A couple weeks ago, I did a post on the hunt for accurate blog statistics. Given the slow news flow over the holidays, I figure it's time for a bit of an update. In terms of raw numbers, there has been consistency among Measure Map, Blogbeat, Google Analytics and StatCounter. The range of unique visitors yesterday was 641 to 696, which appears to demon state they are using the same kinds of methodologies. The anomaly continues to be Blogware, which indicated I had 5,265 "distinct hosts served" (their version of unique visitors) and more than 1,000 hits from other "referer" sites such as Google's portal, RealTechNews and FeedBurner. Not sure why Blogware is so different but they concede they have found a small bug in their statistics package that has been counting distinct hosts served every time they visit the blog - rather than just once. As far as how each statistics package performs, I've been impressed with the clean look and feel of Blogbeat and Measure Map. For bloggers and Web site operators not interested in the nitty-gritty details that Google Analytics provides, Blogbeat and Measure Map did a really nice job. The key question facing Blogbeat continues to be how many people will pay $5 a month or $50 a year for the service. I'm on the fence but if they offered a few more user-friendly bells and whistles. I could be convinced otherwise. I've only been able to use a small part of Measure Map because it doesn't support Blogware yet, which the folks at Blogware should help fix if they are really interested in promoting the platform. In other statistics-related developments, it is encouraging to see Wordpress has finally added some basic features to its hosted service where I write my Nortel blog. I've yet to try Mint but if you someone over there wants to give me a trial version, I'd be happy to check it out.