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What do you expect from personal blogs?
12 points by ismailsevik 9 months ago | hide | past | favorite | 15 comments
That I'm wondering: What do personal blogs/websites need? Originality? Minimalism? Design diversity? Social media?



They need to talk about something original that hasn’t been regurgitated thousands of times.

They need to have personality and talk to me like I’m their friend and we are having lunch (ie I don’t wanna be bored)

They need to be written in a way that makes it easy to read too (ie no long paragraphs)

They need to be helpful, interesting or entertaining (preferably all 3)


I agree with you.


Need for what? Being successful? Have an amount of daily visitors?

I use my personal blog[1] as knowledge Archive for myself. Writing stuff down helps me to understand and remember. And a organized readable version of my personal thoughts about a topic is way better than a simple brain dump in logseq. If someone else is interested, great. If not, it also is ok.

I did have the thought of earning money through affiliate links. The "feature" is there, but to be honest I don't really care any more. It's just good to have a place for my structured knowledge dump - and I call this a success :-)

[1]: https://pilabor.com


Originality is everything. Design, minimalism, interactivity, whatever - those are all just ways to make the author sound more original than they might be.

https://web.mit.edu/jmorzins/www/C-H-speech.html

Case in point - this is one of the best pieces of writing I've read in a long time. It's not even the right format (written transcript versus original audio). And the webpage could hardly be uglier. Yet it's everything (and more) that every real writer could want to be


Integrity.

I will get modded down and probably flagged for this because it's not just dissent but existential threat on HN, but this means:

Don't ever use AI generated content [0]. The pictures, the words, the video, the voices, any of it. Because not caring about creative choices poisons your integrity.

e.g. for illustrations:

- if you can draw well, do that. Find a way to capture them consistently, use those

- if you can manage a half-arsed sketch, do that. Find a way to capture them consistently (or use some of the minimal tricks in an iPad drawing app to fix them up). Make a virtue of it.

- if you can't draw at all, do you know someone you could ask? Or are there relevant sketches in the Flickr Commons or whatever. Or get just good enough that you can make a virtue of being crap at it.

For photographs:

- if you can photograph something relevant, do that

- if not, use a stock library. Pay, preferably, but credit if not. Or use the Flickr Commons and find something relevant

Failing all this, illustrate with something irrelevant but contemporaneous. Write your stuff, and shoot photos on your phone of your day as you write. Use a photograph from your phone that captures the day you wrote the article. Write a little caption to do it. Make a virtue of this sort of separate parallel stream of your content.

But no AI-generated content. Ever.

[0] except maybe when you're writing about AI-generated content. But please, if you can, find something else to write about. Integrity 102: don't shoehorn AI into every conversation.


I expect sincerity, if the blog is a marketing effort or a way to generate affiliate traffic I ignore you.


Unfortunately, my day is based on internet marketing.


Writing about marketing seems like it's fine, especially if it's about projects that are relevant to you.

What's not great is when the blog's sole purpose to exist is to market something, or to get clicks on affiliate links/ads/whatever.


I recently re-did my personal blog. My goal is to write about topics that are of interest to me mostly for my own learning and knowledge. Hopefully it also helps others but my goal is write and share. I don't care about comments or social media. I do have a newsletter that is coming soon if reads want to be notified. No analytics etc btw as well.


A voice. That’s really about it. Very occasionally the content on a blog will be so novel that I would read it for that, but mostly I’m interested in the voice of the person writing it. Their style , their wit.

A theme is good too. But if the writing is good, it could be about food or electronics or 80s tv shows


I should feel how much the author is interested in the topic rather than just going through the motions. Grammar / punctuation is also important to me. I lean towards enjoying a more minimal theme.


This is like asking if your band needs a horn section. Depends on the genre. Just make the songs you wish existed.


Something interesting to write about


Normally guides and fast recounts about a given topic


Palpable enthusiasm. Basic coherent writing. Visible lack of scammy SEO. That's about it.




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