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Amazon shop on my site

by Henk ter Heide on Saturday September 22, 2007

There are a lot of books about drawing and it would be nice to have a way to link to them. For that end I’ve been looking for a widget that will automatically link to interesting Amazon products. I finally found one.

The only problem with this widget is that it creates context links. Those links that give you a picture of the page that you could go to, if you hover for 400 ms above the link.
I really hate those kind of links.
So I will be testing this one for a while to see how annoying it is.

I’ve send an email to Amazon requesting a box for my sidebar. Hopefully they’ll respond and create one.

(Still waiting for Amazon’s spider  :)  )

In Dutch we have a proverb about looking past the point of ones nose. Meaning that you should look around before you start making comments.
In this case it applies to me.

It turns out that Amazon does have the kind of ad box that I was looking for. Only in there wisdom they gave it a Japanese name. Since my Japanese isn’t all that good I missed it.
You’ll find a little blue box at the bottom of my middle column. At this moment it’s showing an ad for a Bruce Springsteen CD but in a few hours it should changes to something that relates to the content of this site.

Amazon seems to think that people either want a long and wide ad or a short and narrow ad. I wanted one that is as wide as the column but not very long, but that isn’t available.
It’s almost impossible to receive money from Amazon if you’re not in the USA. Amazon charges $15 per $100 for the check and last time I checked my bank charged 45 guilder – about $20 – to cash out a dollar check.
I only wanted to offer one or two books as a service to the reader.
Oh well. It’s at the end of the column. If you don’t need it you’ll probably won’t even see it.

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Viral traffic gain method for starting bloggers

by Henk ter Heide on Friday September 21, 2007

I’ve found some more information and figured something out that makes Blogrush very interesting for people who just started a blog or any other kind of website.

Blogrush is a new service by John Reese (a big name in Internet marketing) to increase your traffic.
Blogrush places a little widget on your site with links to related sites. When someone clicks a link a new window is opened for that link.
Other sites get a widget with a link to your site. For every time you show the widget you get a credit and your link is shown ones.

It gets interesting when you refer people to Blogrush since you also get credits for the number of times they show the widget. And when those people refer people to Blogrush you get credits for the number of times they show the widget. This goes on for ten generations.

So basicly it’s a pyramid scheme.
When you join a pyramid scheme there are two questions you should ask.

  1. When did the service start?
  2. Does the six degrees of separation theory apply?

The service started on the 16e of September 2007.
With a piramid scheme that started only 5 days ago hardly anyone will know of it’s existence. That means that if you join now you’ll be able to find a lot of people to join your network.

The six degrees of separation is a theory that says that you know (1) someone who knows (2) someone who knows (3) someone who knows (4) someone who knows (5) someone who knows (6) someone of importance.

At first glance that may seem unlikely but think about it.
I’m a starting artist with autism who does unskilled labor at a sheltered work place. I know about 200 people and none of them know anyone of importance. Or do they?
The manager of my department knows a president of the company with 2000 employees. The company where I work.
This president has joined us about two years ago. We hired him because he is well connected within the business community. It’s quite possible that he knows the president of Sony or at least that he knows someone who knows the president of Sony. (The last few months we have been doing a lot of work on Sony mp3 players.)
Within three or four degrees of separation I “know” someone important.

The same holds true on the Internet. With most networking schemes it’s all about who you know to get something done. But because you can get traffic from ten generations of referrals the six degrees of separation applies.

With an ordinary networking scheme you would have to find people who’d bring in at least the same amount of traffic as you do. Which would be a lot of work.
But since the six degrees rule applies you could except anyone with a website.

Did you just start your own blog last week and do you have one or two friends who just started to blog last week?
Join up and get your friends to join your network!
At this point it really doesn’t matter if you have any web traffic to speak of because it will grow.

To grow your traffic you’ll go about your business in the usual way. You’ll write your articles. Maybe you’ll learn how to write great headlines and great articles and your traffic will increase.
In the mean time your Blogrush widget will be sitting on your website. Ones in a while you’ll write an article to get people to join up. Maybe an other friend will start blogging and join your network.
Slowly but surely your network will grow.

I can’t say how long it will take but at some point you will hit that pot of cold. At some point in the next few weeks you’ll find that you know someone who…. knows someone with a large amount of traffic who will give you a lot of credits.

