Macworld Liveblogging

Rating the Livebloggers talks about three of the blogs that were covering Steve Jobs keynote where he announced the Macbook Air. The one with the highest rating, Gizmodo’s Live site, is hosted on WordPress.com as a VIP, which is how they managed to avoid the problems that hit Crunchgear, Engadget, Twitter, et al. Here’s a Flickr picture showing how spiky the traffic can be. (That’s from the iPhone keynote, not the latest one.)

8 thoughts on “Macworld Liveblogging

  1. Thats a notch in the wordpress vip belt for sure.

    @Cody – the only thing mindboggling was that the MBA is so limited. No ports for EVDO (forget the usb modems). Very disappointing.

  2. Wow, that’s insane. Congrats, though, on having such a great infrastructure to sustain Gizmodo during today’s live blogging.

    I know I was surprised that Engadget went down, but my first alternate choice was Gizmodo.

  3. It’s how thin it is that got me. But after the initial look, it’s easy to see that Apple did make concessions. I’d rather have a 10 pound laptop with an optical drive and more ports (my current laptop has four USB ports; no need for a hub here) than a 3 pound laptop with only three. But what would you expect from an ultra-portable?

  4. Well, Engadget wasn’t totally cooked (they wrote about it on their site), but it was inaccessible here in Denmark at least…

    Still, the best source was macrumorslive.com; it refreshes automatically, has pictures and is very very fast (though Engadget captures more sentences than macrumorslive…)

    And yes, mindboggling Macworld. I don’t want an Air (well, I do want one, but I haven’t got a stationary, so I would use it as my primary, which is kinda impossible), so I look forward to the upgrades for MacBook and MacBook Pro. They have to come soon – it’s way overdue.

  5. WordPress was a great help in providing live coverage of the keynote this year at PhoneNews.com.

    We had exponentially higher traffic than last year, but lower CPU utilization (we were running Joomla for the last two years, and switched to WordPress last month).

    WordPress has been a huge improvement over Joomla in CPU load for us, and looking forward to WordPress 2.5… it’s going to get even better.

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