Sigh ...
I was afraid I would be misunderstood. It was meant as a constructive comment. Ofcourse its your blog and I have a choice to follow it or not.
It is a little frustrating to see a link to a blog post on Twitter and click on it only to be directed to click on another link for details. Why not just tweet the real link instead?
I figured as much, which is why I hadn't said anything until I saw Dalibors comment. Maybe reconfigure whatever blog engine is doing the automatic tweeting to link company blog posts directly to the company blog instead of bringing everyone to a stub post here? Just a suggestion for a way to improve the user experience.
Honestly the cross posting makes a bit more sense -- ayende certainly has many more regular readers than the company blog, why not cross pollinate a bit, especially considering most of Ayende's readers are his target market.
Comments
Please don't take this the wrong way but if I want to follow your company blog I would follow your company blog.
Dalibor, I apologize, would you care for a refund for your money?
Sigh ... I was afraid I would be misunderstood. It was meant as a constructive comment. Ofcourse its your blog and I have a choice to follow it or not.
It is a little frustrating to see a link to a blog post on Twitter and click on it only to be directed to click on another link for details. Why not just tweet the real link instead?
Bryan, I am not twitting this manually, the blog is twitting this automatically.
I figured as much, which is why I hadn't said anything until I saw Dalibors comment. Maybe reconfigure whatever blog engine is doing the automatic tweeting to link company blog posts directly to the company blog instead of bringing everyone to a stub post here? Just a suggestion for a way to improve the user experience.
+1. Sure it's your blog, and it's no big deal, but I second Dalibor's constructive criticism.
Honestly the cross posting makes a bit more sense -- ayende certainly has many more regular readers than the company blog, why not cross pollinate a bit, especially considering most of Ayende's readers are his target market.