Blogging and microblogging

Post Syndicated from original https://mjg59.dreamwidth.org/64660.html

Long-term Linux users may remember that Alan Cox used to write an online diary. This was before the concept of a “Weblog” had really become a thing, and there certainly weren’t any expectations around what one was used for – while now blogging tends to imply a reasonably long-form piece on a specific topic, Alan was just sitting there noting small life concerns or particular technical details in interesting problems he’d solved that day. For me, that was fascinating. I was trying to figure out how to get into kernel development, and was trying to read as much LKML as I could to figure out how kernel developers did stuff. But when you see discussion on LKML, you’re frequently missing the early stages. If an LKML patch is a picture of an owl, I wanted to know how to draw the owl, and most of the conversations about starting in kernel development were very “Draw two circles. Now draw the rest of the owl”. Alan’s musings gave me insight into the thought processes involved in getting from “Here’s the bug” to “Here’s the patch” in ways that really wouldn’t have worked in a more long-form medium.

For the past decade or so, as I moved away from just doing kernel development and focused more on security work instead, Twitter’s filled a similar role for me. I’ve seen people just dumping their thought process as they work through a problem, helping me come up with effective models for solving similar problems. I’ve learned that the smartest people in the field will spend hours (if not days) working on an issue before realising that they misread something back at the beginning and that’s helped me feel like I’m not unusually bad at any of this. It’s helped me learn more about my peers, about my field, and about myself.

Twitter’s now under new ownership that appears to think all the worst bits of Twitter were actually the good bits, so I’ve mostly bailed to the Fediverse instead. There’s no intrinsic length limit on posts there – Mastodon defaults to 500 characters per post, but that’s configurable per instance. But even at 500 characters, it means there’s more room to provide thoughtful context than there is on Twitter, and what I’ve seen so far is more detailed conversation and higher levels of meaningful engagement. Which is great! Except it also seems to discourage some of the posting style that I found so valuable on Twitter – if your timeline is full of nuanced discourse, it feels kind of rude to just scream “THIS FUCKING PIECE OF SHIT IGNORES THE HIGH ADDRESS BIT ON EVERY OTHER WRITE” even though that’s exactly the sort of content I’m there for.

And, yeah, not everything has to be for me. But I worry that as Twitter’s relevance fades for the people I’m most interested in, we’re replacing it with something that’s not equivalent – something that doesn’t encourage just dropping 50 characters or so of your current thought process into a space where it can be seen by thousands of people. And I think that’s a shame.

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