I need something between twitter and medium. Short, but not that short, with connections to people who might be interested (ie, not the people on Medium).
In 2003 blogging was a conversation -- you'd post and folks would post in response. You'd get a real discussion around ideas.
In 2016 blogging is just screaming (or whispering) into the void. If there is a conversation around the post, it will be in short comments on aggregator sites (such as this one).
It seems to me that successful blog post requires either having expert knowledge of a specific domain, or an interesting take on a trending topic. It's hard for many (including myself) to break through the barrier of self-doubt if neither of those cases are obviously true.
Blogging for personal reasons is still a good option (as many would say), but why spend limited time on writing a blog post when you could be working on a side project instead?
Personally, I like blogs where people are about 85% sure they know what they are doing. It tends to spawn better conversation (as long as the comments section ends up minimally moderated). "This is how you do [insert complex concept here]" is a lot less interesting than "This is how I fucked up trying to do [insert complex concept here]". Obviously though, it does take time from the side project. I write notes to myself constantly. For me, setting up the blog seems more time consuming than taking some time to edit my notes into something coherent.
Most of what I have to say, I haven't thought through enough to commit to the internet permanently. When I was a little younger I was willing to put anything out there, but not anymore. So I prefer a transient medium.
The other thing is that that there a handful of disjoint subjects that I might like to blog about: a hobby (that I do have a nascent blog for), things learned in tech, etc. But they don't have much to do with each other, and putting them all in the same place feels silly.
Because to write takes as much time and effort thinking through the structure of things as programming does, but the compiler is much more poorly specified.
Really though, I need to get together some folks who can do usability tests on my writing. (If, uh, anyone is interested and wants to learn about server configuration, please tell me what you think of https://saltstack-from-scratch/
I've ran various news sites in the past, and I'm working on one now, if that counts as blogging.
But I don't run a personal blog. Why? Because I don't see the point. Anything related to gaming or tech is already discussed on my existing sites and social media accounts. My personal life is kind of boring by comparison, so no one would want to read about it. And anything political goes on Medium or some other such platform instead.
I took the plunge to writing a blog, because I like to sometimes express (really stupid) ideas in long-form, which social media is ill-suited for. Also, I hate most social media platforms. So basically the same reason Stevey's Drunken Blog Rants exists. But I am an idiot, so don't expect that kind of quality content. If you're insane, or curious as to how many bad ideas a bored, slight knowledgeable hobbyist can come up with, it's at qwertyuiop924.wordpress.com
I've got a lot of blog post outlines saved, and I'm no longer so worried about posting something to the internet and receiving critique. However, no matter how good my intentions are, I always find something 'more important' to do with 2-3 hours on a weekend. E.g. sleeping, extra work via side projects or freelancing. I just need to find a way to break it down into half-hour blocks of time, or to lock myself in my office for a few hours on a Saturday night.
I used to, starting maybe 15-16 years ago, and I kept it up for a good long while, but I don't get much out of it anymore. A bunch of people decided, for reasons which never made any sense to me, that blogs and blogging somehow ought to be a mechanism for making money, and in their rabid enthusiasm for commerce managed to suck all the life out of the medium. I no longer feel like writing blog posts is an act of participation in a community, because there is no community anymore, so far as I can see.
The web itself seems to be pretty much over, as far as you can consider it to be a community medium, and the death of blogging is just the most visible aspect of that. I still post on my blog from time to time, but it's basically just out of habit, or because I think I might want to find some interesting link again later.
I'm not financially affiliated in any way - but I do maintain my own Neocities page and attempt to outreach to those who host sites with similar interests. It takes me back to the Geocities days, which is kind of the point.
I blog at https://glebbahmutov.com/blog/ as a reminder to myself how some problems are solved. Now people at work, especially new hires, comment how 50% of my communication or answering questions are just links to the blog posts.
I have many articles written on software management. They document my journey as a new engineering manager. I also write down what my other friends deal with as managers/tech leads. It's amazing to see what everyone has to think about and how events could possibly unfold behind every decision.
