The stats helper monkeys at WordPress.com mulled over how this blog did in 2010, and here’s a high level summary of its overall blog health:

The Blog-Health-o-Meter™ reads Wow.
Crunchy numbers
The Louvre Museum has 8.5 million visitors per year. This blog was viewed about 160,000 times in 2010. If it were an exhibit at The Louvre Museum, it would take 7 days for that many people to see it.
In 2010, there were 3 new posts, growing the total archive of this blog to 14 posts.
The busiest day of the year was May 2nd with 2 views. The most popular post that day was [Lucid][Ubuntu 10.04] High resolution Plymouth & Virtual Terminal for ATI/NVIDIA cards with proprietary/restricted driver.
Where did they come from?
The top referring sites in 2010 were ubuntuforums.org, code.google.com, wiki.ubuntuusers.de, ubuntu-ky.ubuntuforums.org, and habrahabr.ru.
Some visitors came searching, mostly for plymouth resolution, ubuntu disable pulseaudio, pyneighborhood, ubuntu 10.04 framebuffer, and ubuntu plymouth resolution.
Attractions in 2010
These are the posts and pages that got the most views in 2010.
[Lucid][Ubuntu 10.04] High resolution Plymouth & Virtual Terminal for ATI/NVIDIA cards with proprietary/restricted driver April 2010
227 comments and 4 Likes on WordPress.com
Ubuntu 9.04 Jaunty – Keeping the beast Pulseaudio at bay April 2009
165 comments
ALSA instead of Pulseaudio for Ubuntu 8.10 Intrepid – a Non-Destructive way. October 2008
121 comments
Network Browsing with pyNeighborhood in Xubuntu Jaunty June 2009
13 comments
HP ProBook 4310s – Ubuntu Jaunty September 2009
8 comments

busiest day = 2 views? o_o
That’s a bug!!! Someone alerts the highly trained monkey @ wordpress
Dear Idyllictux,
Thank you very much for the “[Lucid][Ubuntu 10.04] High resolution Plymouth & Virtual Terminal for ATI/NVIDIA cards with proprietary/restricted driver”. article, published on April 26, 2010. Begin march 2011 I installed Ubuntu 10.04 LTS Desktop onto a HP Pavilion Mediacenter PC m7380.nl (got it as XMas present in december 2006). It has an ATI video card. During every boot of Ubuntu I saw several artifacts. After executing all the instructions of your article, I was able to set the resolution for boottime to 1280×1024-24 and I lost the disturbing artifacts too! Dear Idyllictux, thank you very much for this nice contribution. I am very greatfull to you for that.
Paul, Maastricht, The Netherlands (almost 65). My first “PC” in 1977 was an Apple ][. Since then “hooked” on PC and IT.