serviceberry 14 hours ago

The corollary is that if you find that post, say something. Drop the author a note, leave a comment. No one else does. For every YT celebrity, there are thousands of people posting good content on the internet and not knowing if it's being seen or appreciated by anyone.

  • gpjt 14 hours ago

    That's an excellent point! Every author needs to know they're not posting into a void.

    • uallo 2 hours ago

      I run a tiny blog. Every now and then, I check the server logs. Specifically, the user agent strings. While crawling feeds, most feed readers adjust their user agent string to include how many of their users have subscribed to that specific feed. That way, I know that at least 9 people on this planet see my posts. Myself included, that's 10! :)

      • dasil003 2 hours ago

        if you put a link in your profile here you might get 11

        • ctxc 13 minutes ago

          HN does not do reply notifications, so please send your blog over - my contact details are on my profile. :)

  • rolfus 5 hours ago

    I do this!

    About two years ago I wanted to replay a game demo I remembered from an old (early 00') computer magazine demo disc. The actual game was nowhere to be found anywhere on the internet, but I did locate the developer and sent him an email.

    Turns out the game was never actually released - its only public existence was as a demo game alongside a bunch of other games and software. He still had the installer for the game, which was small enough to fit as an attachment in the reply he gave.

    He didn't say, but I got the distinct feeling that I might have made his day asking about that game he made more than 20 years ago.

  • nicbou an hour ago

    Yes please! This sort of feedback keeps me going through the harder times. I could have sold out a million times if it wasn't for the feedback of grateful readers keeping me on the right path. A kind comment never fails to make my day!

    I made it a habit of showing gratitude to content creators, as well as to open source maintainers.

  • 8n4vidtmkvmk 13 hours ago

    A guy posted about how to fix a broken car socket (cigarette lighter or whatever you call them) on a 1999 Honda Civic. Apparently there's little... Transistors or something under the glove box. Never knew they were there. It was like a 50 cent fix. Would never have known if this person hadn't posted. I did drop him a note of thanks

    • jayd16 12 hours ago

      Fuses not transistors.

      • 8n4vidtmkvmk 11 hours ago

        That sounds right. Couldn't remember

  • adityaathalye 12 hours ago

    100 upvotes, if I could. There is too little positive feedback in peoples' lives, if any. For this reason, I habitually cold email people who's stuff has moved me in some way (think, feel, pause etc...). Universe knows, I need it too :D So I put a "standing invitation" [1] front-and-center on my site, copying Derek Sivers and patio11. I get maybe a handful of "hello from an Internet stranger" emails, but every time it makes my day / week / longer if the conversation rambles on languidly. Email is so great for slow-mo thoughtful banter.

    [1] https://www.evalapply.org/index.html#standing-invitation

    • 7thaccount an hour ago

      Glad to hear that other people do this as well. I very rarely get a response (not the intent), but hope it makes at least someone's day.

      I've done this for a few books, two video games, and a composer. One of the smaller indie studios wrote me back a nice email about how much it meant to them.

  • ketzo 14 hours ago

    The ~3 times this has ever happened to me, it made my week. Cannot recommend enough.

    • kristiandupont 12 hours ago

      (Just to say that I went to your profile to check out your writings but found no link!)

  • dcminter 8 hours ago

    Quite right. My late father used to do free audiobook recordings for LibriVox¹ and while I know he enjoyed their forums, after he died we discovered a little clutch of hand written letters from people who had enjoyed his recordings. It warms my heart to know how pleased that would have made him and was one of the brighter moments when clearing out the family home.

    These signs of appreciation are, themselves, truly appreciated.

    ¹ https://librivox.org/ - if you'd like to hear him then try The Prisoner of Zenda: https://librivox.org/the-prisoner-of-zenda-by-anthony-hope/

  • netghost 13 hours ago

    There was a blog I followed and really admired ten or fifteen years ago. One day I was reading one of his posts and in the middle of it was an exuberant note of thanks for an article I wrote doing a close read of Ruby's TSort package.

