Dedicated to the Young Ones below 76 during Covid-19 Lockdown April 24, 2020 bizadmin [abc] While we get entertained, we boost up our immune system to fight the invisible treacherous virus that has taken the world by storm. It is mayhem everywhere. Nevertheless, I shall create more blog posts and upload entertaining videos such as this to keep occupied. As they say, “An idle mind is the devil’s workshop; and that devil is Alzheimer’s disease. Certainly, you don’t want to suffer dementia in your golden years when you should be happily retired enjoying the fruits of your labor for the last 20-30 years of working, corporate life. Below are the lyrics: Cliff Richard – The Young Ones Lyrics The young ones, Darling we’re the young ones, And young ones shouldn’t be afraid.To live, love While the flame is strong, for we won’t be the young ones very long.Tomorrow, why wait till tomorrow, Tomorrow sometimes never comes. Love, me, there’s a song to be sung And the best time is to sing while we’re young.Once in every lifetime comes a love like this. I need you and you need me. Oh my darling can’t you see.Young dreams Should be dreamed together, Young hearts shouldn’t be afraid. And some day when the years have flownDarling, this will teach the young ones of our own. The young ones Darling, we’re the young ones The young ones Darling, we’re the young ones. [abc] Below are the lyrics of “The Last Waltz.” I wondered should I go or should I stay, The band had only one more song to play. And then I saw you out the corner of my eye, A little girl, alone and so shy. I had the last waltz with you, Two lonely people together. I fell in love with you, The last waltz should last forever. But the love we had was going strong, Through the good and bad we get along. And then the flame of love died in your eye, My heart was broke in two when you said goodbye. I had the last waltz with you, Two lonely people together. I fell in love with you, The last waltz should last forever. It’s all over now, nothing… [abc] Here is a summary of the above. Check it out. Thanks, and subscribe. ❤❣💕💗💖 [abc]
Seek First God’s Kingdom April 24, 2020 bizadmin [abc] “Therefore do not worry, saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’ For after all these things the Gentiles seek. For your heavenly Father knows that you need all these things. But seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things shall be added to you. Matthew 6:31–33 As a child of God, know that it is your Father’s pleasure to meet all your needs. Jesus Himself tells us, “For your heavenly Father knows that you need all these things.” But God does not want you to seek after things. He wants you to seek first His kingdom. And when you do that, all the things that you need will be added to you! So your first priority every day is to seek His kingdom. The word “first” in verse 33 is the Greek word proton, which means “first in order or importance, holding the highest place in all our affections.” My friend, God wants us to seek first His kingdom, and all things will fall gloriously in place. [abc] We are not to seek after things the way Gentiles do. The word “seek” in “the Gentiles seek” (verse 32) is the Greek word epizeteo. It means “to seek with all their might with much sweat or with much stress.” However, the way God wants us to “seek” in “seek first the kingdom of God” is the Greek word zeteo, which means “to hunger, to desire to worship.” It is simply a hungering, a desiring for the kingdom of God, without any labor or toil. But what is the kingdom of God? Romans 14:17 tells us that it is righteousness, peace and joy in the Holy Spirit. And the kingdom of God dwells within you because the Holy Spirit indwells you. So the kingdom of God is His righteousness, peace and joy in you. Beloved, if you want to have peace and joy in the Holy Spirit flowing inside you, then seek every day to be conscious of your righteousness in Christ, not your own righteousness, but His righteousness given to you as a gift. Pursue Jesus first. Spend time with Him and listen to His Word. And when you do these things, you are seeking His kingdom and His righteousness, and all the things that you need will be added to you! [abc]
Abbreviated Subscriber Counts on YouTube April 24, 2020 bizadmin [abc] As you likely have heard by now, as of September 2019, YouTube will be abbreviating subscriber counts everywhere except in a creator’s private studio dashboard. This will cause the subscriber number everywhere it is publicly shown, including on Social Blade, to be shortened to only three leading digits max. Read on to learn a little more about the change and how to adapt to this new change when looking at data on Social Blade. For the purposes of the screenshots below we have backdated YouTube’s change to Sept 2018 in order to show you what things will look like before they actually go live on YouTube. The actual website will show live data up to the point when YouTube flips the switch. User Summary Pages [abc] The top half of the User Summary page has a new look to it but is still mostly the same data as you’re used to with the addition of the graphs. The new graphs feature how many subscribers (left) or views (right) the channel got each week over the past year. Looking at this gives you an at the glancing look