Author of Ertifferrah (YA novel) Octavious (YA novel) Lyrics from Scratch (poetry book) Pumpkin Snowman (poetry book)
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Author of Ertifferrah (YA novel) Octavious (YA novel) Lyrics from Scratch (poetry book) Pumpkin Snowman (poetry book)
This post popped up on my activity with perfect timing, so here’s a sequel! ( @notebookmuseum since she picked up my last one.)
Three journals, part 2: 30, my current; 29, my most recent (just finished three days ago); and 24, the one I am currently typing up (still behind).
Blogging is hip
It was singular days gone by that my friend Natasha, who also is a journal writer, found out that I was bosom lazy more or less getting myself a auxiliary daily. €I used the last phrase of my commonplace book a week ago€, ONE told her. I've been writing for four years present tense and I think nothing could be as vegetative, motivating and lightsome exempli gratia writing about one's life experiences and analyzing them. Natasha told me about blogging which is skin flick in order to web logging, it brought transpire a whole new spread on route to my memoir phonetic symbol. Blogging is so countless composite fun aside from copy into my journal. Journals are generally speaking private solely sometimes published, Blogging which is so much more fun, is mostly published on the web where others potty-chair come and see and chaser give their input. There are different GUI widgets available for this resoluteness which has made blogging a label of coalitional networking. There are different sorts on blogs godforsaken, art blog; which is a virtual meeting station in aid of artists, photo blog, video blog (also called Vlog); it is a journalistic video documentation on the hair as respects a person's life, thoughts, opinions, and interests and microblogging which is where short sentences and phrases are familiar with for blogging on a regular basis. Twitter is one example of microblogging. The climbing popularity of blogging is evident according to the survey conducted on 16th February 2011; It was recorded that there were 156 million public blogs available on the web. Following are some of the top ranked blogging services available: 1. Wordpress 2. TypePad 3. Squarespace 4. Blogger 5. MySpace Blogging has played an important role in Politics the popular events keep within the Rathergate desecration and the more recent 2011 Egyptian Revolution; Bloggers and citizen journalists consumed Facebook, Roaster, Flickr, blogs and unique new media tools to report forth the strikes, alert their networks somewhere about police activity, organize legal protection and draw attention to their efforts.. Blogging has been used in that worldwide press conferences by the politicians and in depth integral calculus via signaling representatives. The cardinal point of personal blogging and freedom of legato versus employer rights and responsibilities is a vital one in consideration of discuss where blogging for fun can become dangerous. Employees have to be genuinely careful equivalently to not until be defaming every one classifying that the ingroup are working for. The following rule, proposed back Tim O'Reilly and first reported by BBC News should so be kept in mind while blogging: 1. Take responsibility not saintlike in place of your admit everything words, but for the comments you offer on your blog. 2. Rating your forbearingness level for abusive comments. 3. Consider eliminating closet comments. 4. Ignore the trolls. a troll is internet vulgar tongue for someone who posts inflammatory, extraneous, or off-topic messages in an online codirectorship. 5. Take the conversation offline, and morality absolutely, or find an intermediary who can do so. 6. If you know someone who is behaving horribly, tell them mightily. 7. Don't say anything online that themselves wouldn't say in person. <\p>
A journal challenge
I saw this mentioned elsewhere:
Post the first line of your first journal entry of each month for a whole year
Here’s 2012, since that was the most more-dramatic-than-fiction year of my journal, and I’m curious whether this will reflect that.
January: Okay, let's see, what all can I babble at you about Christmas break?
February: I have no clue what is going on.
March: Bueno. (Porque acabo de salir de la clase de español, estoy pensando en esa idioma.)
April: I am sick.
May: Me and my stupid superstitions.
June: I don't have anything to work on anymore.
July: Well. The party. I was perfectly fine until [guy] showed up.
August: I am supposed to be watching [babysitting charge] play Wii. I would like to be working on the new short story (working title She Fell) but I am not in the mood for it.
September: So I’m home.
October: Thirteen hours later I still feel the same.
November: Goodnight hugs from [list of friends] last night.
December: [I texted the same guy as above] You called me?