
Trees & Clouds [Olympic Sculpture Park, Seattle] Canon EOS 20D w/10-22mm Wide Angle Zoom
I've been lying low at home for half of a week now, recovering from a flu bug. As result, I've had way more down time than I've had in a long, long time. I feel like I've been burning the candle at both ends for months now, with stresses piling up at work and at home, plus the usual busy social calendar. Sometimes it takes being sick to remind me to slow down.
Anyhow, as a result of sitting around at home getting bored out of my brain, I've been spending a lot of hours geeking out on my computer. I've been playing with new programs that I haven't had the time to learn yet (mostly Aperture), dicking around with pictures that I've taken with my new lens (Canon 10-22mm super wide angle) and my new camera (Canon SD800IS point & shoot). I've been catching up on friend's blogs. And I've been thinking about my own blogging habits, how they've developed over the years, and where I want to focus my blogging energies. So here's where I need your help!
First, a bit of history. When I started playapixie.org, blogging was only just starting to take off. While there had been bloggers out there for a few years, a lot of people still didn't know what blogs were. At that point, there were way less options for how and where you could blog. Initially Playapixie was a pretty standard blog: mostly words, mostly randomata from my daily life. Shortly after I started it, I developed an interest in digital photography and got my first digital camera, so I started adding pictures to most of my posts. Over time, my interest in photography grew, and I changed the format of my main page to more-or-less what you see now: a large photo for every entry, one entry per page, and maybe a written entry to go with the photo.
I still really like the large photo format, and I still think of Playapixie as mainly a photoblog. But what happened as a result of that change was that I almost completely stopped blogging in the traditional sense; I wasn't writing any of the silly random stuff anymore. I got picky about what photos I'd put up, and if I couldn't think of anything to say that went with the picture, I wouldn't say anything at all. Lots of times I'd have things to say, but no picture to go with it, so I just wouldn't say anything. And more often then not, I'd post nothing, because I don't really like post-processing, and getting pictures ready to post is work.
In the past year or so, a few new blogging tools have come along that have changed the way I think of blogging. First, Flickr.com made posting snapshots and sharing photos in a community-centered way much easier. Second, Tribe.net became the social networking site that a huge number of my friends and acquaintances joined, and they have a nice blogging feature. Third, some friends of mine in San Francisco launched Vox.com, yet another really lovely community-oriented blogging tool. So my blogging efforts have gotten scattered. I've been using Tribe as my main randomata, word-oriented blog (particularly when I'm thinking of my Seattle and Burning Man friends), Flickr as the place where my day-to-day snapshots land (as well as event albums), Vox as an alternate blog spot when I have my San Francisco friends in mind, and maintaining a Livejournal account for following my friends there. The result of all of this scattered energy is that Playapixe.org has been almost completely neglected.
But I still feel the most personal attachment to my Playapixie.org site. I'd like to focus more of my energy here, but I'm not quite sure what that will look like. I'm toying with leaving it as it is, but trying to post more, or adding a separate page that's more of a traditional word blog, or maybe making the front page be a spit screen, so the most recent photo entry and the most recent word entry are always on the main page, but they don't necessarily go together.
So what I'd like to know from my friends and readers is how do you use blogs? Where do you focus your energies, both as a blog reader and as a blogger? Do you follow your friend's online ramblings in multiple locations, or do you only read what they put in one particular place (their main blog, or Livejournal, or Tribe, for example.) Would you prefer it if entries in multiple locations were the same (so you only have to look one place to find it all)? Or do you like it when their various blogs say different things? I'd love any thoughts that might help me figure out where to take my blogging energies next.
Posted by Dawn at February 25, 2007 12:43 PM
A few random thoughts:
1. RSS feeds make it easy to get all your stuff in one place, ie your playapixie.org posts AND your flickr feed can show up on your tribe page, OR your flickr feed can show up on playapixie.org, etc.
2. I don't like it when people duplicate content, ie posting the same thing on both their personal blogs and their tribe blogs. I've known a couple people who've done this, and my way of dealing with the duplication was to stop reading their personal blogs completely and assume anything they wanted to share would show up on tribe. But it seems like a lot of copy/paste for them and sort of a waste of everyone's time.
3. As for me personally, I most heavily use my blog for public stuff, and then my heavily filtered and protected livejournal for the emotional stuff. (Do I have you added to LJ? I really should!) Tribe gets used only when I have something to share specifically with hoopers, burners, moontribers, etc.
4. I think you should turn playapixie.org into a simple portal, sort of like http://powazek.com.
Posted on February 25, 2007 14:10 PST
As long as person's multiple blog-like places are trackable in an easy enough fashion, I'll follow all of them. For instance, any blog system with a feed reader goes into Google Reader, while my "friends" page on LJ takes care of another huge segment of stuff-to-read. As for duplication, it makes more sense to me, at least, to write different stuff in different locations.
Posted on February 25, 2007 14:37 PST
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