Adam Luke

Archive for November, 2009

Metcards I: Introduction

Here in Melbourne, a “contactless smartcard” ticketing system has just been introduced1, which will soon replace out old ticketing system for trams, trains, and buses. The new system is myki; the old system is Metcard. Metcard lasted here for about ten years, and I’ve collected literally hundreds, or even thousands, of them over that period (see below). It’s kind of sad to think that when I actually start using myki, I’ll only have one which will last indefinitely, and I therefore will no longer be able to collect.

In memoriam of Metcard, I’ll be posting a collection of various Metcards I’ve collected over the years, starting with the following. This is part one of my collection.

Yellow, red, and blue Metcard from 1998. A Metcard is a rectangular cardboard ticket.

This is the original generic design from 1998. I remember when Metcards were introduced, I was all excited about getting to press the buttons on the Metcard vending machine.

Blue metcard with light blue spots

This is the current generic design. I can find ones dating back to 2002, so I assume that's when they were introduced.

Metcard with drawings of futuristic trams and Flinders Street Station

Metcards are often used to promote events or to celebrate an occasion. This is one of a series of twelve that were used in early 2000. The rest of the set will be showcased in the next instalment. Those vehicles are (futuristic) trams, and the big building at the back is Flinders Street Station.

A box of hundreds of Metcards

This is my collection. The thought of counting them all is too confronting for me to even try, but I guess I could get a vague idea with the use of a ruler and some basic maths.


  1. The whole of Victoria will be using it, and I know that one other city introduced it quite a while ago, but at Melbourne train stations, it has only been active since last week.

How to Steal a MacBook

At university, it is currently the exam period, which has resulted in a higher number of students studying in the libraries. A lot of these students have MacBooks or MacBooks Pros, and it’s so common for me to walk past a row of study carrells and see an extremely expensive laptop just sitting there, unattended. And this is with the warnings that thieves are active in the library! Sometimes, I even poke around the surrounding areas to see if someone who owns one of these could be nearby, e.g., looking for a book in shelves a few metres away. But I rarely see anyone! If I wasn’t so nice, I’d totally do a grab ‘n’ run.

I also wonder why so many students have MacBooks in comparison to the rate they appear in the general population. At least half the laptops that pop up in my lectures are from Apple, which I figure is much higher than the proportion seen in the Real World. I suppose it’s because they’re super cool, fashionable, trendy, amazing, status symbol-y, or some such?

Also! Since we’re talking Apple, what’s with people who buy a new Apple product, who feel the need to buy a new one, whenever a new one is released? I’ve seen many people with perfectly-functioning iPods who have immediately spent (wasted) money on a new generation.

On Creating a Blog

I have been informed that it is currently National Blog Posting Month. Although I don’t plan to post even nearly every day, I hope there will be an increased rate of posting this month. Plus, I’ve already missed two days, according to my timezone (GMT+10 represent!).

I have thought of various things I want to write about/show photos and pictures of, including one image post that will have had hours of work put into it. It will be a  surprise. Except for how it won’t be, as I’ve mentioned it on Twitter. But anyway!

Today, I shall be talking about my experiences with gaining readership over the past three months.

I don’t really know how to gain readers, actually. I don’t actively promote my blog anywhere. I post at Snark at least once every few days, and I comment on the odd blog entry here and there, both of which I get referrals from. Additionally, I receive some search engine referrals for phrases such as “into weird shit1, variations on “wisdom teeth” and “wisdom teeth extraction”, “top things we spend on“, and “Melbourne commissioned graffiti“.

As I’m happy to observe, my hits have increased month-by-month, partly thanks to those of you who are returning visitors and have subscribed to the feed. Below is a graph (graphed by the WordPress.com Stats plugin).

A graph showing a monthly increase in visitors to this blog from July to October 2009

Part of the reason I only blog once every week or two is because my readership is still quite low, and I actually have faith in my blog entries, and am certain that they are interesting enough for people to want to read. Now I don’t know how many people reading this actually agree with that, but my theory is that the longer I keep a blog entry up, the more people who actually read it, rather than it getting “swept under the rug” due to my still-low readership.

Back in the day when I had my first domain, I briefly used a website called Blog Explosion, to increase my hits. I recently poked around to see if it still existed (it does). Although sceptical about how useful such a website actually is, I signed up to see if I’d gain any new readers. How the site works is basically this: you view a blog for a minute or so, and then move to another blog, and so on. Each time you visit a blog, you get credit, and the more credit you get, the more people who view your blog. For gaining hits, the site is useful. For gaining readers, it is utterly useless. Out of the 50 or so people who viewed my blog, not one of them engaged with the content (i.e., no-one clicked a link or read anything other than the main page). In fact, they may not have even read the front page. I know I didn’t do it for any of them! While I had their blogs open, I was off in other tabs doing other things. It’s not something I’ll continue with, as I’m more interested in people who want to read this, and don’t really care about.


  1. Although the whole purpose of the post was about how I’m not into “weird shit”. Also, this was my first proper blog entry here! How nostalgic. Memories, like the corners of my mind…