Blogging

Lately I’ve been telling my friends, friends of friends, casual acquaintances, and random strangers I meet on the street that they should start a blog*. I’m not sure what’s gotten into me. Blogs are fun though, even if no one reads them. I’ve had a lot of trouble trying to justify this though, until I came across a really interesting article the other day:

You Should Write Blogs

That blog entry was written by Steven Yegge, a 30-something Google employee (though he was working for Amazon when he wrote that). My favorite observation from Stevey is that “struggling to express things that you’re thinking or feeling helps you understand them better.” I think he’s dead on there. If you take the time to write about something that’s on your mind, you’ll end up understanding it a lot better. It’s like having to teach someone something. The act of explaining the subject helps you better understand it – and it helps you understand how much you really know about that subject.

When I was in grad school I had to teach these 45 minute C++ lab courses. They were comprised of small groups of students from one of the computer science introduction lecture hall classes. I taught the labs daily, but they only ocurred once a week for each group of students. Even though I considered myself pretty proficient in C++, having to explain all the nooks and crannies made me realize I didn’t understand things as well as I thought. However, it turned out that each class usually had the same questions about C++ and the lab assignment (it was almost Twilight Zone-ish really), so I got progressively better at teaching the lab as the week went on. It was funny, on Monday I’d look like a bumbling slacker, but by Friday I seemed like some kind of C++ wizard. I actually had a couple of the Friday kids give me some strong complements on my C++ skills :P. So writing down your thoughts and exploring certain topics can help you better understand them.

Another thing Stevey does in his article is give and refute 4 popular excuses people give for not writing blogs:

  • I don’t have enough time to blog.
  • I’m afraid to put my true thoughts on public record.
  • No one will read my blog.
  • Blogging is narcissistic.

Reasons #1, #3, and #4 are petty excuses in my opinion. However, reason number #2 is not something that should be treated lightly. One’s opinions may be the “spice” to their entries, but you can get yourself in a lot of trouble if you don’t exercise some common sense. I’ve had employers, girl friends, ex-girl friends, and friends get pissed at me over entries I’ve written in past blogs. And not the kind of pissed where they grumble and forgive you 5 seconds later, the kind of pissed where you’re given the look of death and not spoken to for a while. You live and your learn though. I no longer blog about personal matters unless I have a good story to go with it. Plus it’s just more fun to write about my hobbies/interests than it is to write about things that annoy me or about my daily activities. I could probably write an entry on how I sat in a cube for 8 hours today and then went home and ate some ramen noodles, but it wouldn’t be very fun to write, and I’m sure it’d be even less fun to read.

So anyway, if you have the urge to blog, I highly recommend reading the above article. It’ll jump start your motivation. And don’t worry about no one reading your blog, you should write it for yourself. Hell, this blog isn’t even the most popular thing on this site – TAAG is (I’m actually surprised by this – it’s mostly due to Google though). Which reminds me, I need to get back to developing stuff. Anyway, think about what I said.

*If you’re one of these people, know that I didn’t write this entry to be directed at you. I actually have been a little over zealous in my promotion in blogging. I dunno why, it’s just gotten under my skin.

8 thoughts on “Blogging”

  1. Well…a blog is different than a Journal because of its public nature. It does teach you about how to express yourself but you have to be careful not to mention people you know or things from your past and it is very limiting in that respect. A journal would accomplish just as much.

  2. Private journals are good too, but I find that you put more time into something if it’s going to be presented to the public. You also research things a little more. For my post on social bookmarking and google page rank I actually read a bunch of articles. Now when I go to sites like thefreedictionary.com and see the little notices that say “Please bookmark with social media, your votes are noticed and appreciated” it makes sense. When someone bookmarks your site on del.icio.us or some other popular social media site, it actually helps your page rank.

  3. Good content will be appreciated despite the different competing methods of publicizing it to people. The percentage of people online is still small and will remain so until other global social ills are addressed. Prosletizing for a given communication technology is pointless unless people have something to say. My last thought is that not all people have the same abilities and talents some may react very well to this technology others not. I know I hate talking on phones but IM is a perfect medium for me.

  4. there was an article on slashdot a fairly long time ago on the ramifications of posting questionable stuff on your blog or personal site, and then being search-engine’d by current or prospective employers. i know that people have been fired for blogging — there have been a few publicized cases. there’s always the fear of “leaking trade secrets”, but i think it’s more just bad publicity, plus the sense that the blogger isn’t a “team player”.

    as far as being web-researched by prospective employers, if the choice comes down to two equally qualified candidates, one who blogs, and one who does not, most hiring managers will choose the nonblogger.

    for one thing, without a blog the personality slate is completely blank — a manager can project whatever he or she wants onto it, and the applicant can mold it into whatever he or she wants with a resume and interview. a blog carries a character-presence to potentially conflict with other world-views.

    blogs are a workplace liability. watch out!

    /me fires you

  5. …perhaps the main issue is that the longer you blog, the greater the chances that you’re going to say *something*, at some point, that’s going to bite you in the ass in one way or another when you’re trying to accomplish some yet-unforeseen goal. dumb example: posting that you voted for gore in 2000, then you run for city council as a republican in 2012. some rabid googler finds you, and oops — there it all goes, like a rosy memory.

  6. Yeah, even if you were to go back and change all of your old entries, sites like archive.org would still have copies up. You can really screw your future self over by posting certain things. Though then again, I don’t think too many employers will go digging through archive.org to try and read your unfiltered blog entries. I guess It could happen for important jobs though (like a presidential candidate).

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