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tisdag, augusti 26, 2008

Moving away from blogspot

This will be my last post on this blog. For several reasons I like the idea of keeping more in control over my blog and the environment surrounding it. I also have some things I'd like to publish that isn't well suited for the blog format, and moving to another location means that I can keep all my content in the same place. More long term I'm planning on migrating information about my open source projects there to.

But what you need to know is this: This blog ends. A new blog is born. All my old entries have been migrated. The important addresses for the new blog is:
And that's it. The new content will obviously be available at http://olabini.com, but right now this site just redirects to the blog.

The blog is dead, long live the blog.

tisdag, februari 06, 2007

Fractured blogging

My blogging in the future will be a little bit fractured (or more fractured, some might say), since I have been invited to write at Inside Java for APress. The address is http://java.apress.com and I do recommend that you subscribe to the feed if you're interested in Java or associated technologies. My first posting was about the two closure proposals for Java 7, and I will try to focus my posting there to be more Java specific, mostly in article format. But if I write anything I deem to be exceptionally good, I promise to link from here to there.

Go subscribe now!

fredag, november 17, 2006

The obligatory meta-blog post.

So, this is post number 100, since I started blogging. And that's almost exactly one year ago. Isn't that interesting? I've been writing something here each 3.65'th day. Often it's been uninteresting, very often indifferent, but sometimes I have manage to write something that people liked. So, I'm happy about this small anniversary.

So, I plan to do what almost every blogger do at least once: turn the writing process inwards and investigate why people blog, why the person in question blogs, and perhaps, if we are really META, why the current blog post is actually written. Hopefully I'll know why I've written this by the end of this post. Otherwise, it'll probably be something indifferent or boring.

Let's begin. "Why blog?", the general question. When I started out, I had no real goal. I knew that I wanted to get better at technical writing and that was largely it. I hoped I would get some new contacts and interesting discussions but the base reason was for the writing ability. As such, I wouldn't have to write public; I could hone my writing skill in my basement and never publish anything to the (sometimes scary) scrutinizing eyes of the public. But that's the problem. If I didn't publish it, I wouldn't have as much incentive to become better. Now I absolutely have to get better at writing, otherwise I will feel ashamed about the filth that will for all time be remembered by Google.

That's reason number one. The second reason, that I've come to realize this last year but didn't know when I started out, is that I learn by writing about a subject. If it's a technical topic I basically have to research the topic quote thoroughly, so I won't look like a fool. And that is really good, that is incredibly good. I have learned very much by writing about things I find interesting. The first learning when I research and think about what I should write, and the second learning when people read it and comment and correct me.

Reason number three can be thought of as hubris. I believe that some of the things I know can be useful for other to know, and I believe that some of the problems and bugs I uncover in open software should be documented somewhere so others won't have to go through the same bug finding escapades as I did on that subject.

And here's where we come to the point. The point is that if you're working with software (or with anything where information sharing is important, really), you should write about. Because the writing benefits you and it benefits me. If you find a problem, write about it. Doesn't matter if someone actually reads it or not, for the most important aspects of writing is about yourself.

Steve Yegge wrote about this in his "Blog Or Get Of The Pot", and also in one of this older blogs ("Why you should blog" I believe it's called).

Coda: Why did I write this post? To make it clear in my head why I blog. To make it obvious and explicit why I do it. So that's what this post is about, and it's a recursive post since it talks about itself. I'm satisfied.