Why move to WP? A personal update…

So I’ve been asked three times in the past 48 hours, Why the move to WordPress? It’s a fair question, though it’s reminiscent of the question people asked me a few years ago, Why are you moving off LiveJournal? What’s so important about setting up your own blog?

That one worked out pretty good, though; a quick check of the stats:

Google Page Rank Site
8 blogs.sun.com/jonathan
7 blogs.sun.com/richb
6 www.crypticide.com/dropsafe
6 blogs.sun.com/davew
6 blogs.sun.com
5 blogs.sun.com/alecm

…so alone I am doing as well as the blogs.sun.com homepage and some of my peers – but without requiring the gravity of Sun’s corporate domain backing me up.

I may not be on Jonathan or Rich’s turf yet, but hey, I post a lot less.

Ah yes – whilst I am on that topic, why has that been, some have asked?

I have been richocheting around like a superball for the past few months; my 87yo father broke his leg in a fall in January, had the bone plated and pinned, and has been in and out of hospital ever since. After recuperations at various hospitals which gave him bedsores, MRSA, C.Diff, cellulitis, a variety of other diseases and some type-2 diabetes-related problems, it started to look like dementia. He was confused, distraught, not sleeping, behaving badly and on the verge of being sectioned before my sisters – who have been working their socks off – whipped him away to a place where he could be looked-after properly.

There his blood sugar has been brought under control, and the confusion found to be an artefact of repeated UTIs brought on by bladder stones. To say he’s responded well to treatment is an understatement given how bad matters were; mentally he’s back to being pin-sharp, but now comes the much delayed exercise and recuperation from the broken leg.

So we’re not out of the woods yes.

Then there’s been my discovery of Twitter, Facebook, and all the other new social-media tools which in retrospect suck my energy and focus away from my main blog; stuff gets Twittered which really warrants a posting, and I believe this is leading to fragmentation in the blogging community.

This makes me wonder: people’s content is becoming dispersed, you have to be on all the networks to get a picture of your friends, so we can extrapolate: unless people start running “Personal Aggregators” real soon, splicing their Tweets and whatnot into their main blog RSS feeds, blogging will lose its focus and start to fade – because Facebook is not the be-all and end-all of social media. But then blogging’s gonna fade and morph anyway. Maybe this is how? Maybe this is the end of the beginning?

Sigh.

Then there was the week’s vacation in Indiana; interesting, fun, radio stations telling me all about “The Rapture”, and something of a respite from normal life – plus I got to hang out with a lot of friends: Brad, Val, Mark, Jon, Sar, Keith, Wendy, Spaf… and finally I’ve been spending a lot of time visiting some wonderful people in London, which has been nice while it has lasted.

So in the past year since the motorbike accident I’ve learned a lot about the world, about other people, and about myself. Some of it has been eye-opening. I’ve learned about politics, people and places. How very differently people can perceive the same world in which you live, or indeed how they can perceive yourself in the context of your world.

I’ve even met people who call themselves geeks, and who are certainly geeky, but who are not like many of my geek friends with whom I share values. Whatever else Eric Raymond may have done, I believe he hit the nail squarely on the head when describing the Hacker personality type, so maybe not all Geeks are Hackers, which was not something that had previously struck me as a possibility.

So back to WordPress – why?

  • It’s pretty.
  • It’s free.
  • I dicked around with writing my own, and although the template-driven stuff is easy, making CSS look good atop that is truly an art form.
  • From old-DropSafe I developed some interesting ideas on spam-prevention, and if I implement them on something popular then everyone can benefit.

Simple, eh?

Comments

12 responses to “Why move to WP? A personal update…”

  1. I thought it was because I bugged you ages ago (to your annoyance as I recall) about using something developed by many people/other users and therefore possibly more effective in the long term (a la open source)… and recommended WordPress. Oh well. Glad you thought it was worth your while to move to WP… which is what matters in the end.

  2. Excellent news about your dad! Please pass on my best.

    Glad to hear you’ve had a break, and I agree with your points on blogging and the hacker/geek thing.

    I’m puzzled by the US radio stations going on about The Rapture, sure, it was a good album, but that was 12 years ago now! 🙂

  3. @A: Well, yeah, you can actually look at it like that, but that’s still the one thing that bugs me about WordPress – by using the same stuff as everyone else I am opening myself up to “Monoculture Syndrome”.

    Just like people who use Windows suffer viruses and therefore must install AV, with WordPress installation I have had to go chase down which modules to use to prevent comment spam, filter it, open it up to moderation… all stuff borne of the thinking that spam is inevitable and that *that* is the way to deal with it.

    I really don’t like that, and especially as a security geek it’s the sort of thing which compels me towards reinvention…

    Plus: nowhere in the above do I say WP is more “effective”; it’s just prettier, free, and exists – though maybe the latter, “existence”, is the same as effectiveness in this circumstance. 🙂

    But if I take a step back, I can *probably* implement some of my ideas in PHP, and using WP means there is a large potential user base, if it works like I think it will.

