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Note that this approach is the opposite of a common practice: write a blog for a few years; get popular; staple posts together into a book. I like some of those books, but they usually seemed just as good as blog posts: they don’t seem to be accessing new depths as books.
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Maybe it doesn’t matter if Substack’s model can’t produce book-depth thought. After all, if the model could “only” support the creation of lots more SlateStarCodexes, that would be really incredible!
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Anon friend suggests that much Substack criticism can be read as: "Yeah, [your fave neighborhood restaurant] is great, but I fail to see what they’re doing for world hunger, farming challenges related to depleted soil, etc, to say nothing of how useless it is to dead people"
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I like this framing too!
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people say real intimacy doesn’t scale, but I think personal blogs work bc one-sided intimacy is just as interesting + meaningful as two-sided intimacy. teenage-girl-making-youtube-covers-in-her-bedroom energy is powerful 🤷🏻‍♀️
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I am currently writing a book and each chapter is a newsletter. I try to publish one chapter every two/three weeks. In between, I publish smaller essays (but not directly related to the book). More information here:
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I'm writing a book. It will change the way you see the world. Find out all the details here: connectom.substack.com/p/connectom-th
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