I've figured out the great mystery of why I have despised blogs for years and years.
Far too often a blog is presented as a website. Whether this is because somebody (myself included, honestly) wants a CMS but doesn't know it exists (or is in this mess far, FAR over her head...), because Google is a tool of doom with an algorithm prone to linking to dumbass things, or what, I don't know. But if I were those W3C people (did you guys die? I'm reading a book written in 2005 about HTML and you did some big stuff in years gone by about web standards I'm told... dunno about since then?) I'd be tackling this new problem that is slowly creeping in and making common sense web searching a huge headache.
Here's a great analogy. Imagine a website as a scientist's final, finished publication. And a blog as his notes in his journal. If I want to read about his discoveries, I want to read the final, tweaked, polished, well-explained, well worked out product - his final publication. Or in the real case, I want to visit his website. I don't want to read his notes and see him pissed off and read the 20 things he did in his experiment wrong before he got it to work. I'm in a hurry. I'm not in academia, I just want to know what he found out, I don't give a crap about the process. I don't want to see his blog.
In a more pressing example, if I want to look up information about, say, Toodles, the main character in WHEN SQUIDS ATTACK!, if I'm going for super bare bones in all honesty I might use Wikipedia. But if I want some real pseudo-academic writing about Toodles, an analysis of his thoughts and dreams, I might visit a website about him. But if I go to Google and type in Toodles and see some blog posts on the first page that go something like LIKE OMG TOODLESSS IS SO FIININIENNE!!!1!!! it makes me pissed. Because obviously, this is not what I'm looking for. This is a waste of my time. I want a structured, somewhat finalized approach to a discussion of Toodles. I also feel a similar sense of irritation if the first few links are to massive websites full of advertising and only five sentences about Toodles that are subpar to what I could have found on Wikipedia. Again, this is a waste of my time.
I realize this is an example based solely on the premise of a person searching for information on a video game/comic book/anime character and shouldn't apply to everything. But it's just like if someone wanted to read about a definition of weblogs, they wouldn't want to read this shit, am I right? This is my personal commentary on something. I don't want to pretend to present it as anything else, or have some company try to sell me something (whether the sale is based on money or just based on me using their idea for what I 'should' be doing with what I write) that presents it as anything else.
And I seriously practice what I preach; bots are off limits in here to prevent some dumb thing I ramble about from turning into an unintended keyword in a search that is actually unrelated to anything anyone would really want to search for in here.
... Well, at least I think bots are off limits here. They're off limits in my super personal whiney space, anyway, so they should be here too.
I'm also intentionally creating a photoblog until I take enough pictures that I like enough and deem good enough to make a more finalized showcase of my work (or, a website). I will not use this photoblog as my portfolio. Because it isn't. Responsible web-use, people.
There needs to be a change. And it either needs to come from the people who are generating content (choose a system more appropriate for what you want to do, please. Thank you.) or it needs to come from the people who are managing the way others search for previously existing content. I don't like search engines, but.. what else is there? Herein lie the problems. And I'm going to keep whining until something better happens.
Blogs, I forgive you. You're great. You can't help it that the people who use you are braindead.
But, what do I know. I make websites; of course I'll champion them, campaign for them, and try to prevent their demise in an information universe of ineffective search engines, blogs, social networking tools and irrespnsible advertisers. Big, motherfucking period.
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
P.S. I did choose Wordpress. We'll see how it goes.
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