Anyone who has a website with a few pageviews a day join Blogrush.
If you’ve been at it for months and you have hundreds of pageviews a day it probably would be a good idea to join but it might take a few weeks before you’ll see any results.

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The viral method of getting more traffic to your blog

by Henk ter Heide on Wednesday September 19, 2007

Looking to your left you’ll see the top of a little applet called “From the Blogsphere”. It shows five links to other blogs with related subjects. When you click a link a new window is opened for that blog.
And off course for every time you show this applet your ad gets shown at an other blog.

Here’s were it gets interesting.
At the bottom of the applet you’ll find a link to the Blogrush site were can you get your own applet. If you do, your ad gets posted on members sites every time you show an ad.
The interesting bit is that my ad also gets shown for every time your site shows the applet. Then someone uses your link as a referral to get his own applet. For every time he shows the applet your ad is shown and my ad is shown.
That will go on for ten generations.

I’ve been doing a little math. Let’s say that the first ten people who use my link as a referal to take their own applet, are bloggers who have been at it for a few month and have one hundred pageviews a day. (Which is my average at the moment). Say that their first ten referrals are also have one hundred pageviews a day. That would mean that my ad is shown a 1000,000 times a day.
But there are no rules as to how big the first generation could grow. So if I keep this applet on my site for a few years I could get as much as a thousand referrals and so could they. In a few years my ad could be shown at millions upon millions of pages a day. Even if only a tiny fraction of visitors clicks on my link I will get a large amount of traffic.

I came across this applet late last night. Placed it in an invisible corner of my site and forgot about it. Today looking at my stats I got reminded because Blogrush send me my first visitor. This visitor was targeted at a specific article.
Looking at my Blogrush stats I found that my ad was shown to 50 people.

I have no idea if this is an average but they still have to show my ad 65 time today, so it will be interesting to see if I get some more visitors. But even at an one in fifty ratio it’s free traffic. You don’t have to do anything to get it.
By the time your referral networks kicks in you could be looking at a minimum of one in fifty click through rate of a million ad views a day.

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My very own ad

by Henk ter Heide on Sunday August 19, 2007

Marketing

The last 18 days I’ve been watching Ed Dale of the Thirty day challange, who is teaching people a little bit about marketing and ways to atract traffic to your website.

Ad

In that spirit I’ve written my very own ad.
Have a look and tell me if it’s cheesy enough.

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Redesign weekend

by Henk ter Heide on Saturday August 11, 2007

When I started this blog I had just met wordpress and was still getting to know the program. I knew that it was possible to design your site but I didn’t have a good idea of what I wanted or needed.
After writing in this blog for a few month I’m getting an idea of what I need and it is nothing like the design I have right now.

This weekend I’m going to implement a new design. That means that all the plugins I’ve add to help readers navigate this site will be gone for a while.

Hopefully I wont run into too many problems and you can go back to enjoying this site in as short a time as possible.

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8 beautiful and unusual art sites

by Henk ter Heide on Tuesday July 31, 2007

Here are some of the art sites I featured on See me draw in the last couple of weeks:

  • Wasted beauty is a beautiful site with eerie drawings.
  • Julian Beever makes pavement drawings. Large 3d drawings that, from the right angle, look very real.
  • Amy Bennet constructed a town using model railroad miniatures, landscaping supplies and dollhouse lighting. From this model she paints pictures of the inside and outside of the houses and the people that could have lived in this town.
  • Characterdesign is kind of a showroom for people who ilustate books etc. They also do interviews with their artists.
  • Jason Chan draws pictures with an eastern theme.
  • Justine Ashbee draws strange wall paintings that remind me of creased cloth and in that have something very familiar.
  • Philip Straub paints beautiful book illustrations.
  • Does a car dream about becoming a bigger car? Wouldn’t it be nice to shine the light of your flashlight around a corner? On 98pages you find these kind of visual jokes.

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Change in direction (drawing: Church window)

by Henk ter Heide on Monday July 16, 2007

The last few weeks I’ve been doing a lot of abstract drawings. Which is fun but it’s only a small part of the pictures I see in my mind. Most pictures are about people, animals and objects. I can only draw a small portion of these pictures because I don’t have the skills.

