Tag personal blogs

Not My Blog

Though it really feels like Facebook has killed every single personal blog in the world, I still enjoy reading what some of my old blog-buddies post. It’s just that there aren’t nearly as many of them still posting.

GoingLikeSixty and his wife up and sold their house in Kentucky and are moving to Costa Rica in just a few weeks. He’s been posting about the upcoming move and the huge culture shock they’re facing by moving to a less-developed country. I would make a joke about how he already lives in a third-world country right there in Kentucky, but we both know it’s not really a joke. His wife, Nancy, who also blogs, has some backstory to explain how they decided to chuck it all in the first place. I have a client who spends the winter months in Costa Rica, and she makes it sound pretty good, too, but I have a hard enough time living in suburbia; I think I’d lose what little sanity I have left trying to live the pura vida.

Joel Sax apparently wants to give us all nightmares by talking about all the horrible things that happen to your teeth. Personally, I’m not too concerned about developing meth mouth, but having suffered with dry mouth as a side effect of prescriptions for a couple of years, his descriptions brought back some unpleasant memories. I know Joel has had to deal with complicated and difficult dental procedures over the years, and it’s a fate I would not wish on anyone. I count myself as incredibly lucky not to have had many dental problems over the years, despite never having been a regular customer of a dentist until I became a parent and had to put my money where my mouth was, so to speak.

Even as other bloggers fall by the wayside, my buddy Jack Cluth manages to keep grinding it out after all these years just by keeping up with the headlines. This morning, though, he offers us this very helpful infographic that distinguishes between Canadian beers and unnatural sex acts. This should be especially useful even to Canadians, who just last week voted en masse to fuck themselves.

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Last Blog Standing

It’s not saying anything new to opine that 2009 is the year that personal blogs bought the farm. The SEO blogs and the “professional” blogs which have all the soul and character of matzo crackers couldn’t quite kill personal blogs, as hard as they tried. It took Facebook and Twitter to really deliver the death-wielding blow. For most of the past nine months, as I have spent time on those sites myself, I have argued that personal blogs did not have to die, that they could go back to being that wonderful little backwater of the Internet that they were when we all began blogging a decade ago. And I genuinely believe that they can, but the vast majority of personal blogs have to die before the survivors can begin again. Think of it, if you will, like MRSA — the bacteria who aren’t killed by the poison are the evolutionary winners and can exist even in a sea of antibiotics, er social networks.

Quite honestly, it’s probably just as well for all those other blogs to fade away while their authors drift through 140-character tweets, lame-brain crypto-profound status updates, quizzes, memes, and friend-list jockeying. Quite honestly, that’s exactly what all those blogs did in the first place, and little else. It’s better to corral up all that superficial noise on one big-ass website and let the people who have more to say, more to engage with, more to explore, go about their business with that much less noise to their signal. It is no great loss to have the “What I Had For Lunch” bloggers give up and relegate themselves to being “What I Had For Lunch” Facebookers. We can, and probably should, think about the ghettoization of so many people into one or two online holding pens in terms of the inevitable issue of corporate control of the web, but for the moment I am putting that thought on the backburner.

I reached a decision the other day that I, for one, would prefer to keep my soapbox and reinvest some effort and energy here instead of succumbing entirely to the half-digested regurgitation of the world that defines Facebook. I won’t flatter myself to even remotely suggest that my blog is anything more than some manifestation of the scattershot way my mind works, but over the last decade I have put an enormous amount of psychic energy into this form of self-expression, and I think it’s a better use of my time than trading snarky comments or taking one more asinine quiz. So I’m leaving it alone for a while — my intent is to stay off of Facebook for the next three months (Oct/Nov/Dec) — and getting back to basics right here, having sadly neglected this site for most of the last nine months.

Referring back to my topic statement — that personal blogs are dying like the flies in my kitchen — one of the really sad aspects of that is realizing that a lot of the people I’ve met online over the last decade have already given up the ghost on their blogs. They might post something now and again, but nothing of any substance, and not with any real momentum to keep them going. Some of these folks are self-aware enough to realize that they, too, have succumbed to the FaceBorg; I can see that others have lost their energy for blogging because their friends have all stopped (whether under the influence of social networking or not), and some have just lost interest organically (let’s face it, writing every day is not an easy task, and it’s not hard to run out of steam, especially in the long-term). Yesterday, I decided I was going to cull my RSS feeds, and as I went through the list I kept bumping into personal blogs that hadn’t popped up in my feeds for months and months; it was almost like waking up and realizing that everyone you know has died while you were asleep.

