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So what's a nice way to keep a blog in 2022?

Submitted by Moonside in ask

So I'd like to have a blog for (inoffensive at best) art criticism, probably mostly music and video games as I feel like everyone and their sister is writing movie and book reviews. I'm mostly interested in using writing as a tool to develop my skill at expressing my viewpoint, secondly have something little external to direct my engagement with media. My direct inspiration is @comrade_yui on Twitter and Letterboxd.com, who I find to be quite articulate on film and clearly has been grinding at the skills I've been honkering for.

I have some wishes and some grievances:

  1. I dislike platforms that are concerned with quantification of things, whether stars, likes, or whatever, which directly aggregates what I write or interact with in some algorithmic way into Content or advertising. It's sort of like how using Tinder for many people doesn't seem to be about getting laid or finding your way into a relationship, but rather getting matches. Getting matches overtakes the original desires, which then parasitizes the original purpose of using the app. People, mostly men, become really superstitious about the whole proceeding.
  2. Certainly I'm no good enough to write professionally or even panhandle through Patreon, nor interested in that. It's a selfish project to write a little bit bimonthly, that's all.
  3. Blogspot and blogger are a bit too old school for my tastes. I have trouble articulating why, but it's not something that can be fixed with mere CSS.
  4. I know how to code and could, like, potentially make my own stuff from scratch - either just write pure html or something little bit more dynamic, but I care about typography and webdesign enough to not want to submit my readers to that reign. I care about typography and webdesign, but I don't have chops in them, so I can really only hope to be a somewhat enlightened consumer. As much as I'd like to believe that it's the work itself that's most important, I don't want to subject people to visual presentation that's offensive as even ok writing isn't worth that.
  5. I'm techie enough that I might get some hosting and run blog hosting software on it in lieu of just using some sort of ready made service.
  6. I dislike Tumblr enough not to want to have a blog there. Like eight years ago I would have seen it as ideal, but not now. It's too much of a social media platform and who knows what will happen to it in near future. It's apparently introduced some app walls on mobile, which is the exact opposite of the openness I'd like to embrace.
  7. I might like to have more than one blog, two of them being wholly write-only affairs. It would be nice if this could be done through a single account/system or w/e.

I hope my ramblings arouse some suggestions.

Comments

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musou wrote (edited )

if you go the self hosted route i like jekyll for this purpose. you can host entirely on github pages which is where i host teatimer.site (although i don't use jekyll for that, it's too simple to need jekyll)

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neku wrote

What about WordPress? It seems customisable and independent enough that you don't have to fuck around with likes and reblogs etc.

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Moonside wrote (edited )

So apparently zillion people agree with you since it is a very popular way of running a website. My hesitation about it is that it might be a bit too heavy for my purposes. My project is such that I could go full web 1.0 and full on just write html+css+javascript in a text editor. I could go that route, but I like some modern conveniences such as tags, archives ordered by date and so on.

With the risk of being pretentious, I'm thinking of Samuel Johnson style affair back when he published short essays as two penny sheets. Or something more contemporary like a xeroxed zine.

In the end I think I will research it and Jekyll and see which one I prefer.

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neku wrote

It just seems easier to spin up a wordpress blog instead of having to maintain software on your end just to do the same thing. But if you want penny sheets or xeroxed zines you could probably just print out a couple of copies of your writing and nail them to the front door of your local Alamo Drafthouse for something just as satisfying

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Moonside wrote

P.S. to see a first hand example of my level of techitude, see my custom styles for jstpst.net - Saturn Valley or something. I use it solely for this site and it imitates the save file and character creation screens of EarthBound. Also, mint green and light blue squares are objectively the most delicious looking background graphic possible. I would sincerely wear a t-shirt based on EarthBound save file and character creations screens!

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oolong wrote

my friend uses dreamwidth for her book review blog and i think as a user you can create communities that act as separate blogs?

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twovests wrote (edited )

If you want to go the self-hosted route, there are a number of static-site generators out there with many themes available. As mentioned in this thread, Jekyll is one of them!

I can't recommend one because I ended up making one my own (just a script that uses pandoc to convert markdown to html) but it's ugly lol.

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Moonside wrote

Yeah it's the ugliness thing that makes me wary of following in your footsteps. That said it would be nice if I could turn my blog in to a ebook, like, instantly.

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twovests wrote

The onlt issue with it being ugly is that my CSS skills are limited. But the static site is pure HTML, CSS, and a teensy bit of JavaScript (for rendering LaTeX).

I'd write pure HTML but I just get in a flow better with Markdown