This morning I decided it was time to move on. I went down town to get some flowers to draw. Only to find that the first flower shop gets stocked in the afternoon and the second flower shop is gone. Driving to where the other flower shop used to be I found a shop with Indian artifacts.
This shop had several nice pots. One of which reminded me of a church window.

Church window
Church window

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I don’t think a tree has any religious meaning but since I’m not jet very good in drawing people this seemed a saver choice.
Although the drawing turned out quite nice I wish I had taking a little less “save” shape to put on the window. The drawing process turned out to be a little boring.

Featured on See me draw

Amy Bennet constructed a town using model railroad miniatures, landscaping supplies and dollhouse lighting. From this model she paints pictures of the inside and outside of the houses and the people that could have lived in this town.

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Art compilation

by Henk ter Heide on Monday July 9, 2007

Here are a few of my favorite drawings:

  • Who’s afraid of yellow, red (and blue)
    A frightening experience at work helped me to make this drawing
  • Tentacles
    Thinking about a title instead of a drawing led to a nice drawing with a different title.
  • Patched
    Sometimes one idea doesn’t work but with trying you get something else that does work
  • Nova
    After thinking about it for a long time I finally figured out which technique to use to draw this picture
  • Apples and pears
    A pictured that turned out almost the way I saw it in my mind
  • Sailing into the sunset
    It’s a strange feeling to draw the background first. You don’t really know what you’ll get.
  • Sea edge
    Did you notice that the waves are flow away from the beach. Still I love the colors.
  • Hard to soft
    I love these flowing colors.
  • Hunebed
    Not perfect but almost the picture I had in my mind.
  • Sunset on crooked sea
    Very expressive sun, almost a fire.
  • Mask
    What started out as a study drawing to try a new technique learned me to draw beautiful pictures.
  • Intersecting bottles
    Reminiscing of old times when the world, or at least my world, was a saver place.
  • Joking
    The first drawing featuring an eye. I don’t yet know why, but eyes are very important to me.
  • Flower
    This is the first drawing where I combined colors by layering them on top of each other. That way you can make colors you don’t actually have in your pencil box.

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Difficulty in taking advice (drawing: Tentacles)

by Henk ter Heide on Tuesday July 3, 2007

You should do…

I’ve never been very good at taking advice. People would tell me how to do something and I’d try my own methods and they would call me stubborn for not taking advice.

There’s a lot of advice floating around on the Internet about the best methods to get a lot of people to visit your website. You should concentrate all your efforts on one subject. If you want to write about two subjects. Fine. But not on one website. Built a second website to talk about your second subject.
But since I don’t take advice I’ve been thinking about all the subjects I could talk about on this website. And in doing so I run in to something of a brick wall. There are thousands of subjects about which I could talk. But there’re only a few subjects of which I know enough to make my writings really interesting.

I been asking myself why it’s so difficult to make a choice between taking the advice and, maybe, creating a website that a lot of people will visit or being stubborn and doing things my way.

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An example

Looking to my stats it’s certainly true that most people reach this blog looking for something that has to do with drawing. But couldn’t that just be something of a self fulfilling prophecy. I write a lot about “drawing” so I’ll attract a lot of people who are looking for the subject “drawing”. If I where to write a lot about “cars” I would attract people looking for the subject “cars”.
Some time ago I tried to draw an excavator and a few people from Russia came looking for “drawing excavators”.

This morning I got to think that something else might be going on:
There are several hundreds of millions pages on the Internet but if you’re Googling for “drawing excavator” you’ll get to the 7th page before you’ll even find anything that’s remotely about drawing. Everything before that has to do with building excavators.
After I realized that, I thought that maybe the advice isn’t so much about what I’m offering. It’s about what people are looking for.

The next step is comparing the subjects I offer to the subjects people are looking for.

What do I write about?

  • Drawing
  • Autism
  • Me
  • Promen (the sheltered workplace in Gouda)
  • What ever comes to mind.

How does that compare to the subject people are looking for.

  • Hundreds of thousands of people are looking for the way to draw portraits, trees, cars and a few Russians want to know how to draw excavators.
  • Thousands of people want information about autism.
  • A few of my colleagues’s and family members know I write a blog. But usually they have the URL so they won’t be looking for me on a search engine.
  • A few hundred people a year are put on Promen’s waiting list. They might be looking for information about Promen.
  • What ever comes to mind is so vague that I can’t expect people are looking for it.

