Blogging

    Dave W

    Dan Gillmor on Dave Winer’s 30 years of blogging:

    I became a blogger because of Dave.

    So, in a sense, did I. The first blogging platform I used was Radio Userland, which Dave created. I moved on to web-based blogging applications — first Blogger, I think, then Movable Type — but Radio Userland made it easy.

    But my use of Dave’s software goes back even further. Back when I worked at Apple UK in the late 80s, the company had a site license for MORE, the outliner/presentation package which Dave also wrote. MORE was great because it made it super-easy to build your ideas using an outline and then turn them into something visual. It was a mile ahead of anything else, and conceptually I still prefer that method of building a presentation to the “visuals first” approach of PowerPoint.

    Resurrecting Technovia

    I have no idea where the name came from, but I started writing a blog called Technovia somewhere around the turn of the millennium. It started off as a project on TypePad, then Wordpress, and sort-of died around 2015 when a catastrophic database failure (read: my fuck up) killed it.

    Recently I've been writing a few old-fashioned blog posts about technology and politics and using my Micro.blog for it, at ianbetteridge.micro.blog. I also have this blog, but posting content about tech never really sat well with me here.

    So as a little project, I have resurrected the Technovia domain and I'm going to use it once again for straightforward blogging. I'm using Micro.blog as the backend for it, as it's much more like the kind of blogging system which you would design today if you were starting that kind of project. It's not a content management system; it generates static HTML rather than being hitched to a database; and it has a bunch of other smart features which I wish Wordpress had (for example, it automatically saves posts to the Internet Archive, and to GitHub).

    Anyway, you can now follow it at [technovia.co.uk](https://technovia.co.uk), or via ActivityPub at @ian@microblog.ianbetteridge.com. There's probably RSS in there too if you fancy it.