    Super niche, mostly irrelevant to all but a vanishingly small number of people, and yet I had proof that someone I admired found it useful.

    It's been years, and it still makes me smile when I think of it.

    You never know what impact you might make on others.

  • elashri 13 hours ago

    One of the reasons I avoid commenting on YouTube whatsoever is the risk that an automated filter flags my comment and then nuke the whole account.

    This idea seems similar. I have some accounts on social media that is being used for read-only. That's unfortunate reality.

    • jmercouris 13 hours ago

      This idea is not related to avoiding commenting. The Author is suggesting you comment.

      • elashri 13 hours ago

        I understand that. I'm just saying that this is the reason I avoid commenting even when I want to follow author suggestion. I agree with the author.

    • bell-cot 7 hours ago

      A fair number of YouTubers also have their own web sites, social media accounts, or other easy-ish ways to comment.

  • jamiedumont 9 hours ago

    I did this recently when a blog post described the exact, very niche issue I was having with a production server. This post described the symptoms of the issue clearly and included a flow-chart of required fixes. There was no preamble, just clear guidance. It was more an incident management manual than a blog post, and it saved me a lot of Googling under considerable stress.

    I sent the author a quick thank you, explaining how it helped me in my hour of need. Exactly as others have said here, it goes a long way to making the effort of blogging worthwhile!

  • anupmm 21 minutes ago

    Hear hear!!

  • HPsquared 2 hours ago

    I throw out upvotes like candy, but a word is worth 1000 clicks.

  • nindalf 10 hours ago

    I’ve gotten a few emails about my blog and without exception they’ve all made my week.

    • ctxc 10 minutes ago

      Come on, you have to link your blog on your profile!

      HN does not do reply notifications, so please send me a link - my contact is in my profile :)

  • doublepg23 13 hours ago

    I reached out to a person on Gemini in 2021 and we've spoken basically every day since. You never know what kind of connections are out there unless you try.

  • datadrivenangel 4 hours ago

    This! A tiny response lets people know that their work is at least noticed!

  • ErigmolCt 7 hours ago

    Absolutely. A simple "This helped me, thanks!" can mean a lot to someone putting effort into sharing knowledge.

  • wizardforhire 13 hours ago

    Case in point

    Total party skills, arguably the most balanced astute commentary of current events… definitely that I’ve come across. Hidden behind a game master facade.

    https://youtube.com/@totalpartyskills

    • cess11 6 hours ago

      Judging from a few of those "psychopolitics" videos it's a far right activist.

      • InDubioProRubio 2 hours ago

        Aint everybody - inflation, inflation, inflation..

      • wizardforhire an hour ago

        Really? Thats what you got out of that? Please go a little deeper before being so dismissive.

        • cess11 an hour ago

          If you want to claim this person is not a radical reactionary, please share some evidence of this instead.

simonw 12 hours ago

This is the philosophy I use for my TIL posts - if something took me a few hours to figure out despite searching for a solution first it's a very strong signal that it is worth writing about.

Here's my most recent one, about using a Tailscale exit node to proxy scraping traffic from GitHub Actions: https://til.simonwillison.net/tailscale/tailscale-github-act...

  • quentinp 12 hours ago

    The article says as much!

    > Simon Willison is the master of this and even has a subdomain devoted to his

pfych 15 hours ago

Whenever I fix something or struggle with an issue I ALWAYS write myself a blog post and make sure to cram in the exact errors/SEO Keywords I searched for while trying to glue together a solution.

  • tombert 14 hours ago

    Two days ago, I was looking on how to get Gamescope working with a new computer on NixOS. I searched around, and found a Reddit post about it [1], found that they had a Github Gist attached to it, and then realized that I was the guy who posted it. I had completely forgot that I had done this work already.

    [1] https://www.reddit.com/r/NixOS/comments/1dahr3g/steamos_base...

    • reeeeee 6 hours ago

      That's incredible, I don't know how I would react. It's like finding a time-capsule that you forgot about.

