Independently published

Jessica writes about The Heroine’s Journey.

Remy explains Why I love working with the web.

Ludwig dreams of designers and developers working Together.

Charlotte documents her technique Teaching the order of margins in CSS.

Craig field-tests The Leica Q.

Robin thinks about The New Web Typography.

Michael dives deep into A Complete History of the Millennium Falcon.

What do they all have in common? Nothing …other than the fact that each person chose to write on their own website. I’m grateful for that. These are all wonderful pieces of writing—they deserve a long life.

Have you published a response to this? :

Responses

Related posts

Harry Roberts is speaking at Web Day Out

This line-up just gets better and better! You’ll want to be in Brighton on March 12th, 2026.

Blog Questions Challenge

Answers to some questions about blogging.

Words I wrote in 2024

Some handpicked highlights from my blog.

Our web

The web is what we make it.

What the world needs

Write for yourself.

Related links

P&B: Jeremy Keith – Manu

In which I answer questions about blogging.

I’ve put a copy of this on my own site too.

Tagged with

Tagged with

Reflections on 25 years of Interconnected (Interconnected)

Ah, this is wonderful! Matt takes us on the quarter-decade journey of his brilliant blog (which chimes a lot with my own experience—my journal turns 25 next year)…

Slowly, slowly, the web was taken over by platforms. Your feeling of success is based on your platform’s algorithm, which may not have your interests at heart. Feeding your words to a platform is a vote for its values, whether you like it or not. And they roach-motel you by owning your audience, making you feel that it’s a good trade because you get “discovery.” (Though I know that chasing popularity is a fool’s dream.)

Writing a blog on your own site is a way to escape all of that. Plus your words build up over time. That’s unique. Nobody else values your words like you do.

Blogs are a backwater (the web itself is a backwater) but keeping one is a statement of how being online can work. Blogging as a kind of Amish performance of a better life.

Tagged with

The Free Web - The History of the Web

I am going to continue to write this newsletter. I am going to spend hours and hours pouring over old books and mailing lists and archived sites. And lifeless AI machines will come along and slurp up that information for their own profit. And I will underperform on algorithms. My posts will be too long, or too dense, or not long enough.

And I don’t care. I’m contributing to the free web.

Tagged with

Please publish and share more - Jeff Triplett’s Micro.blog

It’d be best to publish your work in some evergreen space where you control the domain and URL. Then publish on masto-sky-formerly-known-as-linked-don and any place you share and comment on.

You don’t have to change the world with every post. You might publish a quick thought or two that helps encourage someone else to try something new, listen to a new song, or binge-watch a new series.

Also, developers:

Write and publish before you write your own static site generator or perfect blogging platform. We have lost billions of good writers to this side quest because they spend all their time working on the platform instead of writing.

Designers, the same advice applies to you: write first, come up with that perfect design later.

Tagged with

Previously on this day

14 years ago I wrote Getting ahead in advertising

My sense of entitlement. Let me show it to you.

14 years ago I wrote Webstocked

I went all the way to New Zealand and all I got was this kick-ass conference.