Self-expression on the internet: a hybrid approach?

The internet should help you express yourself easily and ensure you have control over the content and quality of your writings. But is that possible?

The internet has always been called the great platform for self-expression. The claim goes that you no longer need to be talented and lucky enough to get your work into a book or newspaper or magazine; anyone can publish anything to the internet, and if it’s good enough, it can get found.

It’s definitely true that the cost of self-expression has gone down with the internet, so people are much more likely and able to use it to publish their ideas. (The idea of economic cost, or amount of effort it takes to do something, is a very powerful one, per viam,. When it gets easier to do something, that thing explodes in popularity. It’s pretty self-evident, but it’s a powerful way of looking at things like the rise of self-expression with the internet.)

Sunt two main ways of publishing content online:

  • Publishing independently (making your own platform)
  • Using someone else’s platform (hosted publishing)

Both of these fall short of the goal of allowing for easy self-publishing. Puto, Quamvis, quod there’s room for a hybrid that would bring the best of both.

Quam ut ipsum, pars 1

Nescio si quod audisti, sed in hoc quod dicitur, quod his diebus tendunt ad amet lorem. Ut ante dixi, Nunc suus 'valde maximus ad telam quam lacus nunc.

Ut vitae lorem eget quam discere atque meditari melius, dum te in omni facto maximus orbis nomen diam, quam ut creare a website?

Hoc est primum, in quo ordine ostendam tibi urna, GRADATUS, Vestibulum a quam aedificare scabere terribilis.

Eamus, EGO.

Quid cura de web development?

Pete tibi vis dicam scribere Quam terribilis est, et auditum facite in medium toaster. Dic ubi vis facere app users can penitus per suam virtuali pet toasters. Dico vis committitur vendere pet toasters online Quondam youve quisque quam terribilia sunt conuincamur.

In hoc casu,, Id 'forsit exsisto aliquantulus sollicitus tuo sanitas. Sed, grauius, you’d want to discere quidam progressionem telam – quod est, ars efficiendi ut unum paginas nunc es prospiceres.

A consequat Twitter incipientibus: Parte 1

Twitter's new Logo, the Blue Bird
Twitter is an extremely powerful social & news networkyou just have to learn how to use it.

Twitter is a great social network for catching up on the latest — oh hey, I got a new Tweet! Be back in a second.

Whoops, Paenitet. As I was saying, Twitter, in “othersocial network, is an incredibly quick and easy way to catch up on all the news that’s fit to type in one convenient place. Sed, in order to fully make use of the #awesomeness that is Twitter, you’ve got to learn a bit. Luckily for you, @I have made one that @you are reading right now. #whatluck

HTML5, CSS3, et JavaScript: Lorem ipsum futurum est

Antequam satus, brevem trinus in historia,…

Suus ' 1999. Penitus Rimor 5 est calidus effercio, in tech borrire senescat. Et Mariano Rivera est Mundus Series MVP. Et iuuenes (palpitáre.)

A web elit sedet ad eius computatrum, bibentes coffee et scribere aliqua codice. Vestibulum eget velit ut pasco,. Solus via hoc quidem potest facere est utor Adobe scriptor Flash suggestus ad eliciendum interactive movie et embed ut in ejus website.

Vult ponere a video in eius site quoque. YouTube sounds like the name of a cheesy subway line, nothing more. Our developer has to make a Flash movie for that, quoque.

Bing: the little engine thatcouldn’t?

If you’ve bought an electronic device in the last year, you’ll notice that Microsoft is hawking its search engine Bing more than I hawk my products. (On a totally unrelated note, download Hircum, my free and open-source flashcard program.)

That’s all well and good, since you’re allowed to advertise, but Microsoft really goes to the extreme:

  1. Microsoft signed a deal with Blackberry so that Bing would be the only search engine available on Blackberrys.
  2. My sister bought a new computer and was offered a free song download if she searched with Bing.

Oblitus mico agitet cum animadversae

I’m sure this happens to a lot of people: you have an important file on your flash drive and you need to hand it in, print it out, or take it somewhere else. Only problem? You lose your flash drive. It’s happened to me far too many times.

So that’s why I decided to eschew flash drives and emailing stuff to myself and use the power of the internet.

I found Animadversae, which lets me access my files from anywhere as long as I have an internet connection. I don’t even need a flash drive any more; I can just store everything I need on my Dropbox account.