this post was submitted on 18 Dec 2024
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What is the Fediverse analogue of blogs? Specifically, which facet of the Fediverse provides the features that blogging used to provide:

  • long-form posts (without character limits)
  • embedded images and other media
  • perma-links and RSS / Atom feeds and other features so that content remains linkable into the future
  • commenting and engagement and associated moderation features
  • re-blogging and sharing
  • community: blogs self-organising into interest areas, pollinate other blogs, link to each other, direct their readers towards each other, etc.

And, most importantly, the ability to create, grow and nurture a following or audience?

I'm on Mastodon and on Lemmy and, in my opinion, neither of those quite hit the mark.

  • Masto is too close to bird-site: character limits (nearly always), shoddy threads, and the fact that one is invariably just firing toots into a torrential onslaught of public toots unless one actually already has a following. Hash-tags and other topic-related features seem ill used, throughout, so discoverability is pretty low unless you already have a platform. Engaging with others in replies earns a lot of boosts and favourites but zero followers no matter how well your reply-toots are received.

  • Lemmy is too close to anotheR site. It's great for being a refuge from that and replacement for that but really not a blogging platform.

I'm happy with both of the above for what they do. I really like the discourse in Masto's reply threads, actually, but it seems useless for actually building a following for one's self. I'm rather new to Lemmy but I like what I'm finding, so far.

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[–] [email protected] 1 points 2 hours ago* (last edited 2 hours ago)

The solution here with the greatest reach may honestly be to just make a simple html website and post your content to other federated services that have wider user bases. Like, yeah, someone might be able to follow your posts through write-as, but I feel like cross posting to Lemmy and Mastodon will probably get more eyes on your work.

Also, from my thinking, blogs are needless and were largely a step on the way to web 2.0's service based model. If you simply have something to say and want to get it out there, you don't really necessarily need a complex system with a database to do it.

Bring back personal pages.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (1 children)

write freely/write-as

https://fediverse.to/write-as

is the only 'blog' software I know of that has activitypub built in

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Ok. I've been trying out WriteFreely and, yeah, here: https://personaljournal.ca/schleudersturz/it-is-more-important-to-flaunt-our-humanity-today-than-it-ever-was-before

How does it look?

  • I really like the simplicity of it.
  • I do not like how hard it was to discover a seemingly appropriate host.
  • I never worked out how drafts were supposed to work and this post was just published without drafting or without any way to preview it or test whether it came out with the right formatting.
  • At least one taxonomy would be good: single-level categories, at a minimum.

Maybe some of the features I want are actually there and I'll find them, eventually.

[–] [email protected] 2 points 4 days ago

Hope you find something that works for you or are able to figure it out!

[–] [email protected] 5 points 4 days ago

You may consider Ghost