Posts Tagged ‘features’
We just launched a stats page on Lijit. Very cool. Now you can see how people are searching you, which of your content sources are being clicked on, who in your network is providing good results, and lots of other goodies.
For example, here’s my page

Looking closer, the first stat gives a view of how often I’m being searched

Next is a graph showing what and who (my content and my network) is being clicked on from my search engine: Posts from my blog, posts from someone else’s blog, pages from my delicious bookmarks, etc…

You see that posts from my blog (“blogs | wanderingstan”) are clicked the most, then some stories from the TalkOrigins archive, some posts from Read/Write web, some stories I’ve dugg, and so on.
Next is a graph showing the distribution just within my content

Again we see that my Blog is the most popular, with my delicious, digg, and StumbleUpon (that’s the “wanderingstan’s” one at the end!) accounts also serving up some clicked-on results.
We also give a listing of the most popular clicked-on results, and a more detailed account of top search terms used.
I’ve made my stats page public, so you can see it here.
Another cool one to watch is the stats for the Ask the VC blog, you can see the stats here. For example, check out the range of blogs that are serving up results:

Check it out on your own search engine page. The results might surprise you!
Tags: features, release announcements | View Comments
Last week we released a new set of enhancements to Lijit, primarily focused on the signup process.
But there’s one feature that I’m particularly excited about but that isn’t immediately obvious: automatic blogroll crawling. What’s that you ask?
If you have a blog, it probably has a section where the you list other noteworthy blogs. These are blogs you read and basically find attention-worthy. Lijit can now automatically find this part of your blog and add all of those blogs to your Lijit search. And the Lijit server will check on your blog every day or so to see if you’ve made any changes–no need to configure things here every time you make a change.
Blogrolls form a huge implicit trust network, and no other service has really exploited them until now. Adding them to your network is just the first step, I’m also working on some blog authority algorithms that rely heavily on blogrolls. I’ll post some preliminary results soon.
So get those blogs rolling!
Tags: features, tech | View Comments
I love working with technologies and companies I actually find really useful. Back at Raindance I would do web conferences from time-to-time but the value was only in that certain and controlled circumstance. It was cool, but I didn’t use it everyday. Conversely, I have been using Lijit all the time.
Last week we found out that Lijit has been selected to present at Venture Capital in the Rockies. As a result I have been working on my presentation, between snow shoveling and present opening. In doing so, I have been doing a lot of ‘Searching”. Some of the items I have been researching are company related, some are market related and others are a function of the conference itself.
Simultaneously, I have been playing with some stuff I found on Feedburner Networks. Feedburner Networks can export OPML. For fun the other day I constructed a Lijit Personal Network Search engine using the data from over 50 of the most influential bloggers on Venture Capital.
As a result I have started to be a fairly large consumer of the Lijit PNS Engine for Venture Capital.
It’s been so useful in fact I used the ‘stick in my browser search” feature so I could do it right from firefox.

Here are some searches I did today…
Search the Venture Capital Network for business plan, VCIR, Google Adsense, elevator pitch…
Pretty cool…
Tags: features, release announcements | View Comments
What would it be like if you could search “through” a person?

Last night Lijit released our first version of Personal Network Search. We have been heads down for a month or so on a really cool strategy to make people, their online identities, and the people they know vertically searchable. It’s an amazingly powerful concept. In the following weeks we will review more about this strategy but for now you can try the concept right here on my blog.

In fact anyone can try it on their Blog if they have a Lijit account. First run our identity wizard to grab your other online personas and map them into Lijit, then turn on your Personal Network Search functionality from your Profile page.
Thanks to a cool Typepad integration you can one-click your search Wijit onto your blog..
Give it a try and shot me some feedback.. Interesting things to “Search My World” for that demonstrate the power here…
Search “me” for “tivo”
This results in a combination of bookmarks about Tivo that I have made in del.icio.us as well a entries from my blog that talk about Tivo’s.. Also mixed in there will be some hits of PVRBlog that I read on a regular basis..
Search for “Niel SAP”
I read Niels Blog Parallax and he is the most knowledgable person I know on SAP.
Search for “term sheet”
Returns a wealth of information from multiple sources close to me on building Term Sheets for startups..
Tags: features, release announcements | View Comments
Today we pushed out a few changes in our “Testarossa” release. The biggest one is the “Add other identities” page where you can link to your accounts on other services like Delicious, YouTube, and Flickr. Any content that you create on these other services will count as coming from you. In Lijit-land, this means that you not only trust this content, you are this content!

