Archive for blogging

Livejournal, WordPress, and blogging, with a hint of information literacy

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on March 31, 2008 by Ben

I came to WordPress largely because I have been disappointed with Livejournal as of late. I’ve had a long-running LJ account since May of 2001 which I used to write in every day. However in the last couple of years I’ve used it less and less. I still keep up with friends there, but it’s more of a “social space” and less of a place for me to just write about what I want to write about, even though I have a “friends-only” journal. Strangely enough, I feel more free to write here, probably because precisely no one knows about this blog.

Then, of course, there are the multiple fuck ups that LJ has had in the past couple of years that have made me quite dissatisfied and even embarrassed to be a member of the LJ community. First there was the inclusion of ads, despite LJ’s long-running promise that they never would have ads. Then there was a general lack of coordination and knee-jerk reactions by the LJ administration after much of LJ had been restructured a year or so after being bought out by Six Apart. None of this is new, there’s plenty of information about all of these goings-on at Wikipedia’s entry on Livejournal.

Then of course there was the banning of a number of LJ accounts which led to a “voluntary” “adult rating” for LJs. And, even more recently, the discontinuation for new “basic” (non-ad-supported) accounts to be created. Not that any of this effected me in the slightest, but the idea of control over my free speech and intellectual property was a little disturbing, not to mention the sheer ass-hattery that was going on with the people who found themselves in charge of LJ. I’ll still be around there reading friends’ entries and participating in some communities, but I feel that my own content is better hosted elsewhere. So far, I’m really enjoying WordPress.

I hosted a short-lived WordPress blog on my own website (installed via WordPress.org) and found it to be quite usable. But now I’ve found that I don’t really have any need for a full-blown website+hosting, so here I am with a hosted blog and a (soon to be) purchased domain name. Awesome.

One thing that I really like about WordPress is its focus as a forum for generating creative content. Livejournal is mostly centered around the idea of “community” and social networking through blogging and commenting. WordPress is all about getting your content and ideas out there into the public. Where Livejournal has useless “virtual gifts,” WordPress has Pages. Where Livejournal has boatloads of userpics/avatars available, WordPress has tons of linking options through the blogroll and links. Where Livejournal has tons of ways to make your blog look pretty, WordPress is a little more practical- after all, aren’t most blogs worth reading just read through your RSS reader anyway? Focus on ways to get your content and message out there and read, and less on how to make it all shiny. Users will view your content the way they want, anyway, through CSS overrides or their own choice of feed aggregator.

As a librarian, both approaches are interesting. LJ sort of came about at the dawn of the social networking site craze, and making those interpersonal connections was one of the greatest things the site had going for it. It got a lot of people writing, even if it were only in small and informal snippets. It made writing fun again, until it wasn’t. As social networking has become practically ubiquitous and sites such as Facebook have gotten it down to a science, blogging hosts/platforms such as WordPress, Blogger, and TypePad now host some of the most popular sources of varying types of news and content out there. Blogs aren’t so much about social networking anymore as they are about sharing information and knowledge. Social networking is about facilitating interpersonal connections and communication, blogs are about creative and intellectual communication.

That both are now “cool” is somewhat amazing to me, although as a somewhat misanthropic pessimist, I’m surprised that the apparent intelligence of the species has not increased as a result. I was hoping that all of this information at the touch of a button would make people smarter. In practice it has just created more ways for people to be stupid. I am not, of course, exempt from the stupefying effect of teh intrawebs. However I do have the privilege of training regarding evalutation of information resources and technology that most others do not, and I think that it would be great if some of those very necessary skills were taught to children before they enter college. Hence why I got involved in this profession in the first place. But that is a completely different post.

Needless to say that this is more content than I have bothered to create in some time, and I’m quite excited about seeing where this is going to lead me. Now, all I have to do is tell some people about this thing. ;)

Think critically, with horns raised high! \m/

Cheers,
Ben

What I’ve Been Doing = What this blog mostly isn’t

Posted in Uncategorized with tags , on March 29, 2008 by Ben

So, I’ve decided that this blog is about all of the stuff that I like, such as music (most especially black metal), video games, bicycling, travel, etc. Interspersed with talk about being an information professional; a librarian by training and working for a library-related company.

Unfortunately for this blog, I have been doing very little of any of those things that I like, and mostly working instead of enjoying myself. This has been hard on me, my family (including my dogs) and my blogging.

Let’s see, what can I dredge up… last week, I replaced my front brake pads and my short commute to work has been much better as a result. I have also been playing Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic 2: The Sith Lords (typically referred to as KotOR/KOTOR) in anticipation of the long-awaited The Sith Lords Resoration Project(TSLRP), which seeks to fully restore the content that was cut from the game in an effort to release the game by the 2004 holiday season. It’s a great game, and I’m looking forward to an even better version in the near future.

Well, that’s about it for now. I hope to start posting here with some regularity… I’m beginning new posting habits from another blogging site, which is probably an entire post in itself.