    That’d be nice.

  4. PS: due to an e-mail spam-prevention cockup, it took me 36 hours to get a WordPress API key to use with Akismet – the primary spam-prevention plugin. Long story short: that’s 36 hours extra, wasted.

    Funny how spam-prevention breeds delays in spam-prevention…

  5. “Well, yeah, you can actually look at it like that, but that’s still the one thing that bugs me about WordPress – by using the same stuff as everyone else I am opening myself up to “Monoculture Syndrome”.”

    Hmm, so why move then? Just because it’s prettier? Thought that would be the last consideration for you…

    Also, how is WP part of Monoculture Syndrome? It’s like saying open source is a monoculture (perhaps it is but so what?). As long as an application has a vibrant community that can meaningfully develop or contribute to it, so to speak, I wouldn’t worry to much…

  6. So why WP rather than say Roller ?

  7. @A: Actually, prettier, yeah… that’s a chunk of it.

    Also it’s exposure to a different approach to blog management – although I am pleased to find many of the concepts which I sketched out in my mind as “how a blogging platform should work” really *are* there in WP, which is reassuring. That said: I can also spot the differences in thinking, which is where the interest lays… 🙂

    Also I believe when you’re breaking something that you should break it good and hard, eg: that the switch from Blosxom to WP took a couple of nights perl-lacking for database conversion, and ongoing I will have to learn more about PHP and MySQL. The learning it demands can’t be a bad thing.

    And finally my interest was piqued by my research on how to move MI to WP, which still seems like a good idea if you want help with that.

    @Darren: Roller? I *know* what Roller’s like. Mmm… It trades hackiness for kludginess. 🙂

  8. Alan Burlison

    Hi Alec, your thoughts about twitter, facebook and fragmentation are spot on, and I’ve been thinking about the same thing myself over the last few days. I had you set up as a friend on facebook, then removed you after a few days – it was nothing personal, I’ll explain why 😉

    Most of the people I’m connected to on facebook are either drummers of dancers from the various bands I’m associated with and are mostly younger than I am – early/mid 20s. For them, facebook is the place they live their online lives, so if I want to keep up with them I need to do so on facebook.

    I already follow your blog via your BCS 48h feed, so switching back to following you via that channel rather than facebook made more sense than seeing your stuff jumbled up with a load of music-related content.

    I’ve had a now-mostly-moribund blog for many years, and I used to post lots of stuff about the Peak District (I’m a part-time ranger) and if I ever put any ‘tecchie’ stuff on it, people used to whinge, so when BSC came along, I started putting all *that* type of content over there. So I’ve different publishing mechanisms for my 3 different ‘faces’ – work, music and the Peak District.

    The problem I see with sites such as facebook is they effectively balkanise the interactions you have with other people – unless you are registered, and ‘connected’ to people on facebook, you can’t actually interact with them in any meaningful way. I’m forced to subscribe to facebook to keep up with my musical friends. For me, facebook is mainly read-only – I already have 2 publishing channels and I can’t be bothered with a 3rd.

    I think that sites such as facebook are actually a step backwards. By tightly controlling the channel between you and others, they force you to become a user if you want to keep up with people, unlike blogs which are by their very nature an open medium. What facebook offers in return is a load of seductive doohickys such as ‘Write on my wall’, ‘Send me a gift’ and ‘SuperPoke’. I can see that this degree of control and the consequent information that can be captured about people’s interconnectedness gives facebook a business model that they can sell to VCs, but personally I don’t think the loss of openness that facebook forces on you if something I’m happy to submit to.

    I think you are spot on with your comment about personal aggregators, perhaps the Web 3.0 killer application will be something that allows you to meld RSS, blogs and Web 2.0 sites such as flickr, facebook, orkut and twitter into a seamless whole…

  9. A brief suggestion, it might be nice if you could adjust the CSS to maybe give a bit more space around articles, and perhaps turn up the contrast on the article headings ?

  10. Have fiddled with it a bit, got some more whitespace.

  11. Thanks mate, that looks clearer to me!

  12. Neil

    Good to see you are still posting. And the new site is much better looking, though I mainly just read RSS (via Google Reader).

    I can see what you mean about Twitter and Facebook fragmentation, and that they try to force you into their world. I’ve not dealt much with either, but I keep a vague eye on a friend I have mostly lost touch with by checking his Twitter feed. I did look at registering and checked out that it was easy enough to set up a dummy account with a mailinator address, but then thought I cannot be bothered to keep a Twitter account just for the odd occasion of replying – especially as I could just email him.

    Which brings me to the fragmentation – I would say that already happens with email, YIM, skype chat, etc – and off the computer SMS and even phone calls. There may well be some mileage in products/services that can bring some order back to it. But I suspect the Facebook’s of the world will still be trying to make everything happen on Facebook and not make it easy to interact externally (reminiscent of Microsoft product strategy).

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