Sometimes I think: “this is not enough for a blogpost”; I’ll make a LinkedIn post out of it. But maybe not. As a reader, my feed is like a firehose. For instance, I see a nice write-up from Rob Bowley or Simon Wardley. Then after reading some of teh references, coming back to the timeline, the post has moved away 😺.
In case you wonder, the same holds for non-algorithmic timelines - e.g. Mastodon. I can’t even find my own messages back!
I would like to see some of your shorter writings as blog posts. So I can read and bookmark them in peace.
Afterthought
This is of course also about giving myself license to post shorter posts. I’m editing some of my explorations in large language models into posts, and they are either long and meandering, or short. I hope you’ll enjoy a couple of short ones. And of course I also enjoy long posts, for instance this one on how Jurgen Appelo use the theory of constraints to decide where to use LLMs for writing novels.
P.S. I needed to find links for Rob and Simon. I had my LinkedIn feed open for a few moments, and a post from Rob bubbled up, pointing to Simon. So a feed has upsides. But still. Write and publish that post on a blog somewhere!
P.S 2: Rob Bowley informed me that he has revived robbowley.net. On medium, there is Simon Wardley’s blog.