Posts Tagged ‘motigo’

Did you know that… You can customize the layout of your motigo guestbook to match your website?

Monday March 30th, 2009

In the Admin Area of your guestbook you will find 5 different options to personalize your guestbook and make it look exactly like you want it to.

Select Layout: Here you can choose a template for your guestbook that will set its basic colours. Motigo offers you more than 15 colour combinations to choose from. Just click on the template name for a preview.

Customize layout: Once you have chosen the basic colour set of your guestbook, you can start the fine-tuning work (of course, if you are happy with the template you have selected before you do not have to use this option). This option allows you to customize basically every aspect of your guestbook individually (from font size to link colour or size of the message boxes). You can change your guestbook’s layout anytime.

Icons: The motigo guestbook comes with icons for e-mail address and homepage of the visitors. These icons can be replaced by your own icons, matching the design of your website. Here you can upload your icons to your guestbook.

Smilies: Would you like to give your visitors the possibility of using smilies in their messages? No problem. Here you can upload as many smilies as you like to your guestbook.

HTML-Areas: Your motigo guestbook has two HTML-Areas (top and bottom of the guestbook page). Here you can use your own HTML-Code and insert links, images, banners, logos, widgets… You can also use the HTML areas to give your guestbook the same background image or style as your website.

Find out more about other guestbook features in our Tutorial!

Still have questions? Our support team is happy to help you! Mail us.

The motigo team welcomes you to this blog!

Sunday March 29th, 2009

Motigo provides useful, high quality free website tools to webmasters all over the world. In addition to our popular Webstats counter and web statistic tool, we also offer forums, guestbooks, online calendars and URL-Redirection.

You’re wondering what to expect in this blog? Well, these are our plans:

With practical tips and short tutorials, we want to help motigo users make the most of their motigo tools. You’ll see: There is a great deal of potential in your motigo services!

Internet technical terms made simple: That’s the purpose of Motigo Lexicon. We will have a closer look at many of them and dedicate clear and simple posts to explaining what they mean.

Knowledge is power and here you get it free of charge ;-). SEO, Web design, writing for the Internet… These are only a couple of themes, which we would like to address and explain without gobbledygook and in a way that is easy to understand.

Of course, we will also post the latest developments and features on motigo, so just visit us regularly to keep in touch.

Your praise, critics and comments to the posts are welcome! We look forward to your comments and mails.

Happy reading!
Your motigo team

Hot, Hotter, Heat Map

Tuesday August 19th, 2008

You may have noticed the new Heat Map geovisualization feature that we have launched on motigo webstats. Here I’ll try to tell a little about what the heat map is and what it does.

Before the heat map, we already had two other geovisualization features on motigo webstats:

  • The oldest feature is the Continent of Origin map, which colors each continent according to the total amount of traffic from each continent
  • The more recent Visitor map uses Google Maps to pinpoint your most recent visitors’ locations

Between these we have wanted for some time to do a heat map which gives both

  1. a more detailed view of where your visitors come from than the Continent of Origin
  2. a higher level of overview than the pinpoint-exact Visitor Map

We also wanted our heat map to update live in real-time. This is something of a rarity in the world of heat maps, in fact it may be rather unique. So here it is: our real-time updating heat map :-)

Heat maps are a way to visualize geographic data such as housing prices, pollution levels, population density, and temperature. On a heat map, areas which appear in a hot color have a high value, e.g. expensive houses, much pollution, dense population, or warm weather.

For webstats, a hot color means “many visitors” from that area. The heat map renders each page view as a “hot spot” placed at the visitor’s location on the map.

When it starts up, it uses the first 15 seconds to render the most recent page views: up to 300 recent hits - fewer (down to 30) if your counter is not that busy or if we have recently run a cleanup procedure (cleanup happens once per day for most counters, more often for very busy counters).

Then it just waits for new hits for the counter and renders those as they arrive. There is a slight delay (up to 30 seconds) from the hit happens until it appears as a “hot spot” location on the heat map. If that location is already “hot”, the hit will not stand out, but the hot spot will expand slightly.

As more hits are rendered, older “hot spots” will gradually “cool off” and fade out if no further hits originate from there.

The time until hot spots fade out is determined dynamically by the number of hits which arrive, so it is not possible to say exactly how long a hit will be visible as a hot spot.

Future Attractions

We hope you’ll enjoy the new Heat Map feature. If you do, we have many ideas for additional features that we would like to add to the heat map. You are also welcome to leave a reply with your own ideas or comments.

The heat map requires our most recent version of the counter code. If you fetched your counter code since 2008 May 8th you should have the heat map already. Otherwise, you can log in and go to your “My Counters” page for instructions on how to update.

Motigo survey results

Tuesday September 18th, 2007

We recently conducted an online survey to get to know more about you, the users of motigo. Most of your answers were as we had expected, but some were also rather surprising.

It has been a great learning experience for us to get our assumptions about who you all are blown away and replaced by actual facts. The whole process of discovering who our users really are have made us all create our own new archetypical users in our minds, which has led us to launch a new persona effort. A HCI tool that we can greatly approve of.

Just for the fun of it, let me very shortly sketch one of our main archetypical users in bullet-form:

  • Male and 40 years old
  • Has his focus on developing personal and private websites with information about a specific topic
  • Has only little knowledge about web standards and techniques like CSS
  • Does not read the developer blog (Argh!!!! - not good!)

You also told us what you would most like to see in the future from motigo: Blogs and photo albums. Coming up. :-)

And don’t worry - the lucky winners of the survey will be announced shortly and receive their prize: an iPod Shuffle.

