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Site changes: August 8, 2002

Updated the jokes. (Editor: which are now at MichaelClark.name)

Site changes: August 7, 2002

(yes nearly one year after my last site change. I’ve been busy.)

Usage Statistics for PlanetMike.com: 2001

Usage summary for PlanetMike.com

Summary by Month
Month Daily Avg Monthly Totals
Hits Files Pages Visits Sites KBytes Visits Pages Files Hits
Dec 2001 1,638 1,283 730 264 6,204 180,075 8,185 22,648 39,794 50,784
Nov 2001 1,504 1,195 692 282 6,068 163,327 8,463 20,768 35,861 45,137
Oct 2001 1,222 869 497 172 4,404 121,890 5,346 15,414 26,969 37,888
Sep 2001 1,785 761 432 154 5,332 111,241 4,627 12,963 22,839 53,570
Aug 2001 1,183 1,054 602 227 5,477 128,376 7,039 18,692 32,683 36,691
Jul 2001 1,140 1,037 571 228 4,798 132,705 7,098 17,716 32,158 35,343
Jun 2001 1,257 1,103 622 234 5,151 131,303 7,031 18,684 33,112 37,732
May 2001 1,217 1,047 525 220 4,888 131,751 6,828 16,298 32,457 37,749
Apr 2001 1,157 1,075 537 223 4,235 131,115 6,708 16,125 32,265 34,719
Mar 2001 1,066 960 494 201 3,706 115,511 6,240 15,327 29,761 33,054
Feb 2001 978 873 462 159 3,100 97,977 4,469 12,942 24,458 27,406
Jan 2001 894 836 431 140 2,649 104,735 4,343 13,378 25,918 27,733
Totals 1,550,006 76,377 200,955 368,275 457,806

Site changes: August 25, 2001

Removed the references to Listbot service. Listbot closed down its mailing lists.

Site changes: May 24, 2001

Updated my resume.

Site changes: May 11, 2001

Updated the “contact Mike contract.”

Site changes: May 2, 2001

Removed search function from the Jokes section, because the vendor providing the function wanted $5,000 for the feature. No thanks, it didn’t work that well.

Site changes: March 18, 2001

Updated privacy policy and how I made the site.

Usage Statistics for PlanetMike.com: 2000

Usage summary for PlanetMike.com

Summary by Month
Month Daily Avg Monthly Totals
Hits Files Pages Visits Sites KBytes Visits Pages Files Hits
Dec 2000 761 693 337 121 2,043 86,988 3,762 10,475 21,510 23,599
Nov 2000 938 818 479 181 1,975 90,558 5,439 14,384 24,559 28,153
Oct 2000 800 683 378 154 1,915 75,270 4,799 11,741 21,180 24,810
Sep 2000 836 750 387 134 2,032 84,438 4,044 11,611 22,522 25,087
Aug 2000 654 576 295 105 1,664 64,052 3,283 9,147 17,856 20,286
Jul 2000 659 552 336 103 1,760 59,167 3,216 10,437 17,128 20,446
Jun 2000 585 474 346 86 1,141 42,007 2,591 10,408 14,226 17,554
May 2000 674 568 467 94 1,240 45,125 2,918 14,498 17,609 20,921
Apr 2000 524 488 320 104 1,483 39,280 3,143 9,629 14,648 15,732
Mar 2000 542 482 324 107 1,472 42,279 3,333 10,050 14,955 16,806
Feb 2000 810 735 515 143 2,617 77,097 4,172 14,943 21,319 23,491
Jan 2000 627 547 391 116 2,325 62,420 3,622 12,137 16,962 19,449
Totals 768,681 44,322 139,460 224,474 256,334

Spam (Unsolicited Commercial E-mail)

Spam is the Internet’s equivalent of junk mail. Another term you may see is unsolicited commercial e-mail (UCE).

Regardless of what you call it, it is wrong to send out massive numbers of e-mail in the hopes of selling something. It shifts the cost of you doing business to the recipients of your e-mail, to the companies that pass your e-mail along, and to your Internet Service Provider. If off-line business were conducted the same way, it would be illegal. The clearest example of this is the United States law that bans unsolcited faxes. A fax ties up the recipient’s phone line during transmission; and then wastes paper and toner or ink to print the fax out.

Can you imagine if you had to pay for each piece of junk mail that you receive? It is a very similar situation with e-mail.

What I have seen happening in the past couple of months is a rise in the amount of spam coming from outside the United States. Why in the world would an iron foundry in India try to sell customized lengths of pipes to several thousand (million more likely) Americans? Because the Indian citizen that was behind the mailing was an idiot. He (or she) got talked into doing this great thing for his (or her) business. If a small business in the United States sent out a piece of spam, the ISP that hosted that account would close the account so quickly your head will spin. But overseas, the novelty of the Internet has not worn off yet. So the overseas ISPs don’t care if you send out spam. I am close to rejecting all e-mail sent to me that has any hint of being from outside the United States.

During Christmas week a company based in Northern Virginia sent out spam. I talked with them (it was a local call, so why not?) about the spam and they “apologized.” They said the company they hired had assured them the list was an opt-in list. Of course, that company was also based in South Africa. I know the Internet allows for easy communications world-wide. But wouldn’t alarm bells go off if you had to contract with a business in South Africa to send out some advertising? Doesn’t that seem stupid to you as well?

Basically, the rule on the Internet should be “Do not send electronic mail out to anyone who has not already confirmed to you that they would like further information about your company.” Period.

I received an electronic greeting card a few months ago. The company is based in Canada, so the laws and standards of business etiquette are probably different, but what they did was unexcusable. According to their terms of service, the action of me going to their web site to view my card gave them permission to add my email address to their monthly newsletter. I don’t think so! So now if I am ever sent a card from that company I won’t be able to see it, because I do not want to be re-added to their newsletter list.

And that is why unsolicted commercial email is wrong. That one mistake this company made is going to forever influence my opinion of that company. The same thing has happened to other formerly reputable companies who have decided to send out unsolicited commercial email.