of the health of the channel over the past year and some areas to explore in more detail. For example in the above graphs, you can see how PewDiePie’s subscriber growth slowed down for several months but recently picked back up as he started playing Minecraft. His view graph also spiked during this change. The table in the middle of the summary page is where you’ll notice the most changes. Depending on the size of the channel and how fast they’re growing you’ll see a wide range of data points. If a channel is growing fast (relative to it’s size) you’ll see almost daily subscriber updates, but if a channel isn’t growing fast anymore (maybe an older channel that has slowed down) you may see subscriber updates every few days, weeks, or even months or years. It should be noted that at least currently, YouTube has chosen to leave views as the exact number so those will be updated every day. [abc] In the example above it shows PewDiePie got 1M subscribers on September 8th. Since we have the real data still we obviously know this isn’t true. We are then left to either A) put a 1M subs gained on Sept 8th since that is when YouTube told us his sub count changed from 100M to 101M, or B) smooth the data out from the last sub count update which is already off the chart. We have chosen to take option A since neither way is fully correct, but option A at least uses the data that was given to us rather than guess, potentially very wrongly, about how many subs were gained each day in the past. For example that 1M really could have happened on a single date and if we smoothed it out across the previous days that would be wrong. We do smooth this data out though in the graphs at the top and the summary page where you can view the data weekly/monthly instead of just daily. [abc] Detailed Statistics Pages The last thing we wanted to highlight in this change is the new graphs on the detailed statistics page. We’re going to be doing some further changes to this soon too, but at launch, the screenshots you see here will be how things look for the most part. The first four graphs you will see highlight on a weekly basis the growth of the channel on both subscribers and views. The top two graphs show how many have been gained or lost during that week (a bigger version of what is on the summary page), while the bottom two show the running total. [abc] The next four graphs require you to have a Silver or higher subscription to view daily data. Inside these daily graphs (green to indicate they are a premium feature) you’ll be able to see a couple of years back of daily data regarding subscriber and view growth. One thing to note though is the daily subscriber data will end on the date YouTube flips the switch so we’re calling it legacy or historical. The last graphs on the page are pretty straight forward, a history of the channel over the past few years in monthly form. These should look very similar to the weekly but on a wider basis to smooth data even more. One last general thing to note about almost all of the graphs is you can click and drag drawing a box to zoom in on any portion of the graph you want to see in more detail. [abc] The Day of the Change One final thing to note is, on the day of the change (simulated to Sept 8th in the example above) is you will see a substantial drop in subscribers for most channels. In the example above T-Series loses 150k subs when typically you can see they are gaining. This is because when YouTube switched to an abbreviated subscriber counts 111,155,817 for example changes to 111,000,000. All those subscribers (most likely) aren’t REALLY lost, but as far as anyone outside of T-Series knows they are because YouTube has removed the full count. We will leave an (i) on the table to indicate this for the time being. The New Normal Really at the end of the day, the only thing that won’t work anymore is the real-time subscriber counter. Or more specifically it will work, but it will be very boring (unless you have less than 1000 subscribers) for most channels unless you know the counter is about to change. The good thing though is you can always get a perfect screenshot as once a milestone is reached it won’t change for a while! So that about sums things up. While we’re not happy that YouTube has chosen to go forward with these changes despite the overwhelming opposition from the community we have adapted the site to support them. We want to thank the community for all of their support over the past few months surrounding this issue and to let you know we’re not going anywhere! Social Blade may not have exact subscriber numbers anymore, but other then real-time, you’ll still be able to enjoy almost all of the same features and since everyone is affected the same way channel data will still be comparable! [abc]
