I’m an Open Blogger
In the blogging space, “open” can mean different things depending on who you ask. There are open-source tools and services. Opening up yourself while blogging is another example. Giving a behind-the-scenes look at your workflows is another. Furthermore, being an open blogger also means a desire to write about writing and blogging.
Open blogging, a new movement (my creation 😃), also means creating, maintaining and sharing a digital garden. It contains many things like a list of upcoming blog posts, work-in-progress articles, never-published articles and other digital artifacts that you can find just by following links within the digital garden. You can even peek at my website’s analytics, too, thanks to Plausible. It’s all there. Just be curious.
Being an open blogger also means using open-source tools and services as much as possible. Such services include Ghost, GitHub, Plausible, Micro.blog and WordPress. I believe basic and foundational tools and platforms aren’t well served if big corporations own them.
Supporting open-source initiatives like Plausible, Commento and Ghost is an act of support for web openness. I subscribe or did subscribe to all those services because it’s like defending a principle (and because the services are of great value, too!).
On a more personal note, I easily and openly expose my anxieties about the challenges of being a blogger, writer and content creator. Isn’t the website hosting this article, its mission after all? If you’re someone who reads all my content, on all the platforms I use, you can build a pretty good picture of who I am, what’s my values, my interests, my challenges. Each website fills a specific niche but, taken together, forms a web of content reflecting my interests in life.
I like writing about my experiences. Did you know that between 2009 and 2013 I was developing iPhone applications? While doing so, I attempted to maintain a blog about it. I wrote and published articles about my experience my learnings of the iPhone intricacies. Today, I like to write about blogging, to share my experience with applications and services I’m using for that purpose. I like doing this so much that I created this website about it: Numeric Citizen I/O. I maintain a meta-blog that exposes the behind-the-scenes of my workflow. Different context, same objectives. It’s my small contribution to this complicated world.
Thanks for reading.