Fireworks time! My photoblog has made invesp.com’s list of Top Photography blogs!
It pays to inspect the source of incoming site visits occasionally.
That's how I discovered Lanora Mueller Photography, my photoblog, ranks in sixth place by pages viewed per visit on invesp.com's Blog Rank of the Top 50 blogs in Photography. I'm proud to be in such distinguished company.
Another reason for setting off the fireworks today!
Wednesday Window ~ Wyler’s, Exchange Street, Portland, Maine
Note added July 3: This was a first experiment in photoblogging with the iPhone 3G and TypePad iPhone app.
Photo shot with iPhone. TypePad app gave no option to scale the photo but did offer a (nonfunctioning) option to add categories.
I guess this attempt was better than no Wednesday Window post at all!
Introducing HipCompass Escapes, a tree-friendly, niche-free, all-digital national travel magazine
Sitting at a stoplight a couple of months ago, I picked up an email on my Blackberry from fellow travel writer Michelle Strashoon with her thoughts about launching a new, glossy travel magazine in digital form.
Michelle's message was filled with such enthusiasm I almost pulled over immediately to read the details. Fortunately, my safety-conscious daughter was in the passenger seat and willing to read Michelle's email aloud so we could continue our drive home from school. I dialed Michelle as soon as possible to learn more about the project and was thrilled when she accepted my pitch to write about my recent culinary experiences in Paris from the point of view of a frugal foodie.
Not everyone shared Michelle's optimism about the viability of a niche-free, solely digital travel publication in this economic environment. Undaunted, she followed through and brought out the premier edition of HipCompass Escapes on April 15, an impressive 96-page launch issue supported by numerous high-end advertisers willing to take a chance on the new venture.
Despite all efforts by Michelle and her team to plan for adequate bandwidth in support of the launch, there were a few technical glitches during the first 48 or so hours that prevented eager subscribers from accessing the publication. Apparently, distributor Zinio.com, host of the online editions of such mainstream periodicals as Business Week, Reader's Digest, Esquire, Playboy, PC Magazine, and Macworld, hadn't reckoned on the publication's immediate surge in popularity.
After those first few days of complaints from frustrated readers who couldn't access the publication, it's now time for me to invite all my readers to sign up for a free subscription to HipCompass Escapes.
The magazine is a quarterly, so we are already pressed to decide where the Frugal Foodie will dine next.
To Schmap or not to Schmap, a strategic question for travel photographers

Sunny afternoon at Pere Lachaise, Paris, originally uploaded by WritingTravel.com. Currently "short listed" for the 7th edition of the Schmap Paris Guide. © 2008 Lanora S. Mueller. All rights reserved.
I was surprised and a bit flattered to receive an email through my Flickr account the other day from Emma Williams, the managing editor of Schmap. The message began thusly:
Hi WritingTravel.com,
I am writing to let you know that one of your photos has been short-listed for inclusion in the seventh edition of our Schmap Paris Guide, to be published late April 2009.
I'd never heard of Schmap, so some research was in order. A quick Google search uncovered reports from numerous other Flickr photographers who had received similar notices, some of whom reacted with the same questions I was beginning to form.
Before I could develop any opinion about this opportunity, however, I had to learn more about the company. From a quick view of the About page on Schmap.com, I learned that Schmap is a publisher of more than 200 "phenomenally successful" digital travel guides that have been downloaded more than 90 million times since going beta in March 2006.
The guides are "free to users," a point which Ms. Williams underscored in her email:
While we offer no payment for publication, many photographers are pleased to submit their photos, as Schmap Guides give their work recognition and wide exposure, and are free of charge to readers. Photos are published at a maximum width of 150 pixels, are clearly attributed, and link to high-resolution originals at Flickr.
Such a well-mannered request, it seems, has met with mostly positive response from other photographers, especially from those who have chosen to allow use of their images with attribution via Creative Commons licensing. Some of these photographers, even some whose Creative Commons terms specify noncommercial usage, went on to comment that Ms. Williams's request was superfluous, as Schmap could have just gone ahead and used their photos without making a formal request.
And not only are many photographers happily giving free use of their images to Schmap and publicizing Schmap's guides via blog posts about the thrill of being published, quite a few are providing free ongoing marketing through use of Schmap's widgets on the photographers' websites.
Wait a minute, I thought, after reading yet another post by a flattered photographer. Just because the guides are free to users doesn't mean Schmap has no revenue model. It's a commercial venture. They must be making money somehow.
I read the fine print again.