Unintended consequences of blogging

I just got through writing a long post in which I detailed all the reasons that I am likely to cease this blog. And WordPress ate it. A sign? Probably not.

At any rate, there have been three events this year which have made me consider whether I want to continue this blog. All three events included google, content here, and usage in a way I would prefer didn’t happen.

I feel that lately this blog has been counterintuitive towards my aim of writing more - instead of spending time on articles, I’ve been putting up quick posts and doing nothing more with them. I think it’s also lost some relevance since I’m no longer job seeking. Lastly, there are so many other blogs and feeds for information out there. This blog started when I was still doing Between the Stacks, my weekly radio show. Things have changed since then. Wikis, citeUlike, CiteSeer and other resources are much better homes for a lot of the content that makes its way here.

So here’s what I plan to do - backup the blog and take it down. If within the next month I strongly feel the need to blog something, I will. If not, I won’t.

3 Responses to “Unintended consequences of blogging”


  1. 1 Drew Aug 26th, 2005 at 4:20 pm

    fiona,

    i understand your reticence to continue blogging: it’s supposed to help with information overload, but can very easily do the opposite. i’ve found that blogs (e.g. my ‘RSS in special libraries’ project: tonneten.net/library) are often really ‘project logs’ (fortunately, ‘plogs’ didn’t take off as a term, though ‘blawgs’ has…): once the reason for doing it has vanished (i.e. from changing circumstances), the focus changes, and the site suffers.

    ifwhen you cease, i’ll miss your feed: it’s one of the most informed and considered library-related site around.

    D<<

  2. 2 Walt Crawford Aug 27th, 2005 at 12:29 am

    Speaking as another who enjoys Blisspix…

    “instead of spending time on articles, I’ve been putting up quick posts and doing nothing more with them.”

    Boy, can I empathize with that one. I have to deliberately fight the tendency to wastespend an hour writing a casual blog essay when I should be working on a more substantive Cites & Insights piece–and, for that matter, Cites & Insights has distracted me from more formal publishing opportunities.

    Blogging is seductive/addictive, both for the reader and the writer. That can be a good thing or a trap. If you’re finding it a trap, then maybe going cold turkey is your best bet.

  3. 3 Ivan Chew Aug 27th, 2005 at 5:02 am

    I’ve found your posts informative as well. Nothing wrong with short posts. What you think is trivial could turn out to be really useful information to others.

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