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View Article  Are you a Qumana blogger?
Do you use Qumana to update your blog(s)?  Tell us!  Even better ... how about this lovely chicklet that Arieanna made ...
 
Even better than that ... be on our new Qumana blogger blogroll!  I've started to populate it already with people I know are using Q.  Want to be on it?  Leave a comment here with your blog's URL and will add you in a jiffy!
 

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View Article  Further review of WordPress.com ... I like it!
I've been playing with my new WordPress.com blog—ProBlogging How to—for a while now.  First thoughts, I really like it.  Qumana connects in a cinch.  I've been cross-posting and re-posting without problems.  The site isn't getting much traffic yet, so trackback and comment management isn't something that I've had to deal with.  On the down side, the admin/dashboard has been a bit sluggish at times and I would like to edit the template (I did choose a standard one, and really like it).  Beyond that, looks good.  Heck it is beta, gotta cut Matt some slack!
 
I'm very excited to have another serious blog hosting option out there.  Yes, I still like Blogware.  I also think TypePad and Bryght are solid too.  I am curious about the WordPress.com business model, though.  Is is going to be free? (Way unlikely, IMHO)  Ad-supported?  Tiered?  I'd love to know.  Matt, ping me ... let me know, please?
 
Now is this just another test blog for me?  One that I'm just going to dump?  No, actually I don't think so.  I like the look and feel.  Nice simplicity right now.  I'm am going to start writing more content that is only posted there.  The focus is going to be on becoming and being a pro blogger.  Yeah, like I don't write enough about that!
 
Regardless.  Matt and team, great work and I hope to see more refinements soon.
 
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View Article  Blogging Survey - On Bloggers

This is the first post in a series about the nature of the Blogosphere, based on data from our recent survey of Qumana users. Our survey is based upon the data and opinions of 103 bloggers who have tried or have downloaded Qumana . This survey gave us a lot of insight into bloggers and the Blogosphere, as well as great feedback to help us improve Qumana. The first part of the survey series will look at the blog experience of our users.

Activity of bloggers - how long they've been blogging, for how many blogs, and for how much time per week.

lengthtimeblogging(n=103)

Roughly 50% of bloggers using Qumana have been blogging for at least a year. Given that I'm not even at that mark myself, it's an impressive figure. The data suggests two things: that Qumana is being used by "experienced" bloggers, and that offline editors are tools sought out after a year of blogging. Possibilities for this shift could stem from frustration with posting via browsers or from the need to manage multiple blogs (see below).

Given the acceleration of the blogosphere, I would expect the numbers of new bloggers seeking easier blog management tools to increase, and that we'll see a lot of fluctuation in the percentages for many years to come, as new bloggers become experienced bloggers at a faster rate.

I believe that the tools to help newbie bloggers are becoming more sophisticated, decreasing the learning curve required to use them. That being said, once bloggers reach a certain stage of knowledge, they will begin to want tools to help them increase productivity and to bypass the restriction of blog platform interfaces.

numberblogswriteon(n=102)

I was mildly surprised to find that most of our bloggers had more than one blog. It makes sense, given that blogging tools such as Qumana make cross-publishing simple, and take away the pain of managing and posting to multiple blogs.

Given our data, 38% of bloggers had 3 to 5 blogs. There was a jump from one blog, 32% to 3-5, with fewer bloggers at 2 blogs (21%). My guess is, if bloggers follow my own pattern, jumping to two is just a stepping stone to more.

Of those bloggers who have 3 to 5 blogs, 70% have been blogging for one year or more. This shows, quite clearly, that the longer you blog, the more likely you are to have more than one blog.

Oddly enough, we have a single lone blogger out there blogging 3 to 5 blogs with less than 2 months experience - I'd say watch out for that one!

hoursperweekblogging(n=103)

38% of bloggers surveyed spend more than 6 hours per week plugging away at their blogs. We have a few bloggers playing around at less than 2 hours per week, which is not really very much time at all. Of those bloggers who have 3 to 5 blogs, 24% spend 3 to 5 hours a week blogging.

One thing to think about here - do we really realize how much time we actually spend blogging each day? I doubt we'd even like to admit that to ourselves.

More data to come: Keep your eye out for future information on time spent reading blogs, blogger demographics, opinions on advertising, and the great feedback we've received about Qumana.

Survey reliability: The survey seems to fairly represent new bloggers, experienced bloggers, and a good cross section of careers, blog topics, and more. However, despite this diversity, the data may not represent the true blogosphere due to the nature of the survey and its restriction to only those bloggers using Qumana.

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View Article  Dinner with Jim Bair and Cece Royal
How often do you get to have dinner with a legend of the computing world?  Last night I was honoured to play host to Jim Bair, who is a Director at Qumana, and his friend Cece Royal.  We had an amazing dinner at the Artist's Bistro here on Salt Spring.  I hadn't been there in a long while, so I was more than a bit nervous.  Well, many folks told me, and them, that it was (it is!) an excellent resturant.  I guess it is pretty good because famous Salt Springer Randy Bachman (Guess Who, BTO, etc) was there having dinner with his wife (who is a gifted basket weaver and gardner, btw) and some friends as well a couple tables away.
 