    • fy20 13 hours ago

      That and finding the answer on StackOverflow that you wrote

  • lazyasciiart 14 hours ago

    My most useful stack overflow answer is one where I barely knew what I was doing (something back in MVC.net) and while I managed to fix the problem, which was the same as the one asked about, I didn’t understand any of the marked “best answers” or how they were relevant, so i wrote out how I’d fixed it in “I clicked here and typed this to match that” terms. Much later I knew enough to realize that of course my answer was exactly what those other answers were saying to do, but mine still got buckets of votes from all the other poor folk googling without having yet understood the bindings and views and magic connections between pieces that Visual Studio was making.

  • ErigmolCt 7 hours ago

    That's a great habit! Not only does it help solidify what you've learned, but it also makes life easier for the next person facing the same issue

  • solarized 14 hours ago

    I also do this.

    Still don’t know how to respond when i get fucked by LLM authoritarians (Grok, ChatGPT, etc.).

    They don’t give the traffic back / incentives or even cite us as the source. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

  • bsimpson 14 hours ago

    Same with posting questions - try to include all the things you searched for, so when it gets answered, the next person can find it.

  • gblargg 13 hours ago

    Something I wish I had done more. You think you don't need to make a note because it's fresh in your head at the time, but years later, even the context is gone. Expecting to remember arcane solutions to things you do rarely is unrealistic. I've gotten better but still have a ways to go. One thing that removes the barrier is to just have common log to put everything, perhaps with some tags, so you can quickly open it and type your thoughts when they're fresh, without having to worry about packaging it just right.

nicbou an hour ago

This habit has turned into a lifestyle business for me. I document German bureaucracy for a living.

I gave a talk about the "why" which turned into a long blog post: https://nicolasbouliane.com/projects/all-about-berlin

I really wish more people did this. I make it a point to show my gratitude when I encounter similar resources. One helped me cycle across Korea. Another helped me fix a very specific device.

It's a shame that Google, social media and AI strip mine the work of these helpful people and rob them of their reward.

Ir0nMan an hour ago

I'd suggest never starting any story with the first 6 words used in this article.

OuterVale 11 hours ago

I think that perhaps the most important part of this is that if you write the post you wish you'd found, chances are you'll find it useful again at some point in the future.

So much of what I write has proven itself useful to me again even years after publication. Adding search functionality to my site and including my microblog posts there has extended this further.

  • madcaptenor 4 hours ago

    Also, the act of writing it down helps you to fix things in memory.

    But I've searched for things and found my own old blog posts on occasion.

dailykoder 11 hours ago

This hits a nerve and my urge to do that gets bigger and bigger by the day. I JUST have to do it (tm).

Recently I have been playing around with the Microchip PolarFire SoC[1] and as I already know, there ain't __that__ much resources available when it comes to FPGA design. But oh man, microchip is a whole other level than Xilinx/AMD or anything Lattice/open source tools related. I fought so many battles to get things done and I finally have some kind of a workflow going and understand the chip. I really like it by now (if anyone wants to dive into hardware-software-codesign, it's a nice budget chip to do it with). But after every battle I fight, I think to myself: "God damn, I should write this one down on a blog somewhere. If I can only help one person in the future, even if it's myself, then that's a huge win". But the lazy (and kinda scared) me won until now.

What if I don't write good enough (because english is not my mother tongue)? What if all I write is obvious to everyone else and I am the only one fighting? What if a friend will see this somehow and laugh at me?

It doesn't matter. I should do it, because I feel like it. Thank you for this post, OP.

- [1] https://www.microchip.com/en-us/development-tool/mpfs-disco-...

Edit: My last few words reminded me of CHarles Bukowski's "Roll the dice". Maybe I should remind myself of that a bit more often: https://hellopoetry.com/poem/68266/roll-the-dice/

neilv 16 hours ago

I'm imminently posting one such Web page, which took me many person-days to figure out, when I couldn't find the info.