They're all sitting on my laptop, but I worry about keeping topics separate from our employers. I want to keep things classy.
If you've got suggestions how to approach this, let me know.
I do: http://www.jakeseliger.com. But I can tell you why most people don't: Writing interesting content with any kind of consistency takes a lot of time, energy, and effort, and it's poorly remunerative in the short term. For many people it's poorly remunerative in any term.
Pretty well summed up by other comments, but loss of ROI. Funny enough one of my last blog posts was the most response I've ever gotten (few hundred K readers, tweeted by O'Reilly, liked by Zuck) but it still felt "not worth it" in the end.
Now blogs are simply the place I put something if I truly write something for enjoyment where that enjoyment needs to be 100% of the reward. This does happen, but rather uncommonly (because: life).
I have a lot of ideas in my evernotes, but I am procrastinating on building my webpage. I want to be perfect, which ofcourse will require time and I am too lazy to invest that much time.
so basically cos I am lazy and just trying to convince myself with false reasons
I ask if it is useful to others: the answer is probably no. In a group of 100 people at random, I am not the best one at breaking down complex subjects, nor the most likely to be a cultural pioneer, so the utility to others would be low. I ask if it would be useful to myself: the answer is no. I write for myself, in a way that is useful to myself, but not to others. I think the blogging provides a lot of leverage to superior writers, and is probably a wasteful distraction to the other 99%.
46 comments
[ 3.2 ms ] story [ 39.3 ms ] threadI have a similar feeling on HackerNews, that people will jump on me. It's also why I don't use Twitter.
fuck those other humans. write what you want to write.
humans die everyday. their voices are never heard.
you have an opportunity to speak. take it.
sincerely,
council of space bats
In 5 years, you'll be happy that you did it, or sad that you didn't.
The only area's I have any in depth knowledge are already well covered by others.
Discourse and Flarum are both so heavy and app-like, it's just not necessary.
[1] https://sublevel.net
In 2016 blogging is just screaming (or whispering) into the void. If there is a conversation around the post, it will be in short comments on aggregator sites (such as this one).
Blogging for personal reasons is still a good option (as many would say), but why spend limited time on writing a blog post when you could be working on a side project instead?
The other thing is that that there a handful of disjoint subjects that I might like to blog about: a hobby (that I do have a nascent blog for), things learned in tech, etc. But they don't have much to do with each other, and putting them all in the same place feels silly.
Really though, I need to get together some folks who can do usability tests on my writing. (If, uh, anyone is interested and wants to learn about server configuration, please tell me what you think of https://saltstack-from-scratch/
http://amfarrell.com/saltstack-from-scratch/
I tried some different TLD endings to the link you posted but got bored after a few and hit google.
I've ran various news sites in the past, and I'm working on one now, if that counts as blogging.
But I don't run a personal blog. Why? Because I don't see the point. Anything related to gaming or tech is already discussed on my existing sites and social media accounts. My personal life is kind of boring by comparison, so no one would want to read about it. And anything political goes on Medium or some other such platform instead.
Blogging is just putting your opinions out as fact with no way for readers to disagree. I prefer commenting.
The web itself seems to be pretty much over, as far as you can consider it to be a community medium, and the death of blogging is just the most visible aspect of that. I still post on my blog from time to time, but it's basically just out of habit, or because I think I might want to find some interesting link again later.
One such community: https://neocities.org/
I'm not financially affiliated in any way - but I do maintain my own Neocities page and attempt to outreach to those who host sites with similar interests. It takes me back to the Geocities days, which is kind of the point.
Players play the game. Commentators talk about it.
They're all sitting on my laptop, but I worry about keeping topics separate from our employers. I want to keep things classy.
If you've got suggestions how to approach this, let me know.
Now blogs are simply the place I put something if I truly write something for enjoyment where that enjoyment needs to be 100% of the reward. This does happen, but rather uncommonly (because: life).