Congrats to Andy for the cool AJAX-y interface and Derek for figuring out how to mesh with all these other services.
Tags: features, release announcements | View Comments
Hello Lijitters! Today we released a new feature (as well as a few bug fixes) for your Lijitting enjoyment.
The new feature allows you to send a notification about a report to another Lijit informer (or even to someone who’s not yet a Lijit user) that’s just kind of a, “Hey, this is cool. Be sure to check it out!” message.
You can send a notification from any report, anywhere — just look for the little “send” icon displayed at the bottom of each report. When you receive a notification it’ll display at the top of your Lijit List and you’ll also get a heads-up about it via email. (If you don’t want to receive the emails, you can disable them from your Manage Account page.)
It’s a great way to make sure your friends see and share in your Lijit report discoveries!
Tags: features, release announcements | View Comments
Welcome to yet another new Lijit release! You might have noticed that I included a release name in the title of this blog post. We’re planing to name our releases after cars, as we have several automotive enthusiasts on staff. The first in this series is the “Vantage” release (named after the lovely Aston Martin Vantage), which offers the following feature goodies:
- You can now convert your Firefox and IE bookmarks into “good” Lijit reports. (If the pages were originally good enough to bookmark, aren’t they now good enough to share with your network?) It’s also nice to have everything (bookmarks, Lijit reports, etc.) together in one place. New informers will be offered the opportunity to upload their bookmarks during the process of creating an account; existing informers can upload their bookmarks from the “Manage Account” page.
- We’ve updated the look of various elements on the site. (Did you notice that the title bars in the sidebar and the title bars associated with the blocks on the right-hand side of the site are no longer black? They’re now a softer charcoal. Oooooh. Ahhhhh.) We’ve additionally prettied-up the Lijit search mark-up for Google and Yahoo! in Firefox (Internet Explorer got its search mark-up facelift in the last release), made the site resizeable width-wise, and removed the orange, cross-hatched bars along the side of the site. They’re all pretty subtle changes, but we hope they enhance your enjoyment of Lijit. We’ll continue to tweak the look of the site regularly. We can’t leave well enough alone sometimes…
- We’ve sprinkled contextual help links throughout the site. We don’t want any part of Lijit to be a mystery, so please click around and learn!
- We now support the ability to include ATOM feeds as informers in your network, in addition to the RSS and OPML feeds we support today. You can include ATOM feeds in your network through the “Add RSS Feed” page.
- We also did some testing and appear to be fully compatible with Internet Explorer 7 and Firefox 2.0. Upgrade and enjoy!
Oh, and we’re rather sorry that the site was down so long today while we upgraded. Please accept our apology for interrupting your afternoon Lijit-ing. We won’t do that again.
Tags: features, release announcements | View Comments
More good things from Lijit today! We released a few new features and enhancements into production this afternoon, which should be helpful for current (as well as potential new) Lijitters.
Sorry for the rather lengthy post. I’m the Marketing-type in this crew and have an (apparently rather irritating) affinity for using (a lot of) words. But enough about me… This release includes the following good things:
- We updated our home page (logged out) to include helpful information about Lijit, how it works and how to get signed up. We hope this will assist potential users in knowing what to expect from the service – and the sign up process – so they can get started off on the right foot.
- Along those same lines, we’ve also updated the default email invitation text and have inserted information about Lijit into the invitation-driven sign up flow. Again, we’ve done this to help newly invited users better understand what they’re getting into and how to get the most out of Lijit once they’re in.
- We hope by now that you’ve seen the new, blue ‘update the browser plugin’ badge on our website and in the browser sidebar. When we release new features that change our Lijit extension for Firefox and plugin for Internet Explorer, we want to make you aware of that…and we want you to click the badge so you can update your plugin to fully enjoy them.
- We added some great mouse-over pop-up boxes in this release. For example, hover over any report title and it’ll show you how many times that report has been clicked. Hover over any of the links in the ‘is trusted about’ subject cloud on your “My Lijit” page and you’ll see how many people trust you on each subject. Roll your mouse over everything – there’s a lot of good info to be had on the site.
- Were you concerned that many of our users seemed to have rather misshapen heads? Did you think that we were perhaps catering to a misshapen head target market? Fret not, it wasn’t them, it was us. We’ve improved our behind-the-scenes picture handling. From here on out it’s perfectly shaped heads for everyone!
- You now have unlimited email invitations. We realized that everyone you know deserves to be Lijit and didn’t want to get in the way of your making that happen.
- For those of you who have incorporated your blogs into Lijit, if you mention a URL in a given post, we’ll see that and turn it into an “informational” (i.e. neutral) report for that page. It’s just another way Lijit gets your thoughts and opinions out there for your network’s benefit and enjoyment.
- We now support OPML in the “Add RSS Feed” feature. We realize the link name is a little misleading on that. We’ll fix it soon.
- We’ve added a great feature in Firefox that displays reports about the processes running on your computer. Just click Tools > Lijit > View Processes. It’s a great way for you to know which processes running on your computer are good, bad or dangerous.
- Finally, we’re in the process of updating our Help and About text. We hope you enjoy the changes once they’re finished.
Tags: features, release announcements | View Comments
We pushed some new code to the site today with a few enhancements, mostly under the hood. Some people were being served an empty Lijit list, or may have intermittently seen no reports in their “My Reports” page. These issues should be fixed now. As usual, if you notice anything strange, please report a bug via the link at the bottom of lijit.com pages (the “footer”).
On the user side, looking at the chains of trust or blockage on a user page has been enhanced a bit to show blocking connections or identity connections (when you add an RSS feed to the system and click the “This is me” checkbox, you’re making an identity connection). So, for example, if an informer is blocked for you, you can go to their user page to see who is blocking them in your local network.
Also, if you haven’t checked lately, take a look at the “Lijit Wijits” link in the footer – we’ve got a Wijit for your blog or webpage that can help you more easily build up a network of trusted informers, which means more relevance for you!
Tags: features, release announcements | View Comments