Posting is actually delayed because I'm experimenting with how to do this more sustainably than I have in the past. Which means generating dollars somehow, and also making it harder for "AI" crawlers and services to rip off everything. :(

drakonka 8 hours ago

This is how I've been using my blog for years - writing about something I did to process and solidify that knowledge, even if I think it's something silly that most other people already know or won't find interesting. I end up getting emails from people who found some random post useful sometimes, which is a fun bonus. And sometimes when I am googling something my own blog comes up and then I remember I've done or thought about that thing before.

alpb 16 hours ago

I'm working one of such blog posts as we speak. Past few months I've been purely publishing articles in my domain (Kubernetes) that go really deep into things that I've discovered the hard way, or code walkthroughs in OSS codebases.

  • yjftsjthsd-h 16 hours ago

    > Past few months I've been purely publishing articles in my domain (Kubernetes) that go really deep into things that I've discovered the hard way

    Could I ask for a link?

  • kreelman 16 hours ago

    Well done. Great you've got time for that. Thanks.

varun_ch 12 hours ago

I like this idea - even for little tips I find along the way when trying to solve challenges.

But then the new issue I have is I end up cluttering my blog with these lower effort posts that get in the way of the longer pieces. How do others solve this? Like separate feeds or something?

Here’s an example: https://varun.ch/posts/macos-keyboard/ I don’t think this should be among by “posts” but do others have a “firehose” section or something, for random thoughts and tips?

  • ozbonus 12 hours ago

    I think this is good use for microblogging platforms like Mastodon and the others, to which you can link to from within your blog. If you've written a lot of mini-posts[1] that fit a theme you can edit them together into larger blog post eventually. If you have complete control over your website you could even feature some of your most recent or popular mini-posts on your front page.

    [1] I don't know what the best term is to describe theses kinds of posts that distinguishes them from long form blog posts. What do people do on Mastodon--toot? I'm just going with mini-post for now.

Brajeshwar 15 hours ago

These days, there is always someone who has already written what I wanted to write. So, I write my own version. In the early days, most of my blog posts were inspired by questions on public forums. I reply there and then write a blog post, and then, I just point them to my blog. The articles from my blog from the early 2000s reflect all of that.

For instance, the article on how to open a browser full-screen from IE5 was a roaring success. https://brajeshwar.com/2002/ie-50-full-screen-from-itself/

runevault 15 hours ago

Always good advice to put back into the world to help those who come after. I've made a few videos in the past to explain things I know others struggled with in Godot and every time someone finds one of them and thanks me for making the concept of the video make sense it puts a smile on my face.

swyx 15 hours ago

amen, my own journey/version here. most powerful career insight ive ever had, when reflecting on why my career transition from finance to tech went so well. https://www.swyx.io/learn-in-public

tombert 14 hours ago

I haven't blogged in quite awhile, and I don't know why. I've done what everyone has done and started five or six blogs and then abandoned them, but never more than that.

Anyone who has seen my HN history knows that I'm not averse to writing out large quantities of text spouting out my dumb opinions on things, and I don't think I'm a terrible writer or anything. I think at least some of my longer HN comments could be converted into blog posts with just a little effort, but for whatever reason it has never really stuck with me.

I guess part of it is that HN is a lot more conversational, or at least when I write a comment here, I'm writing it either a) in response to someone or b) with the expectation that someone might respond to me. For whatever reason, having that bit of social interaction (with the relatively technical and educated audience of HN) is enough to lower the barrier for me to write something.

I think if I already had a blog that was relatively popular, I'd also find it easier to get into the mood to write a more organized blog post, if for no other reason then there would be an automatic minimum-interest in whatever I write and then it would feel less like I'm shouting into the void.

  • iamwil 12 hours ago

    Just cut and paste whatever you wrote in comments into a blog. it'll help you get over the mental hump.

mhlakhani 14 hours ago

This echoes well. The most popular posts on my blog are things where I wrote things for myself (e.g. reflections on my career), rather than trying to orient them for an audience or maximum clicks.

svilen_dobrev 9 hours ago

somehow i can't get myself doing this.. publication stuff.

