markjgsmith

2023/10/19 #

Life is bread - I've been thinking a lot about the words, Vietnam, Britain and the buddist saying that Life is Pain, combined with my observation from the other day. So many strange coincidences. It's especially odd if you speak french. As it happens in RL I'm constantly having issues with bakeries atm. Perhaps Danny Boyle can figure this all out. It's doing my head in.

Btw, I'm not a fan of the phrase Life is Pain. I feel it sets the bar rather low. Life is much more than pain. Even if you look at it from a purely scientific point of view. There are many other experiences possible, despite what some would have you believe. #

Getting the blogging balance right

I introduced a notes feature to the website several weeks ago. The big success has been that it has definitely made it easier to post, and I have been posting much more often than previously. The shorter and less formal structure of notes means that I don't agonize about getting everything perfect. I have a thought and if I deem it relevant, I can have it in a note pretty quickly. That's a big win, and worth remembering.

Having said that though it's becoming clear to me that I don't have the balance right. My links are too long, or to be precise, the text accompanying the links is often too long. I'm constantly thinking that the link I've created really should have been a note. Ironically notes are also often also too long. It happens so often after writing a note, that I realise it should really have been a blog post. I don’t write enough blog posts. The way I have things setup just isn't working.

There are several post types:

  • Short posts (notes)
  • Long posts (blogs)
  • Linkblog posts (links)
  • Podcast posts (podcasts)
  • Newsletter posts (newsletters)

It's made somewhat more complicated by the fact that links can take different forms:

  • Full title with comment
  • Comment only
  • Long post with extracted quotes

At the minute I seem to be favoring the title with comment form for links. For example here are today's links. That form is popular in various programming newsletters. As a reader, I like being able to see the original full title, but with a comment from the currator. That way you get a good sense for what's at the other end of the hyperlink before you click.

The downside is that I'm not convinced it's so well suited for my needs, because very often I find that the comment contains a fair bit of analysis, and could have probably been a note.

The other side of it is more practical. I like to have each post in it's own seperate markdown file. The problem with that is there is quite a lot of overhead. The time when ideas that form notes occurs at the beginning of the day, often as I'm gathering links, or listening to podcasts. They don't occur in order, fully formed. They tend to occur all at once, then they get fleshed out as the day progresses. The fact that I need to create a seperate file each time really gets in the way.

I'm finding that I've started keeping a daily scratchpad list, that I then later turn into notes and links. The scratchpad file then gets thrown away. It's kind of a waste. I want the scratchpad list to be the notes right from the outset. But like I said, I like them all to be in seperate files. Quite the cunundurum.

I'm starting to think that I should create a specialised markdown file format for daily notes. It would be some sort of list. Each item in the list would be a note, but would also include a timestamp. That way each day I would only create 1 file, and all notes would be written to that file. I would then have a custom renderer that would split the notes out into seperate files when the SSG builds the site.

I would also be able to easily include, links and blog posts into the daily notes file. I think such a setup might make it much easier to write unincumbered. It feels like I'm quite close, most of the pieces are there, they just aren't organised in a way that's very productive. I'm constantly triping over myself, and so I end up just not posting.

Having a good writting setup is incredibly nuanced and difficult to get right. #

Isn't it all just blogging? - I've been running a linkblog for over 10 years now. I did originally have a blog, but for whatever reason I didn't post as frequently as I wanted to. Then Twitter appeared on the scene, and it was clear that short posts were the thing. I posted loads. But I wanted my own site, and since sharing links is one of the best things about Twitter, I built my linkblog and started posting links there.

But is linkblogging a seperate thing? For the longest time I saw it as a very seperate activity. But now that I'm writting blog posts, notes and links, as well as newsletters, I'm starting to return to the idea that it's all just blogging, we just have more tools these days, even if it's a challenge to get right sometimes. I've been doing this for many many years now!

Bloggers post in different formats, short posts, long posts, links, newsletters, and other stuff too! :) #

Today’s links:

  • Bookmarks in the Fediverse - Andy Piper writeup of how he's been modifying his setup to be on the Fediverse, with a focus on sharing links using a self hosted express app he runs on glitch. Some interesting ideas. I'd like to add ActivityPub support for things I publish on the website, though I'm not yet convinced it's much better than RSS. Managing an ActivityPub server is quite a lot of effort. It would be awesome if there was a service that republished RSS feed items into the fediverse. andypiper.co.uk #

  • MI5 head warns of 'epic scale' of Chinese espionage - They are worried about a doubling of the reported cases of people being appeoached by chinese spies in order to cultivate them to provide sensitive information. The environment that spies operate in is going to be massively changed by AI tools, but will have a profound impact on society at large. www.bbc.com #

  • The Matrix reloads again: Danny Boyle dance version opens Manchester's Aviva Studios - Great article that covers all the main topics without too much sensasionlism. Much of Boyle's work is phenominal. The opening ceremony for the Olympics was a master piece imo. I've never seen anything like it. Many of his books are ceminal too. I can't think of anyone better to re-explore the ever more important themes of the Matrix. Interestingly I think Boyle now lives in the US. Fun factoid, I was interviewed by a TV crew walking out of the cinema after watching the 2nd Matrix film. The one with all the CGI spaceships with tentacles. I didn't have much to say about it. I felt it had lost the spirit of the original movie in favor of over the top VFX. Curious to see his interpretation, the modern world is so the Matrix, but it's not about flashy VFX, it's much more incidious. www.bbc.com #

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