Do you want to say thank you to the people who upvoted you in the last two weeks? Let me introduce a simple utitily function, Steemreport, which let you know who gave you upvotes and who are your most important upvoters. It is a great tool for any author who wants to keep track of their followers.
Introducing Steemreport
Steemreport is a useful online utility for you to keep track of your steemit performance. Simply go to the website and you will find a couple of useful functions. The one being introduced here is Account Voting.
Click on the Account Voting / Incoming Votes, you will then able to see a beautiful chart.
Above is the number of upvotes I received (it is also known as Incoming Votes) in the past 14 days. In my case, you see a significant portion of votes were given by a few users. By significance, it means the upvoting power of voter that eventually contribute to your rewards. That is to say, if a user with very little steem power upvoting you a hundred times, it may not be as significant as another high-steem-power user who upvoted you only once.
With this useful tool, you may regularly review your performance. It is essential to understand why and who upvoted your content for what reason in order to improve your blog. It also gives you some hints about who to follow back as well.
Try it out yourself at http://www.steemreports.com/
Thank you for reading. Happy blogging.
Yo im just a cook, but that link doesnt have the green http thing before the address... yet you show the link as http:// - this is suspect or I am overly paranoid?
Thank you for reading. All the links in my post are working well. Alternatively, you may also google steemreport and see how it works.
Yeah np dude, my question was not about the functionality of the links at all though but are about the trustworthiness of them. Providing me with another way to click the link wasnt inspiring confidence; However! I did decide to read about http vs https on my own.
I have trivial programming/admin/etc knowledge and honestly am curious if there is a reason you chose not to use https for something you plug username data at least into. Only trying to learn something.
I didn't aware that was a question about http or s. Well, it is generally a good practice to do everything on https. For the particular case of steemreports, it does not involve any sensitive data. Data on steem blockchain is openly accessible for everyone reading. e.g. You may see how much money in my wallet and vice versa. There is no secret (and no privacy to a certain extent) at all. But it definitely works on https as well.
Ok, this makes sense, thanks for helping me* understand.
You are welcomed. Please feel free to ask any question in the future. I will try to help as much as I can. Have a nice day.