comment on your blog is better than having, well, me.
I'm now wondering whether there are enough APIs that a new cloud-based service could wander out and do this quickly :-)
M.
Our application does exactly that !
As an example, we've aggregated 4500 blogs on Food&Wine, we've automatically id the most influencial blogs and are also gathering compete ranking and frequency of posting along with various info like social profile (linkedn,facebook) of the blogger and ad networks the blog belongs to.
We also have "workgroup" iteraction with the community so that a group of people can collectively comment and track their influence in a community.
Here is a link on our blog with a short study: http://blog.ecairn.com/2008/06/19/food-blogs-st...
Curiously, many of my "throwaway" posts - like when I vented about how DHL sucks, wrote a quick album review, or talked about locker room etiquette - get tons of comments. My "most active" are, in many ways, not what my blog is about, and I have to think this is relatively common for those of us outside the "A List".
On a related note, I have to imagine as Mark Harrison alluded to, that many of those 44 comments are just people who are putting in a "me too". Then there are those blog comments which you talked about that become posts in their own right. And often I stay out of the comments when there are two many simply because there's too much noise and I feel like my response is easily lost.
That assumes all my plans work out
Fred
However, you can put up a crappy political-related post and get 3x the normal number of comments.
Many comments just means everyone can relate, understand and knows a lot about the post, this is not cutting edge thinking, it is not novel and is not new observations, just a lot of people who can agree...
Andy of HoboTraveler.com in Thailand in transit to Africa
Comments are consideration for good content.. The more valuable the content, the more comments it earns. Good content compells people to express themselves. Creating content that does this is not easy.
It's not about whether a post is good or a post is bad, but rather a measure of how much a post impacts people enought to express themselves. In a world where people have little time to do anything, getting them to stop and leave a comment clearly is an impressive feat.