What’s the problem?

So why do I have such a hard time following this advice? Why, in general, do I have such a hard time following advice?

After thinking about that for a while I realized that is because most advice doesn’t hold true for me. People advice my to use skills I never learned. They don’t consider advising me to use skills I do know. Neither do they help me acquire the skills I miss. They just tell me I’m stubborn for not doing what I’m told.

It’s like telling someone with a spinal cord lesion that the best way to get to the second floor is to scale the stairs.
Which of course is the problem. Nobody knew that I had autism. I didn’t know. But now I do. Now I can start judging which skills I’ve learned, which skills I should learn and which skills are impossible for me to learn.

It also means that I should start thinking about which advice I should follow and which advice I won’t follow.

In this case it’s clear that I should follow the advice about what to write about on my blog: Mainly about drawing, the skills involved in drawing and the way I conceptualize drawings. Secondly about how autism and other circumstances influence the drawings I make.

Tentacles

After trying for a few days to draw a color fountain I felt I should try to do something else with the connection between water and colors. Maybe I can have colors flow in a kind of river.
To try this I made this drawing.

Tentacles
Tentacles

But as always when I start out with thinking of a title instead of just drawing one of the pictures in my mind, I’m finding the drawing won’t fit the title. Since the drawing is much more important that the title I’ve changed the title.

Link

Wasted beauty is beautiful site with eerie pencil drawings.

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What is RSS (drawing: Erase a flower)

by Henk ter Heide on Monday June 25, 2007

Running into a strange symbol

If you’ve been roaming the Internet a lot you may have noticed this symbol:

rss-icon
RSS feed symbol

You find it at the end of the address bar of a lot of sites. Sometimes you find it in the upper right or upper left corner of a website. Usually it’s accompanied by a little bit of text. Something like “posts” or “comments” or “RSS”.
Have you ever wondered what it meant?

Don’t miss anything

Maybe you visit a lot of sites. You’ve noticed over the years that sites are changing. A few years ago sites were static. You would visited them ones a year and hardly anything would have been changed. But lately it’s a very different story. Many sites, including mine, change on an almost daily basis.

So you do what you’ve always done. You come across a website that’s of interest to you and you add the address to your favorites folder and ones in a while you go back.
But slowly you notice that’s it’s become nearly impossible to read all the changes of all the sites that are of interest to you. With all the interesting site your favorites folder keeps growing and to make matters worse some site can add a lot of articles in a week. Some only add a few hundred words but with others it can be as much as a few thousand of words in a week.

Have you ever thought how nice it would be if you could get some kind of warning every time one of your favorite sites adds an article?

Get a warning

You can get a warning! Free of charge!

Many websites, including mine, offer their regular visitors the option to get a warning every time an article is added.
My site actually offers two systems to get a warning when “See me draw” is updated.

You can subscribe to an email service that is send out only when there is a new article on “See me draw” or you can subscribe to something called a “RSS feed”.
Email is the old trusted way of getting a warning.
RSS is the new up and coming way. Only a fraction of Internet users use it or even know what it is.

Warning by email

But let me start out with telling you how you can get an email warning for updates on “See me draw”.
It’s actually very easy.
You just click the title of this article. That will take you to a page with only one article. This one. When you scroll down you find a form just below this article. With this form you can subscribe to an email that will warn you for updates on “See me draw”.
When you’ve entered your email address in this form you’ll notice that there are two save guards. The first save guard you’ll see is to prevent spambots from entering thousands of addresses. (I’m not quite sure why they would want to do that, but they do.) The second is to prevent someone from playing a practical joke on you and subscribing you to lots of mails you don’t want.

The warning mail does have a few drawbacks.
This is kind of an art site. I’m learning how to draw the pictures in my mind and publishing those drawings on my site.
With every email you’ll receive the complete story of the new article but for the drawing you’ll have to visit the site.
And then, of course, there is spam. Some people get loads of spam and it’s getting very difficult to find the few interesting emails among the mountains of spam.

What do you need to use RSS

As I said RSS is the new and upcoming way of communicating on the Internet. It combines the best of email with the best of websurfing.