Motigo survey reloaded: you can still win an iPod shuffle!

Friday August 24th, 2007

Due to the amazing amount of people participating in the survey (aren’t you fantastic!) we quickly reached the target we had set. To popular demand we have decided to reopen the survey so all of you who couldn’t participate can now click on the link again (in the admin interface) and hopefully get one of the iPod shuffle we will be giving away!

You can jump there directly at my-account or create an account to participate!

All in all the survey will be giving us a very clear picture of what you, the motigo-ers, wants to see? What product is for you the missing link to really turn motigo into a workable, practical and interesting environment. The survey will also give you some clues on what we are thinking should come next.

Indeed we know there is still quite some work to do but this is one of the many steps we will take with you. We have opened a new communication channel and we hope you will use the opportunity to reach us!

Designing events view in motigo calendars

Wednesday August 15th, 2007

As we had built the recently launched motigo calendar, we quickly realized how important the events view was. You can add events to your calendar in two ways. One is subscribing to a news feed, the other is through the events overview page.

The events view is the page where all of your own events are listed (feed-events aren’t listed here, as you cannot edit them). The list provides edit links, so that you can alter the details of your already added events. So the primary purpose of the event view is to let the user browse through all of his events in a quick way, in order to find the exact event the user is looking for.

The peculiar thing about a calendar is, that you can both have events in the future and in the past. The most relevant events for the user will most likely be centered around today’s date, and not in one of the extremes: past or future. This also means that it does not make sense to sort events by their extremes (by the event with the oldest date or by the event with the most future date), but rather by the center: today.

Version 1

At first we had just chosen to list the events ordered by id - that is ordered by creation time. This would put the most recent added events on top, and thus provide feedback for the user to let him know that his event has been added (as he could see his newly added event on the list). For feedback purposes, this list worked great. But if you wanted to find that specific event you to either edit or delete, the browsing through pages of events sorted by creation date was not acceptable. You could of course search for the event, but then you would need to know what the title of it was.

Ordering the events by start date does not make sense in itself either. The most relevant event is not one that starts in 2012 and not one that happened in 1995.

When looking for a specific event, you always know that it either hasn’t happened yet (in the future) or that it already happened (in the past).

Introducing today’s date as the center of the events view:

Version 2, unfolded

Adding today as the center means that you can know browse in two directions: either further back in the past or further ahead in the future. We therefore introduced two paginations: One for pages in the future and one for the past.

This view works much better as the most relevant events (the ones closest to now) will always be shown on the base page of the events view. You can then choose to browse toward either of the extremes (past or future).

Having to pagination directions is all nice, but if you haven’t filled your calendar up with that many events yet, you don’t want to be bothered with information about how you can browse the future or past- you just want the few events you have to be shown.

Version 3

So the last thing we added was that. The fancy pagination arrows in the left margin are hidden when you just start and will get shown once you have use for them.

We also added the capability of looking up a specific date as a nice shortcut to finding the events you are exactly sure when is.

Developing software is not always straight forward, if you want to deliver a nice user experience as well. We hope that his insight into how we conduct iterative development will help you continue your progress in developing the perfect website of your own.

Launch: Motigo calendars

Thursday August 9th, 2007

We are very happy to announce the Launch of motigo calendars! It is the first stand-alone product that we have developed ourselves from scratch, and we are more than happy with the result. If you don’t have an account yet, then sign up for a free account and give it a go.

Creating the calendar has been a great example of constrained based development. With only very little time to develop the application, we had to make vital decisions on what our new application was to do and what it was not going to do. The constraints turned out to be a blessing in that it kept our heads focused on exactly what is important for our product for it to work: it has swept the unimportant nice-to-haves away from the must-haves and secured a simple and non-bloated product.

The calendar is really an ordinary calendar application with two views: an administration area that is only accessible for the owner of the calendar (a motigo user), and a public version, which is visible to everybody. The public version of the calendar would look like this.

But it is not only a web calendar. The motigo calendar has two very intersting features:

  • Import of RSS feeds
    If you have a blog, a flickr stream, or whatever kind of web content that streams as an RSS feed, you can import it into your calendar. You can also import several feeds into your calendar in order to use it as a feed reader. The possiblities are many!
  • Include a small version of the calendar on your own page
    If you have a homepage on your own domain - or just another domain that motigo.com, but still want dynamic content directly inside your page’s main view, then the motigo calendar will help you out. Ad dynamic calendar content directly to your page, like you would add a banner ad.

Now - enough reading - go play around with it!

New product requests?

Thursday June 28th, 2007

At motigo.com we are always thinking about what new features and what products we want to create for you. But although we have many ideas of our own, we would love to hear from you what you would fancy the most.

Would you like to have a new blog for your site, to be able to easily insert polls into your site. How about a new calendar?

The possibilities are endless!

What new products would you most like to see from motigo.com in the future?

Motigo search launched

Monday June 25th, 2007

We just launched a new part of our site called motigo search. Hurray!

In the last few weeks, we have been in a steady stream of solid updates to the motigo website in general. We have come a long way since we started in March earlier this year.

This time we added search capabilities to motigo. The motigo search has been born.

Now you can search the web for pictures and video to reference in your blog posts or in your forum discussions. We feel that we by that have a superior product to many competitors. The search also allows your to search our webstats counter catalogue.

The future will call for a full motigo service search, but as we felt the described update in itself provided enough significant value to our users to stand on its own, we decided to push out the search capabilities as they are now in their early state.

Please go try it out and let us know what you think.