Happy New Year from WordPress.com!
Each rocket represents a post published on this blog in 2011. And because we like to share, we made the fireworks available as a jQuery plugin on Github.
Some browsers are better suited for this kind of animation. In our tests, Safari and Chrome worked best. Your overall score is not known (details).
We made beautiful, animated fireworks to celebrate your blogging! Unfortunately this browser lacks the capability. We made a slide show to fill in but we hope you will come back to this page with an HTML5 browser. In our tests, Safari or Chrome worked best.
To kick off the new year, we’d like to share with you data on TELic: A blog about Technology Enhanced Learning’s activity in 2011. You may start scrolling!
A New York City subway train holds 1,200 people. This blog was viewed about 5,200 times in 2011. If it were a NYC subway train, it would take about 4 trips to carry that many people.
In 2011, there were 25 new posts, growing the total archive of this blog to 91 posts.
The busiest day of the year was June 14th with 72 views. The most popular post that day was The Student View of Blended Learning.
The top referring sites in 2011 were:
Some visitors came searching, mostly for live speech to text, adobe presenter vs camtasia, speech to text for lectures, and speech to text lecture.
These are the posts that got the most views on TELic: A blog about Technology Enhanced Learning in 2011.
Thanks for flying with WordPress.com in 2011.
We look forward to serving you again in 2012! Happy New Year!
WordPress.com
TELic: A blog about Technology Enhanced Learning
2012 is going to be even better on WordPress.com…
Who were they?
The most commented on post in 2011 was PLE Conference at Southampton
These were the 3 most active commenters on this blog: