New website, finally with no analytics
During the Christmas/New Year break, I achieved my goal of updating my website with a new theme. I loved Casper, the previous one I ran for a very long time, but it has not been updated in years and looks abandoned. I wanted new features like fuzzy search, archiveand tags pages, cover images, table of contents, title anchors, and more. Also, the old theme kept me anchored to an ancient Hugo version, something I felt uncomfortable with. There are still a few loose parts, but I’m confident I made the right call by switching to PaperMod; it offers all the needed features (and plenty more), and it’s frequently updated, which allows me to open tickets and offer improvements confidently.
I also dropped web analytics. I’ve not counted visits or any other metric for years; I realized I’m not interested and certainly don’t need metrics for motivation. Besides, I hate Google Analytics UX so much that I always wanted to replace it, but never got around to doing that. Besides, from my small experiments, web metrics are unreliable. Just today, Manuel Moreale’s little analytics experiment surfaced on my RSS reader:
[…] we were discussing the discrepancy between log numbers and the ones coming out of the various analytics platforms and were noticing how they all spit out different data. Which to me makes no sense. Still, it’s an interesting topic and I decided to run a little experiment to gather more info on the subject.
His article is worth reading. He ran four different GA-alternative analytics platforms on his website for a short period and obtained unpredictable and differentiated results. His conclusions corroborate my impression: trust web analytics sparingly, if at all. They might make sense on professional websites (and I’d like to argue against that, too, but maybe in another post), but for blogs? They do not serve any useful purpose other than slowing down the whole thing.
Originally posted on my website.