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How Hacker News hit us with 10 000 unique visitors in 10 hours (whoapi.com)
65 points by GoranDuskic 5273 days ago
10 comments

I'm surprised it wasn't higher. I got 15,000 uniques in a day and my link (http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=1940129) only had 36 upvotes.

I guess there isn't a direct relationship between links people find voteworthy and those they just want to visit.

As far as signups are concerned, of the 10,000+ visitors we received, 3,000+ clicked through to the site, and 1,000+ signed up.

I wrote a little here, http://blog.idonethis.com/post/15619811026/write-your-own-st..., about how the traffic we got did much better than a traditional press announcement.

I have a similar story which I blogged about afterwards: http://hackerthings.com/blog/launch-week-from-48-hour-projec...

There should be a public Google doc that lists all of these "what HN did for me" articles.

I had around 1,800 uniques over 3 hours in 2011 - posted some stats (browsers, OS, geo) here: http://willgrant.org/hn-traffic-stats-summary/
I made a similar analysis over a longer period of time with a larger sample basis. http://thenextcorner.net/hn-users/

Always interesting to see what systems, browsers HN users work on.

Interesting, but no new customers, no signups. Are HN viewers not the signing-up type? The article was of interest but I guess their site isn't as targeted to HN - thus no signups, makes sense.

What to take away? I hope it isn't "game Hacker News to get hits".

Why not watch a video on how it looks like during a 2-min span during the first hour of being on top of Hackernews!

http://brajeshwar.com/2011/how-is-it-like-during-the-first-h...

Great choice of music on the video!
that's so true, once my article got 500 unique visitors by only being on the frontpage for 5 minutes :D 500 unique visitors in 5 minutes + new visitors keep coming because it was still there in rss feeds and there is a huge community following hackernews via rss feeds.
Exactly, plus the article gets quoted and reposted on other portals, it gets retweeted and everything. Its just a crazy ride. Even this article is trending, I am wondering what the results will be this time :D
Stop with the wide-eyed admiration of a someone (pg) who wishes nothing more than to take a portion of your win.

Grow up and recognize the wider world.

I love the community here for so many reasons :)
Congrats! The hard part is to retain a couple of those new readers though :)
Times certainly have changed. About 5 years back I got frontpages on Digg/Reddit for an article and easily saw 250K on the first day, maybe 750K before my server crapped itself.
WoW, thats awesome! Pics or it didn't happen :D
I was shocked with Wordpress handling such a traffic without any noticable server load change on an average server.
10,000 uniques in 10 hours is only 1 unique per 3.6 seconds. It'd be more shocking if it did cause noticeable load.
Most of it was within the first two hours :) yeah, I didn't do the math :)
People generally seriously underestimate the power of modern hardware. Suppose you have 100 million requests in a month. That's a small country of people accessing your website, so that will require a large bunch of big iron, right? No. A single commodity PC box can easily handle that. 100 million requests per month is just under 40 requests per second. Say your peak is around 100 requests per second. If your site is amenable to caching you can probably handle that load on a single core. Even if your site can't be effectively cached, for $5000 you can buy a terabyte of RAM these days, which can probably hold the hot parts of your database (for comparison: compressed current-revision-only of Wikipedia is under 8GB). Of course you need expensive hardware to be able to put that much RAM in, but then again you probably don't need anything close to a terabyte.
People generally seriously underestimate the power of modern hardware.

They also often underestimate the bloat of modern software. The difference in page generation times between WordPress and some minimalistic CMS can be in the order of 50 or 100. And while it's compelling to believe that WordPress "does more", I don't believe that's the case.

Absolutely. A modern quad core $100 processor doing 10 requests per second has about 1 billion clock cycles per request. You can easily lose a factor of 100 by using an interpreted language, another factor of 10 by using a bloated framework, and another factor of 10 by using a DB optimized for disk instead of one optimized for RAM.

Due to network overhead (in performance, but more importantly in complexity when programming and sysadmining) and the speed and size of modern hardware, for the vast majority of sites it makes much more sense to run on 1 powerful box than on 20 small boxes. And even if you do need to scale to multiple boxes eventually (which >99.9% of websites won't have to), managing 10 boxes instead of 200 has advantages too.

Wow! 10,000 WHOLE people? I can barely imagine the utter joy!

Stop thinking about sucking up to people who are doing EXACTLY THE SAME THING AS YOU.

than
Well this will get you another 10,000 for sure. Good post though.