Day: April 11, 2002

  • 3 ~~ The Third Great Trap of Xanga ~~ 3


     


    Another impression that one may come to warmly cuddle with after a short-term of blogging in Xanga is that the community that initially embraces you will endure.  In the short run, the initial familiarities seem perfectly resident.  No one much seems to go anywhere.  In fact, it becomes amazing to behold how regularly “all of us” keep coming back. 


     


    Don’t worry.  Relax.  If Xanga withstands, a community will, indeed, always give thee context.  But clearly, in the long run, it will not be the same blogging community that welcomed you out of the gate. 


     


    None of us are really “old-timers” here. Outside of the founders, i.e., John, marc, monsur, dan, et.al., the earliest hoard of us bloggers arrived here December 2000—only 1 ¼ years ago.  Yet even upon so short a baseline, active membership has radically changed.  Not only are a great many of the earliest most active and high-profile bloggers gone,  the influx of new bloggers is so intense that it’s easy to get lost.  Unless you drill regularly through your SIR (Sites I Read) list, and your subscribers through theirs, you can find yourself losing touch with some once-a-time blogging intimates as rapidly as a clique of “best buddies” going forth their separate ways into the endless summer from a high school senior graduating class.


     


    And as Xanga gets bigger, staying in touch with everyone will get harder.  Imagine a couple of years from now when Xanga membership is 50x its current (60K or 70K?) or around 3 million, you have 2 or 3 thousand subscribers, and your average blog is getting about 200 comments a day.  Without some sort of comment autoresponder (which would be abhorrently impersonal), how will you ever keep up reciprocally?


     


    In the long run, if all goes well, count on two things: growth and change.  The regular appearance of ever numerically-increasing newly-arising generations of bloggers.  And watching a good many of your steadfast very favorites like VeryModern just disappear.

  • An open-heart view of my current "auto-blogger": http://calendar.yahoo.com/notforxanga.  This scheduled post, as with most others, I've now marked *private*.


















    Reminder Reminder from the Calendar of notforxanga













          private

    Friday April 12, 2002
    4:45 pm - 5:45 pm
    This event repeats every day.




    Notes: The scholar might look at the themes occurring to me and suspect them to be nothing more than the cognitive distillation of what I have studied and read: science and philosophy, history and theology, anthropology and psychology.

     







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  • 2 ~~ The Second Great Trap of Xanga ~~ 2


     


    Things that count  in Xanga don’t count for much.  The number ( # ) of eProps, Comments, Subscriptions, Site Meter visitors, blogs that you’ve written,  times atop the Featured Content List,  #s, #s, etc.   Are you susceptible to amassing numbers?  Then Xanga will suck you in.


     


    Better to have written one brilliant post and received one equally brilliant comment than to become effusively entrained in the mediocrity of #s and even by #s do well.


     


    Oh, the things that count do count for something .  Just not much.  eProps, for instance, are a type of Fool’s Gold.  Fool’s Gold, the mineral, is a commodity worth something. There is a real economic market for it.  Pieces are almost always included in *sampler* rock collections just to contrast it with real gold.  There’s just not much a demand for it in relation to its supply.  Hence, it’s economic value is rather low.


     


    There’s an economic market for eProps, too.  A market that Xanga itself creates.  “Wait”, you say, “there’s no market—I can’t trade them in for anything!”  True.  But they can, by automated triggering, “buy” you positioning in the Featured Content list.  They can also “buy” you, in a murkier way,  a perception of popularity—a stab at becoming a “xangadu god”—in the estimation of some.  And to the extent that any blogger is motivated to write for a higher count of eProps ( a degree which can range from 0% to 100% ), there is an eProp cost: the opportunity of time spent which might otherwise have netted alternative value (this is the economic concept of *opportunity cost*).  So there is a potential cost and a potential return.  But, in my estimation, it isn’t much of a market.  Fool’s Gold “buys" Fool’s Goods.


     


    Hence, I have evaluated the potential return to me as unrewardingly low and have subsequently decided to opt-out, at least in one regard, of “spending” my eProps. 


     


    How so?  By posting multiple times a day. 


     


    I have discovered that *multiple posts* spread out throughout the night and day defuse the concentration of eProps sufficiently to keep any one  post rather low, if not off of, the Featured Content list.  I used to almost always be in the *Top Ten* of that list, sometimes even at the top.  But not recently—and I would imagine never again—not since I’ve embraced a strategy of staggered multiplicity.  And, the great thing is, since I’ve fallen off that list, I don’t even track it regularly anymore.  More freedom to me.  Amen.   Not that I should have even ever tracked it in the first place—it was, for me, one of these #s—one of these traps.  But since “my eProps” were thus being “spent”, the curiosity was irresistible.  Yet by opting-out of that market and discarding it as a concern, I now find I have the opportunity to focus my energy more rewardingly. 


     


    Not everyone falls into the Xanga #s trap.  For some, it’s pure fun.  Funny money all the way. Finding uncipherable intellectual, social, and creative rewards amidst the amusing trappings of the Xanga Glitter Game.  Laughing, or at least benefiting, whether they’re heading toward the Xanga Bank or the Xanga Poorhouse.  One word for all such who can avoid this trap altogether and reap a soulful harvest:  Hurray!

  • It's noon. Damn, the sun is shining!

  • 1 ~~ The First Great Trap of Xanga ~~ 1


    Xanga will drag you down if you start writing for *it* and for *it's audience* alone.  Don't write for Xanga--ever .  Don't even write for your *subscribers*--write for yourself, and the world, and beyond.


    The great thing is to last and get your work done, and see and hear and understand and write when there is something that you know and not before and not too damn much afterwards.


         Ernest Hemingway

    Write as if someday your words will be immortalized in some future Shakespeare's cosmically enwrapping cyber-play.  Above all, write gloriously for the Golden Eternity of you.

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