I ended up doing a savage cull of the feeds. In fact, I unsubscribed from 153 different feeds, leaving only 19 in place, one of which is just a tracking feed to see who is linking back to me and doesn’t really count. So of the 18 blogs left on my list, all of them are personal blogs. Of those, probably fewer than 5 are fairly active (one or more posts a week), another 3-4 were never prolific posters in the first place but can still be counted on to say something, and the remaining handful are sort of a “wish list” of people I keep hoping will have the same epiphany I had and will start writing again. Of the 153 that I dumped, most of them were topical sites related to my various interests, but personal blogs were well-represented in that list, I assure you.

A slight tangent — for all the good things about the availability of RSS feeds, I believe that they have also been a huge contributor to the fall of personal blogs. Part of the original experience was “visiting” your friends’ websites, getting ideas from them about designs, making comments, and being a part of those people’s online world. The text-only crawl of RSS makes it far too easy to just scan and not read posts, discourages commenting (because you usually have to “click-through” to do so), and removes the personal touches of seeing how someone chooses to present themselves on the web through their graphic design.

Back from that short digression, here’s what the deal is with me and this site: Some of you were good enough to respond to a feedback poll I did in the spring, and I have had a long time now to think about that feedback and what to do about it. Within the parameters (constraints?) of the way I have generally used this site, I agree with the sentiment that too many cut-and-dried linky posts are not good, but that is where this blog began and is not likely to go away, I just need to bring more to the party like a little analysis or synthesis of the material. Blowing away all those RSS feeds gives me a chance to discover some new things to read, and I will make the effort to stay away from the kind of site that has 130 posts a day, most of them hastily-rewritten press releases from the industries they follow. But the topics I am interested in are going to continue to be the main thrust — food, computer technology, the media industries, etc.

It’s my hope that I can get creative here once in a while, too, but I dare not promise anything. Every time I think my creative voice has returned, it seems to go so deep into hiding that it might never return. Back in the spring I got all excited about taking little weekly road trips, only to have The Black Dog come and crush that out of me so hard that I didn’t move out of my chair for three months. So we will proceed on little kitten feet in this regard.

This site has never been deeply confessional and never will be. I am pleased to share news and stories about my life, particularly through the lens of parenthood, but on the few occasions when I have let my guard slip and said more than was strictly necessary about things, I have always regretted it. I firmly believe in not hiding behind a manifestly artificial persona, and I have always included my full name in the name of the website itself, but I also recognize the importance of maintaining the separation between things suitable to share with the world and things best kept to oneself. It’s a pity that more people online don’t seem to understand and practice this.

Come the end of the year, I will re-evaluate all of this again. Maybe the FaceBorg are too strong to resist, maybe I, too, have finally run out of stuff to blog about, maybe something better (or worse) will have come along by then. For now, my soapbox and I are right here, back where we belong.

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Blog Buddies

Several small notes about various friends who keep blogs:

Since I began using RSS feeds to keep up on all the blogs I read, I’d lost track of several people who, for one reason or another, either didn’t have an RSS feed or whose feed didn’t work. I almost never visit anyone’s blog “in person” anymore, so not having a working RSS feed is equivalent to being “off the grid” as far as my attention goes.

Quite honestly, while using RSS feeds does make the business of keeping up with blogs vastly more efficient, there are aspects of using the feeds that I don’t like, and this is probably the biggest one. And, while I know there’s nothing preventing me from visiting those feed-free sites, the reality of the situation is that once you get going with several dozen feeds to keep up with on a daily basis, it seriously disincents one from visiting blogs. That’s too bad, really, because back in the olden days (three or four years ago) part of the entire experience of blogging was this visiting function. It gave you creative inspiration when you saw someone’s cool new design, and it encouraged commenting and counter-commenting.

Anyway, I was happy to discover that Karan finally got her feeds working again. Her feed is “title-only”, which actually does force you to go visit the site if you want to read the post, so maybe that’s the happy compromise — you know someone is posting, but you have to go pay a visit.

And somewhere along the line, Sue added an RSS feed. She had deliberately turned feeds off a while back when she discovered that someone was scraping them and posting them on another blog without her permission. Then, I guess, she actually stopped blogging for a while, and I lost all track of her. I am always tickled when a post from her pops up in my feed reader.

Meanwhile, Tony has moved beyond the blogging backwater of Microsoft LiveSpaces with a new blog. It never ceases to amaze me how half-assedly Microsoft approached the whole blog business. Tony’s ulterior motive for moving stems from Microsoft’s insistence that anyone wishing to comment on a LiveSpace blog be registered with their “LiveID” service, which is the latest incarnation of their equally horrible “.NET Passport” scheme. We’ve all got a little too much Big Brother in our lives right now to play along with Uncle Bill’s Total Global Domination game, don’t you think? Especially for something as trivial as blog comments. Hopefully, leaving LiveSpaces behind will not only get him to post a little bit more, but it will encourage a few more people to say something back once in a while.

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