Change 6626

Time Attribute with previous and current values
Change #6626
2011-03-21
07:47:20

create Calagator::Event 1250460022 October 13, 1994 Roll back

description nil As you may know, I don't do interviews. But when a reporter asks to talk with me, I usually say there's a lot of material on the web, and they should let me know if they don't find what they need. Then I can write a blog post if I have something to say about the subject. Over the weekend, a reporter contacted me wanting to know when I started blogging. As far as I know the answer is not on the web. Short answer: [October 13, 1994]. [A picture named divingbell.jpg]If you look at the [chronology] of DaveNet, you'll see it wasn't the first piece. But it was the first one I wrote after [realizing] that I could publish my ideas on the Internet, without going through a publisher. The two pieces before that were more like notices or ads. This one was meant to stimulate thinking among people who were reading. And boy did it ever stimulate thinking! What came back was a virtual avalanche of ideas, from some very smart people. I published the most interesting response (to me at least), back out through the same channel. And then I did it again, and again, and on and on. I'm still doing it almost 17 years later. [:-)] I'm sure people will dispute that date, it's the nature of blogging to dispute things. But I was there, and you probably weren't. And from that point on, it was a sequence of steps that eventually led to all the things we consider part of blogging today. Some people who have studied this stuff minimize the ideation process, the evolution of blogging from virtual nothingness to a literary practice (at its best) that's capable of delivering great insight and feeling. If you doubt me, look at Nobel laureate Paul Krugman's dispatch of former Fed chairman Alan Greenspan. That's a bit of on-the-record writing that belongs in a history book. And it was written in the last 24 hours. The freshness and directness are, to me, the best of blogging. Designing software is hard work. The things that seem obvious after-the-fact were anything but obvious before. The best things, the most useful innovations, are the ones that seem so obvious later that they melt into the fabric of reality and become invisible. I am proud to say that many of the things that came from the evolution of blogging have turned out that way. Like all art, software design strives for suspension of disbelief. In our world, that effect is felt by the tools becoming so invisible that you can focus all your attention on _your_ work. It's creativity for the sake of other creativity. There are other milestones for sure. I remember the frustration of the flaming mail list for the 24 Hours project and realizing I could side-step the flamage by publishing a reverse-chronologic list of links to pieces of the project. In other words, a link-blog. After that, came Frontier News, a link-blog for a scripting community. Which then led to Scripting News, and that blog is still running today. But the beginning, the first blog post authored by yours truly, was the open letter to Jim Cannavino on October 13, 1994. PS: [Why I don't do interviews], in a blog post, of course. [:-)]
end_time nil 2011-03-21 03:22:40 -0700
id nil 1250460022
source_id nil 996334553
start_time nil 2011-03-21 02:22:40 -0700
title nil October 13, 1994
url nil http://scripting.com/stories/2011/03/21/october131994.html