For some really bizarre reason bound to be the result of an interdimensional rift, E-Evidence Information Center - Blogs & Wikis made a grave error with the consequence of having Harlan Carvey’s Windows Incident Response blog listed at the top of the left-column and this humble blog listed alongside at the top of the right-hand column.My “new post ranking” on the sidebar of the Windows Incident Response blog hadn’t sunk to dead-bottom yet, but was slowly getting closer and needed to be “bumped up”, and.And special credit to two extra-special things I noted this week that helped me get focused: So please enjoy this labor-of-love blogging post today. And along the way taking names, linkage, and notes. I’ve been studying books, taking notes, putting into practice, crafting and refining. ![]() So despite the visible slowdown in GSD posting here, I assure my gentle readers that it’s because my boots have been on the ground, in the trenches, getting very dirty with real-world experiences. They're different beasts and they deserve different forms of metrics and comparison. Reading, research, critical thinking, writing, editing and publishing isn't like posting a picture to tumblr or texting off a tweet. ![]() Writing is hard because finding the time to do real critical thinking and then to put those thoughts down in writing is even more complex. ![]() Blogging is publishing.” and “Blogging is hard.” From Mitch’s post:īlogging is hard because writing is hard. ![]() And I am encouraged by two points he offers “Blogging isn’t dead. Mitch Joel has a great response to the NYT article in his Blogging Is Dead (Again) | Six Pixels of Separation Blog. While the NYT has been waxing prosaic that Blogs Wane as the Young Drift to Sites Like Twitter I take heart that I tend to be both old(er) and require a verbosity in communication that sites like Twitter and Facebook just cannot satisfy.
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