Anyway we talked about Qumana, of course, politics (come on with two Americans and an American ex-pat, it's going to come up), and technology.  Who better to talk about technology than Jim.  You see Jim is a pioneer of computing.  He helped shaped how we work with computers in very fundamental ways.  Networking, human interface design, knowledge management, the mouse.  Yeah, THE MOUSE.  He helped invent it.  Cece is a technical writer for HP, so she had a lot to contribute to the conversation as well.  So, here on the left is a mouse, signed by Jim, for my friend's 16-year-old daughter.  I know that this mouse has now been retired and will be displayed with honour.
 
Jim and Cece, thanks for a great dinner and I'll see you at the AGM on Thursday!
 
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View Article  Last chance to win

Only 24 more hours left to complete the survey about Qumana and be entered to win one of four licensed copies of Lektora, a $29.95 USD value.

If you're new to Qumana, still haven't tried it, or have been using it for ages - now is your last chance to go through the survey and tell us what you think. If you've been using Qumana for a while, you'll know that we really do listen to what our customers want. So, now is your chance to be heard.

Click here to take the survey.

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View Article  Jim Turner interviews Fred Fabro for One by One Media on Qumana
Connections.  The Blogosphere is all about connections.  Connections between people.  Connections between businesses.  I met Jim through our work on Blog Business Consulting, and we hung out for most of the sessions at BBS05SanFran.  I got Jim hooked on Qumana.  I've helped him connect Qumana into most of his blogs.  A great experience for me, since I've started to learn a lot about how we can make the product better.
 
Well Jim was so interested in the whole Qumana story that over the weekend he interviewed Fred Fabro, our CEO—One By One- Help Wanted- A Blog Editor.  It's a great interview.  Fred lays out how Qumana fits in and where we're headed. 
 
As an interesting segue, Jim asks about me and my role as CBO (Chief Blogging Officer).  Okay, first off, I started off as CBO with only semi-seriousness.  Now, now things are different.  A lot has happened since February.  Blogging has leapt forward so fast, I don't think any of us could have planned for it.  As for the role of the CBO, well it is truly a melding of my role as Product Manager and as a professional blogger.   I blog about Qumana, I blog about blogging.  I work with other bloggers and monitor the Blogosphere.  It is crucially important to Qumana.

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Will the CBO role expand?  I hope so.  Will it always be a "C-level" position?  A senior person doing the job?  That remains to be seen.  Will more companies find it crucial to their operations?  Yes.  The Blogosphere can really hang you out to dry if you're not watching.  Plus by opening the channel to the world, but blogging about your company, it's products, it's niche area, you truly start to understand it all better.
 
Here's to Fred, Qumana, and the CBO!
 
 
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View Article  Take the Qumana Survey and win!

You are invited to take a survey about Qumana and the blogosphere. You may already know about it if you signed up to receive email from Qumana. If you didn't, you are now invited to take part. If you haven't tried Qumana yet, now is the time to give it a test drive.

We've learned a lot from those of you who have taken the time already to answer the survey. There are obvious areas where we want to get better, and areas where are hard work is already showing. We look forward to meeting some of your requirements soon in making Qumana a better application for all!

As a thanks for completing the survey, you will be entered in a draw to win one of four licensed copies of Lektora, a $29.95 USD value.

Whether you have used Qumana for months, just started, or stopped a while ago, we would appreciate your thoughts, good or bad. We have built Qumana up from the suggestions of bloggers, and want to keep our bloggers involved in making Qumana even better. Please feel free to have suggestions ready for us.

Click here to take the survey.

Thanks for your help!

When we have all the results, we'll be sharing some of them here on the blog. From our initial responses, we know that we have a lot to talk about and cannot wait to start blogging it.

View Article  Qumana and ExpressionEngine ... works better now
I was helping Jim Turner yesterday getting Qumana up and running for a new blog of his. This new blog is running on ExpressionEngine.  I've used EE before to post to.  The problem with previous versions of EE has been that they only supported the Blogger API for remote posting.  Blog Ads by ChitikaThe Blogger API, unfortunately, doesn't handle titles.  The latest version supports not only Blogger, but MetaWeblog and MoveableType as well.  So after initializing the MetaWeblog API module I was able to post with titles and support for comments, and support for uploaded images.  Not bad.
 
If you're trying to get Qumana to work with your blog and have run into trouble, just e-mail support AT qumana DOT com and we'll help you out.
 
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View Article  What makes a good blog editor? Listening.
I've been a part of Qumana for a little over a year now.  Since I started a lot has changed with the application.  I don't think you'd recognize the application then with what we have now.  We started off think with what we thought blogging and a blog editor was about.  We tried to capture and store more content.  The application was powerful, too powerful.  It didn't function in the flow, sometimes it was like a boulder in the way.  That didn't stop me from making a lot of use of it.  The original QumanaPro was what let me get into professional blogging, and when a little issue with a Windows patch killed it for a while, I wasn't half as efficient as I was before.  The other main difference was that QPro was commercial.  I still think it was worth the price we were charging, but we needed to make some changes.
 
What is now Qumana (we had been calling it QumanaLE), came about in a conversation with the team—"What if we made a prototype with just the DropPad and the editor ..."—and in a few weeks QumanaLE (the Qumana you now know) was born and we haven't looked back.
 
Blog Ads by ChitikaSince our launch on June 13 we've had nearly 5000 downloads of the application (not including our "beta" last month), and we're really pleased and excited with the reception Qumana has had on the Blogosphere.  But, but we can do better.  We want to be better.  We're actively reading and evaluating all comments and feedback we receive.
 
So on this Labour Day weekend, I hope all of you have a chance to relax and enjoy the fruits of your labour.  All of us at Qumana are happy you've been pleased with ours.
 
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