[abc] As you likely have heard by now, as of September 2019, YouTube will be abbreviating subscriber counts everywhere except in a creator’s private studio dashboard. This will cause the subscriber number everywhere it is publicly shown, including on Social Blade, to be shortened to only three leading digits max. Read on to learn a little more about the change and how to adapt to this new change when looking at data on Social Blade. For the purposes of the screenshots below we have backdated YouTube’s change to Sept 2018 in order to show you what things will look like before they actually go live on YouTube. The actual website will show live data up to the point when YouTube flips the switch. User Summary Pages [abc] The top half of the User Summary page has a new look to it but is still mostly the same data as you’re used to with the addition of the graphs. The new graphs feature how many subscribers (left) or views (right) the channel got each week over the past year. Looking at this gives you an at the glancing look of the health of the channel over the past year and some areas to explore in more detail. For example in the above graphs, you can see how PewDiePie’s subscriber growth slowed down for several months but recently picked back up as he started playing Minecraft. His view graph also spiked during this change. The table in the middle of the summary page is where you’ll notice the most changes. Depending on the size of the channel and how fast they’re growing you’ll see a wide range of data points. If a channel is growing fast (relative to it’s size) you’ll see almost daily subscriber updates, but if a channel isn’t growing fast anymore (maybe an older channel that has slowed down) you may see subscriber updates every few days, weeks, or even months or years. It should be noted that at least currently, YouTube has chosen to leave views as the exact number so those will be updated every day. [abc] In the example above it shows PewDiePie got 1M subscribers on September 8th. Since we have the real data still we obviously know this isn’t true. We are then left to either A) put a 1M subs gained on Sept 8th since that is when YouTube told us his sub count changed from 100M to 101M, or B) smooth the data out from the last sub count update which is already off the chart. We have chosen to take option A since neither way is fully correct, but option A at least uses the data that was given to us rather than guess, potentially very wrongly, about how many subs were gained each day in the past. For example that 1M really could have happened on a single date and if we smoothed it out across the previous days that would be wrong. We do smooth this data out though in the graphs at the top and the summary page where you can view the data weekly/monthly instead of just daily. [abc] Detailed Statistics Pages The last thing we wanted to highlight in this change is the new graphs on the detailed statistics page. We’re going to be doing some further changes to this soon too, but at launch, the screenshots you see here will be how things look for the most part. The first four graphs you will see highlight on a weekly basis the growth of the channel on both subscribers and views. The top two graphs show how many have been gained or lost during that week (a bigger version of what is on the summary page), while the bottom two show the running total. [abc] The next four graphs require you to have a Silver or higher subscription to view daily data. Inside these daily graphs (green to indicate they are a premium feature) you’ll be able to see a couple of years back of daily data regarding subscriber and view growth. One thing to note though is the daily subscriber data will end on the date YouTube flips the switch so we’re calling it legacy or historical. The last graphs on the page are pretty straight forward, a history of the channel over the past few years in monthly form. These should look very similar to the weekly but on a wider basis to smooth data even more. One last general thing to note about almost all of the graphs is you can click and drag drawing a box to zoom in on any portion of the graph you want to see in more detail. [abc] The Day of the Change One final thing to note is, on the day of the change (simulated to Sept 8th in the example above) is you will see a substantial drop in subscribers for most channels. In the example above T-Series loses 150k subs when typically you can see they are gaining. This is because when YouTube switched to an abbreviated subscriber counts 111,155,817 for example changes to 111,000,000. All those subscribers (most likely) aren’t REALLY lost, but as far as anyone outside of T-Series knows they are because YouTube has removed the full count. We will leave an (i) on the table to indicate this for the time being. The New Normal Really at the end of the day, the only thing that won’t work anymore is the real-time subscriber counter. Or more specifically it will work, but it will be very boring (unless you have less than 1000 subscribers) for most channels unless you know the counter is about to change. The good thing though is you can always get a perfect screenshot as once a milestone is reached it won’t change for a while! So that about sums things up. While we’re not happy that YouTube has chosen to go forward with these changes despite the overwhelming opposition from the community we have adapted the site to support them. We want to thank the community for all of their support over the past few months surrounding this issue and to let you know we’re not going anywhere! Social Blade may not have exact subscriber numbers anymore, but other then real-time, you’ll still be able to enjoy almost all of the same features and since everyone is affected the same way channel data will still be comparable!