There are tons of things i have (accumulated) to say, but something is stopping me. Probably the current not-easiness of it (plain html isn't that fun), and the need of investing yet-another-little-of-myself to make-that-easier (software? it's what i breathe), and some kind of tiredness of it..

There, i said it. Maybe one day.. i will.

have fun

https://www.svilendobrev.com/waterfly/

https://www.svilendobrev.com/rabota/specart.html

RajT88 15 hours ago

I post the occasional Medium article about technology and DIY projects.

I wrote a post like this once - an article I wish someone else had written and posted. It has hundreds of views - a steady dozen or so a week. It's too bad I don't have more content like this where I figured out a thing which was largely undocumented.

DeathArrow 11 hours ago

Trying to teach others will help you a lot in mastering a subject.

muzani 12 hours ago

Stack Overflow/Stack Exchange used to be such a good site for this - I'd just ask the simplest kind of question on how to do it and then answer it myself a few days later. It was great because SO would show up on a search; it ranked well on Google unlike personal blogs and public wikis. As a bonus, other people also maintain the answer and it stays up to date.

This was one of my favorites: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2757107/developing-for-a...

It was a checklist and people would just add on to the checklist as things changed.

Alas, it's not practical to do this anymore, because you'd just get downvoted to -13 under the current administration. Don't build atop other people's platforms, I guess.

zem 14 hours ago

julia evans is really good at doing that. can recommend her blog, both for knowledge and for inspiration: https://jvns.ca/.

shadowgovt 15 hours ago

This is the only reason I have a blog. It's letters to myself when I find one of those in-the-gap-between-systems problems and want to describe how to fix it.

iamwil 11 hours ago

I have different types of posts to support different habits of blogging.

1. First, I have classic essays that I wrote by hand. I'll ask an LLM for thematic flow or grammar checking, but it's my thoughts. It's more sporatic, but they're things I'm compelled to talk about and think deeply about. Example is on how visual programming is stuck on nodes-and-wires. https://interjectedfuture.com/visual-programming-is-stuck-on...

2. Next, I have posts that I write on a schedule. These are what I call lab notes, which I'll post every monday no matter what. These are easy to write because I just recount what I've been doing the past week and what challenges and wins there are. This exercises the muscle of posting something. Example is this past week on type checking https://interjectedfuture.com/lab-note-60-writing-words-and-...

3. I do write TILs, though these don't occur for me nearly as much at the moment, due to the type of work I'm doing. It's like my own stackoverflow, I guess. Example is on the common footgun of useEffect. https://interjectedfuture.com/today-i-learned/til-message-ha...

4. Lastly, I have posts where I had conversations with LLMs in depth on a niche topic that I think others would find interesting. If it's a back and forth, at the end of the conversation, I'll have it write a blog post based on what I thought the salient points were. If it's deep research, I'll just post that. I mark it clearly at the top it was LLM generated. The generation can be good enough that it's worth the post for humans to read. But also, in the hopes that the next model might pick it up, as an indication of what's good an interesting. It's basically one single sample eval based on my taste of what's good. Example is how algebraic effects are handled across Koka, Eff, OCaml, and Unison: https://interjectedfuture.com/algebraic-handler-lookup-in-ko...

All's to say to people, there's different modalities of blogging. If you pick just one, you might feel pressure to write when you have nothing to write. But if you don't write you don't get in the habit, which is why I do the lab notes. It makes me post even if I don't have anything to say, or the time to say it.

  • DavidPP 4 hours ago

    Thanks for taking the time to explain your process. I'm just starting out, and so far I was planning to:

    - Radar: just cool categorized articles, libraries, apps, etc. that I found during the week and organized in weekly drops.

    - Guides: In my mind, those were closer to TIL than real guides, though I couldn't figure out how to name them. I love TIL for that.

    - Playground: Forcing myself to share prototypes, snippets, etc.

