Six years of blogging

Just a quick note to acknowledge an important milestone for FML: today marks the sixth year that this blog has been in existence. To be fair, it really wasn’t a blog at first in the sense we now take for granted. There weren’t many readily available blogging platforms that I knew about in 2002. I didn’t even know the term. Back then I called it my web diary. This whole personal publishing thingy has seen many changes in that time, with lots of shifts in content and subject focus. But I’m more committed to blogging today than ever before.

I am very happy I’ve chosen to do this. It’s been hard sometimes to write anything, and I haven’t been afraid to simply stop trying to keep up with it for weeks at a time. I’ll never be as prolific and steady a blog author as some. Also, I plan to stick with what works best for me in terms of subject focus, that is, a purposeful mix of family, faith, librarianship, technology, and any other topics that interest me or about which I feel compelled to write. I think that’s the key to my definition of blogging success: to write about things I care about.

I know that I will never achieve the audience that many other librarian colleagues have achieved with their blogs, and honestly, I’m not sure I would want that. I figure that roughly 200-230 people (based mostly on Feedburner logs) find FML interesting. I’m very happy with that!

No comment

One of the things about blogging that I have yet to figure out is the etiquette of commenting, or more specifically, responding to comments.  This goes for comments people make on my blog entries, as well as comments that I make on other people’s blogs.

It is really important, in my mind, to pay attention to, and encourage, comments in the blogosphere.  As I have noted before, the fact that someone comments at all is a big deal because it isn’t necessarily easy or straightforward to do it.  In many cases, for someone to take the time and effort to comment on something on a blog is an indication of a strong interest or opinion.

However, as a blog author, I am often uncertain as to whether to respond to a comment.  For instance, although I want to show regard and thankfulness for every comment, should I always add a comment to someone else’s?  Is it ok or necessary to do this if/when the only thing I might have to say is “Thanks”?

There are many times where a blog author hardly ever acknowledges or responds to comments, even if the comment is posing a direct question to the blog author, or the comment adds a lot to the discussion or provides a thoughtful viewpoint.  If I’m the commenter and I’ve put in a lot of thought and/or effort into a comment on someone else’s blog in an attempt to add something significant to the idea, concept, or subject of the post in question, and I receive no response whatsoever, I am pretty discouraged.  When that happens, especially when it happens over and over again, I’m not going to bother commenting any more.  In some cases that is probably a good thing or doesn’t matter much.  In other cases, I think it’s a shame.  Sometimes it is downright disrespectful.

I realize that there are all kinds of reasons why comments may or may not be answered by the blog author or by someone else.  We all have a hard time keeping up with email let alone acknowledging or responding to comments on blogs (our own or someone else’s).  We may not have any opinion or reaction and therefore choose not to respond for that reason.  We may simply overlook the fact that someone has made a comment.  We may in fact want to discourage comments by a certain person with an axe to grind or who is being disruptive in some way.  (Personally, I’ve never faced this situation, but then, this blog has a pretty small readership, which is fine with me.)

So I am often left to wonder and puzzle over this issue.  Comment?  Or no comment?  And what does that mean?  Or does it mean anything at all?  I wish I had more solid answers.

Upgrade to WordPress 2.0

I’ve upgraded this blog to the latest version of WordPress (2.0) as well as changed the template used to generate the look and feel of it. I’m still not sure whether I like the new look and feel and I know that there are some things from the old template that need to be added in, such as an About Me section in the sidebar. The main enhancements with the new version of WordPress come in the administrative side of things, and I like what I see there so far. I particularly like the implementation of AJAX to make common task easier for the blog author.