Surfing the web is a perfect way of finding loads of new information but it’s a bit awkward when you want to regularly visit the same sites.
With email it used to be very easy to subscribe to information that is of interest to you but with all the spam it’s becoming next to impossible to use it.

An RSS feed reader is a piece of software that goes onto the Internet and gathers webpages in the same way that a web browser does. But before it gathers those pages you have to subscribe to them in the same way as you would subscribe to a mailing list.

The RSS program

RSS is a abbreviation for Really Simple Syndication or for Rich Site Summary or… There are a number of explanations. It’s a special kind of code that looks something like this:

<title>The .NET Schema Object Model</title>
<link>http://www.xml.com/pub/a/2002/12/04/som.html</link>
<description>Priya Lakshminarayanan describes in detail the use of the .NET Schema Object Model for programmatic manipulation of W3C XML Schemas.</description>
</item>
<item>
<title>SVG’s Past and Promising Future</title>
<link>http://www.xml.com/pub/a/2002/12/04/svg.html</link>

and will go on for page after page. Not something you would want to get in you mailbox, would you.

To use RSS you need a program called a RSS feed reader. RSS Feed readers come in two flavors:

I’ve used an offline RSS feed reader for a few years but recently switch to an online RSS feed reader. If you don’t have any experience with RSS feed readers I would advice you to use an online RSS feed reader. Although they basically work the same, with an online RSS feed reader you don’t have to install anything and you can read your RSS feeds were ever you find a computer.

I use Bloglines. Which is a RSS feed reader that’s perfectly suited for people who follow a large amount of RSS feeds. I follow about 190 RSS feeds. For someone who reads less RSS feeds the Google reader is also a very good choice.
I don’t have any experience with Gritwire and News Alloy but I’ve read there both are fine RSS feed readers.
The only thing you have to do to use the service is to subscribe to the site. Usually entering your name and email address is enough to use the RSS feed reader.

As for the offline RSS feed readers. They work about the same. You install the program. Sometimes you also have to tell the program where to find your browser. After that you can start adding RSS feeds.
The first four RSS feed readers in the list are free.
Both the Opera and Firefox browsers have build in RSS feed readers.

Subscribing to a RSS feed

Subscribing to the RSS feed is as easy as subscribing to the email.
When you use an online RSS feed reader you only have to click on the RSS symbol that you’ll find in the left upper corner of this site. That will send you to a page were a number of online RSS feed readers is listed. You click the link of your service and your done.
When you use an offline RSS feed reader you have to copy the address of this website to your RSS feed reader and the RSS feed reader will search for the address of the RSS feed and ask you to confirm that address. After adding a RSS feed you have to push the “update” button on your offline RSS feed reader to have it download the new articles.

Update

A few months ago Bloglines developed a bug that had me re-reading articles I had already read. I complained about it but the bug was never fixed. I didn’t even got an answer.
Although it was an annoying little bug I still liked Bloglines.
Two weeks ago they got server problems. Some of my feeds were gone. Including the feed I use to find new sites for my “Featured on See me draw” series. Despite my complains they did nothing to repair it.

I’ve switch to Google reader and although it takes some getting used to I must say that I’m happy with the switch.
The Google reader does have some good points: Articles are marked read after you’ve read them instead of marking the whole feed the moment you open it. It’s also very easy to save article you like.
A minor disadvantage is that the automatic “read” marker takes a little time. So while scrolling down the program stalls every few seconds.

Erase a flower

Erase a flower
Erase a flower

The purpose of this drawing was to find out how many layers of pigment you can erase. I could have drawn a lot of browns and erased that, but what’s the fun in that. I mix some colors and found:

  • Erasing one color works nicely (top left) but if it’s a light color you can hardly see the difference even when you put a second color on top.
  • Putting three colors on top of each other (lower middle) is pointless since you can’t see the third color. Erasing three colors has the same result as erasing two colors. When you put a fourth color on top and blend them you can’t see the result.
  • Erasing two colors gave something of a surprise. When you erase two layers of pigment some pigment is left but it’s not always the color you’d expect.
    When mixing orange with green on top you get a brownish color and when you erase it the color becomes lighter but doesn’t completely disappear. But when the bottom color is purple or green with a different color on top, the color that’s left after erasing isn’t a mix of those two colors but a light blue.

Link

I came across the website of this Canadian guy, Sebastien, who makes really nice looking comic book style drawings

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