    I also have tons of LLM chats that could become content. Instead of trying to rewrite them, I will just share them as they are (while being transparent).

    The main idea, as you said, is to find a modality that works well for me and force myself to write more.

mvdtnz 15 hours ago

I wish I had done this starting a decade ago. Now, with AI, it feels pointless. These powerful AI tools have slurped all of that valuable information up while simultaneously removing all value from actually posting any of it going forward.

  • ZaoLahma 11 hours ago

    If your target audience is yourself, there's still plenty of value in writing it down.

    Wait long enough and there will be situations where you did something in the past that works really well, but you can't remember anymore what you did or why you did it. An AI doesn't really help you then.

  • robocat 13 hours ago

    If you're writing to help altruistically, then AI shouldn't matter.

    If you want recognition, then writing tech articles is a difficult path to help you gain status or become known.

    My guess is that you just dislike helping the enemy. I'm often more driven for negative reasons than I am for positive ones.

  • netghost 13 hours ago

    Three reasons to write regardless of whether AI slurps it up.

    1. You will learn more, even when you think you know everything there is to know about the topic.

    2. You can point to a thing you personally created. It's nice to be discussing a technical topic and be able to say, "Hey, I actually wrote an article about that, I'll send you the link."

    3. AI might slurp up some of what you write, but it's a blurry filter over information. Your unique writing, details, and perspective are your own.

    Finally, it can be fun or rewarding in the same way drawing, painting, or any other creative act can be. If it's not, then channel your effort into something else.

  • zem 14 hours ago

    seriously, just ignore the AI, and create the human internet you want to see.

  • iamwil 11 hours ago

    LLMs aren't good at everything. If you're on the edge of knowledge and taste, it's very apparent. Might as well write it down.

    Not at all. That's like saying it feels pointless to write a blog if there's search. Like gwern says, lots of people are probably going to be looking for information through LLMs in the future. If you don't write what you're thinking, you'll likely be invisible or illegible to the future. Might as well write it down.

  • benatkin 14 hours ago

    It turns into write the messages/prompts to get the answer you wish you’d received and put it somewhere where it can be used to train the AIs and in the meantime searched by humans

6stringmerc 14 hours ago

It’s a rush to feel appreciated when somebody takes the time to enjoy your craft - be it writing, cooking, or developing a tool. It’s deflating to put something out there and it simply disappears into the ether, never to be recognized nor celebrated. 10 years into my Medium account I’ve experienced both and at this point, I simply can’t quit because writing is my journey and audiences are fickle. So be it, such are the terms and conditions of the craft.

some_furry 12 hours ago

Blogger beware: You can be a victim of your own success if you're not careful.

Every time I follow this sort of advice, whatever I write inevitably becomes immensely popular and I end up hearing from a lot of people that whine loudly about my furry blog having furry art on it.

(Most recent example: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=43105421)

It's exhausting and if you don't reply on news sites, they'll send you social media messages and emails too.

And if you'd like a poignant example of a time I followed this sort of advice, I wrote this one after I failed to understand why some applications were using HKDF different than I intuited it was meant to be used, and a formal methods guy had to explain it to me because I was asking very loudly. It has since been cited by the Python cryptography library docs: https://soatok.blog/2021/11/17/understanding-hkdf/

  • UncleEntity 12 hours ago

    People will complain no matter what you do...death, taxes, stupid people on the internet.

    • some_furry 11 hours ago

      You're not wrong, but I felt these words of caution are something anyone should be aware of should they pursue TFA's advice.

      If you're doing it for intrinsically valuable reasons (i.e., for yourself), wonderful!

      But if you're doing it to try to overcome writer's block or establish themselves as a recognized name in a community, there are downsides that people don't tend to talk about much because they might sound ungrateful (especially if they financially benefit from their popularity). I, individually, have no such monetization incentives at play.

  • vonunov 11 hours ago

    Geez, shove it down my throat, why don't you?

    I'm free all w--