Appearing on World IP Day, this is the 100th post of the Lightbulb law blog, a Dilanchian Lawyers & Consultants group blog which began on 15 August 2006.
We began expecting to focus on intellectual property commercialisation and Australian IP law. The blog's scope quickly broadened to include the global application of IP law and related business law, of which IP law is a branch. This change is evident in the 9 November 2006 stocktake post titled
Index for Lightbulb by service area.
In a world drowning in news, we've endeavoured to write posts which are practical, reflective, analytical, well researched and, where appropriate, reflecting an Australian perspective.
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Best titled post
Best illustrated post
Most common tags
Website traffic statistics help avoid subjective decision
making for the remaining signposts of how Lightbulb is tracking. Traffic is up, including for the site's RSS feed readers. To understand RSS watch this brilliant 3.5 minute training video.
The most common tags used in the 100 posts are featured on the Lightbulb homepage
tagcloud (right hand sidebar). They are - case study, commercialisation,
internet and ip. They are followed by contract, copyright,
licensing, litigation, statistics, strategy, trade mark, trends and web
ventures.
Most searched keywords
Turning to keywords, in the top 20
list of the most searched keywords using external search engines were - business, lawyers, law, Australia, tax, earnings, price,
YouTube, patent, ip, and liquor.
Most popular posts
The top 10 posts ranked by page
impressions is one of the most important statistics. Some massaging or balancing is needed, largely because the more
recent posts have not as yet accumulated high levels of traffic and
several statistics modules are used on this site. After doing the balancing, ranked in order the 10 most popular posts were:
This post is illustrated with postage stamps of famous and interesting lawyers.
The first is Edmund
Barton, Australia's first Prime Minister who took office on 1 January
1901.
Those who think lawyers have to be boring were hit for six by our
most
promising writer's most personal post, the title of which quotes an English judge who
in 1891 said “Thirsty folk want beer, not explanations”.
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