Does something like what Substack enables with a newsletter + threaded conversations with the same readership point in the right direction?
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not really - substack doesn't change the received experience of author -> community. It simply enables in different ways.
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Replying to @tomcritchlow @iChris
Agreed. Substack is a point solution for harvesting the end-of-life blog market into the email ecosystem, which seems more robust/long-lived. It is less a successor to blogging than a sort of upmarket retreat for blogging being disrupted by threaded open media
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Really, that's what you're talking about Tom. My elderblogging personal phase just happens to synchronize with the elder stage of the medium itself. Of the 2 dynamics (me getting old, blogging getting disrupted by threading), the latter is the more important one obviously.
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For sure - but you're "crashing" first as the canary in the coal mine for the rest of us. A useful point of study.
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Replying to @tomcritchlow @iChris
I think what I'd *like* to do is port ribbonfarm to a site where pre-blogchain stuff is rendered as a bunch of legacy static pages forming a sort of background, blogchains are rendered as native threads weaving through it, and there's support for a new roam-like thing
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Yep! This would be fun.
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Replying to @tomcritchlow @iChris
What we're running into here is a need for a multi-architecture publishing: books, blogs, wikis, threads, and my latest obsession, short glossary-like log-level entries. Kinda like Intel's OneAPI is trying to make a single interface for many architectures.https://software.intel.com/en-us/oneapi
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Yeah - aligns with the "headless CMS" idea except that world is deficient in imagination. It's not headless CMS so that you can reskin the front end it's headless cms so you can merge blogs, books, wikis, threads, roam etc
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Replying to @tomcritchlow @iChris
unfortunately, all this is technically way beyond me to set up on an experimental basis so I'd need someone to invent a scheme basically. Until then, I'm sitting around in wordpress.
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The one thing I'd add to this vision is a politics... I'm old fashioned enough to think that the successor to blogging should be an open standard that multiple products could meet rather than a single product (no matter how well executed)
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Technically, we seem to be poised at a sort of "big data" moment for content. 10 years ago, if I had posed the problem above, people would have said "drupal with a lot of custom node models". Now that seems like far too heavyweight approach and exactly the wrong direction.
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Replying to @vgr @tomcritchlow
Most of this is above my pay grade - still fascinating to read - but it is interesting how the return to static sites somehow feels liberating and empowering instead of restricting.
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