Conversation

I think the death of blogging is for real this time, because a bunch of better options have emerged and because virality is increasingly not worth it. Here I mean classic Wordpress indie-site blogging. Not Medium or fanfic sites or things that have grown into pro-media.
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Though if someone reimagines Wordpress from the ground up around blogchains, threads, stripe etc it’ll come back. Though perhaps so transformed we wouldn’t call it blogging.
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It’s interesting times for writers who are in it for the writing (I’m primarily that), rather than as a means to something else like money, influence, marketing, lead-gen, or as an information-products business like online courses (all of which I’ve done as a side effect)
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So long as you’re not about writing as an end in itself rather than a means, it’s totally a golden age. Great options for doing what you want to very effectively. Writing for the sake of writing is more mixed because temptations to solve for a valuable side effect are high.
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I think the trick is being clear what game you’re in now, what each piece of tech enables, and what tradeoffs are involved in each case. Since the tech supports all games. For example, Patreon solves for community building not writing. Mailchimp solves for marketing not writing.
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Replying to
Love this. Got thoughts I'll try and post up. In the meantime the question on every artofgig subscribers lips is: more details about the Gatsby consulting pls 😁
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I think the "text renaissance" also extends to the revival of UNIX-style text editing tools that are now getting a shot in the arm, such as NeoVim (which is a leaner, meaner Vim): neovim.io