this post was submitted on 04 Sep 2024
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Blogging

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Welcome to /c/blogging!

This is a community for posting interesting, insightful, or even personal blog posts. You can advertise your own blog, or share other blog posts you find interesting.

Since this is the programming instance, expect many posts to be related to computer science. General blogs are still welcome as well!


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Looking to start your own blog? Check out Bearblog, Write.as, WordPress (which you can host yourself as well).

If you're tech-savvy, check out Hugo!


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[โ€“] [email protected] 8 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (1 children)

I refuse to participate in a two-tiered web of the power users who get to use free services uninterrupted and the bulk of everyday users who have to pay for it with ad garbage.

This section is one of the most insane takes that I've seen recently.

He... he realizes that ad blockers aren't some secret voodoo, right? They're not paid, they require no setup, and they're trivial to find and install. At their simplest, they're literally just a browser plugin, installable in the same way that casual users already install themes.

[โ€“] [email protected] 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago)

I don't think the vast majority of users use browser plugins at all. Vodoo or not, the barrier is high enough that it's not a common practice. Certainly not trivial. See the next section; I do think there's a genuine blind spot among tech literate people.

It's kinda like if cars shocked you every time you touched the steering wheel. Car enthusiasts of course know how to pop the hood and remove the shock module, but most drivers aren't car enthusiasts. So when people have a conversation about cars, it needs to start with 'yeah shock wheels kinda suck' because that's what cars are to drivers, even if you have a workaround. If leaving the shock module in as a reminder is what it takes, so be it.