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Why Personal Websites Matter

latif writes "Lately personal websites have fallen out of fashion. Some term them as vanity sites, and others are scared of privacy concerns. The article Why Personal Websites Matter discusses some reasons as to why they have to be embraced to stay competitive." I see the personal website as the virtual equivalent of the front of one's home, except that most virtual homes have large signs in the front yard that give a running play-by-play of the inhabitants. Just like one's home, it may be prone to vandalism, but it's far easier to make one's website be an expression of oneself, than to put up large signs outside!

9 of 436 comments (clear)

  1. Re:hmm by supersam · · Score: 5, Interesting

    but, in practice, there are far too many useless, egotistical homepages

    But those are just a reflection of the personality of the website's owner. It takes all kinds to make up the real world. Likewise, it takes all kinds of websites to make up the online world.

    The analogy of a website being the online home of a person is very valid. You'll see so many garishly decorated homes in real life... while a few tastefully done, organized and neat houses. That does not mean one should go around criticizing the unorganized, tackily decorated ones. Its a matter of personal taste. After all, thats why they're referred to as personal websites.

    Smartness has very little to do with taste!

    Blogs, on the other hand, are like standing on the porch and talking aloud... airing views... sharing news.

  2. Personal Websites? by Metex · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I think there is no more room on the net for "personal" websites. How many people here have run a blog or any other storehouse of personal info and at one point in time has it been used against you? For me it was about 6 times. Three with my school/university and 3 due to friends reading something and assuming it was them.

    I think the net is great for writing about your intrests and perhaps form a community around it such as CG, Legos or Evil Dead movie series. However having personal info on the web is usually extreamly dangerous and can at times be annoying. I remeber how I at one time had a collection of 50 poems on my site but took it down after a peer decided that half of it was about her and started to complain to me about how she though I was a dick for bitching at her indirectly.

    Now adays my old personal website is technicly amazing but I post no content on it. I guess live and learn.

    --
    Never could figure out why my girl liked my bitch tits, then I found out she was a lesbian.
  3. Re:hmm by kinnell · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Personal websites are a good idea, in theory -- but, in practice, there are far too many useless, egotistical homepages

    Say what you like, I got my first job after graduating simply because I had published my resume online and an employee of the company had found it in a web search. I had never heard of the company and would otherwise probably never made contact with them. Self advertising is not necessarily egotistical - we all do it sometimes.

    --
    If I seem short sighted, it is because I stand on the shoulders of midgets
  4. Mac.com gets it by l0ungeb0y · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Apple has recognized that all it's spiffy user apps are not complete without a distribution channel.
    Basically, they've recreated the homepage as an extension of your desktop, laptop or iPod.
    This also helps productivity. One of the projects I am a member of uses iCal synching between developers via a .mac account. Of all the features I've seen, this has to be the greatest and most usefull.

    The direct integration between the OS and your .mac account makes file updating easy, you don't even need an FTP client, it's quite seamless as the .mac account management interface is built into the OS.

    Ultimately, I would not be surprised to see .mac ripped off in MS's Longhorn, but that will be in 2006. Apple has 2 years to cram their service full of features to keep a leg up.

    <wishful_thinking>
    Perhaps an extension of the music store is in order to beeef up .mac as well as iPod/iTMS. Allowing users to compile playlists that are actually streamed by iTMS rather than the user account.

    Apple opened the door for industry wide licensing without getting sued, perhaps they can now convince them that streaming already purchased music as a form of fair use on the users behalf can work too.
    The major difference being that iTMS/Apple would act as the middle man, there by providing oversite to the system as a whole, something Kazaa/Morpheus et al fail to do.
    </wishful_thinking>

  5. Re:Google's Pagerank is to blame by Decameron81 · · Score: 4, Interesting
    "...personal webpages won't end up with many other pages linking to them unless the content is very popular."


    To be honest I must say that I thank them for this. When I use google, or any other search engine, the last thing I wish to find are personal websites with unpopular content. While creating sites and sharing them with the world is something everyone can do, making good sites with good content is not. I can only see an advantage with this system as a site now needs to struggle more to remain popular.

    Diego Rey
    --
    diegoT
  6. Re:Another stick by wfberg · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Yes, because companies never have websites with their details on. Companies never operate/trade etc in public view, allowing opinions of them to be formed and perhaps shared/disseminated by mass media or even individuals on their 'blogs.

    Yet, companies seem kind of reluctant to openly post "we support government X that randomly kills thousands at a whim" kind of information on their website, while personal websites might contain such shamefully incriminating nuggets as "I like Dilbert" or "I'm a X denomination Y believer".

    Did you know that in some countries, employers can't ask applicants to supply a picture with their resume? That's to prevent employees from only inviting white folks to interviews. Any idea where that came from? Because it happened.

    And yes, every slashdot post is potential incriminating material.. "He once said Foo about company Bar, and they're a client of ours".. "He made a Pointy Haired Boss joke!".. Etc. etc.

    So yes, I have a bland website. Just as bland as any corporation's website.

    --
    SCO employee? Check out the bounty
  7. Re:hmm by calethix · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Well here's a little story...
    Just over a year ago, I got some kind of bug bite (or at least that's the assumption). A big red spot developed around it which kept growing so I went to the doctor. The doc gave me a shot and an assortment of pills to stop the itching/inflammation.
    So, what's that got to do with blogs? Well, later that night I got the hiccups. After maybe an hour, they went away. Then I woke up in the middle of the night with hiccups again and couldn't get rid of them. Since I couldn't sleep, I decided to do some googling and found another person talking about this side effect of the drug on their blog. My doctor of course thought I was a nut when I asked her about it even after I found a write up from the company that makes the drug listing hiccups as a possible side effect.
    This person's blog was just about their life and battle with some disease. While I wouldn't have found it all too exciting under normal circumstances, I appreciate the fact that I was able to get useful information from it when the need was there.

    As for my doctor, well I won't be going back there. I don't really care to have a doctor that blows me off when I tell them there's something wrong with me after they just shot me full of drugs.

  8. Kinda split on the issue by Quietti · · Score: 5, Interesting
    On one hand, I admire the boldness of some people who go right ahead and discuss at lenght their life as a [goth, bisexual, etc.] and post samples of their own [erotica, nudes, contreversial opinions on various issues, etc.] and who, surprise, don't seem to run into any problem resulting from this, because a few people actually do respect or fear those who are that bold and upfront about everything.

    On the other hand, I cannot help but notice how running into the wrong person [politically correct employer, boy/girlfriend, football coach, bad cop, etc.] with excellent Googling skills, can easily manage to ruin your life completely, by marginalizing you out of existence, to the extent that nobody wants to hire or date you and where even your old highschool pals fake not recognizing you on the street, because whatever you posted on your website went against the grain.

    This leaves open the question of whether freedom of speech and democracy really mean anything anymore.

    The game used to be played along this famous French writer's motto that "I might vehemently disagree with what you are saying, but I'll die to preserve your right to say it." Likewise, former Canadian Prime Minister Pierre Elliot Trudeau once told his son (quoted at the funeral) to "Never attack someone personally. You can publicly attack their ideas, but never touch their dignity as a human being."

    Unfortunately, in a world where anything you say can and will be used against you at some point, before you have been accused of anything, even whenever you have not broken any law, simply because people fear the stigma of guilt by association, it appears that we have reached a point where those old standards of respect are no longer true.

    This being said, lately, I've been asking myself why I even bother maintaining a diminutive website:

    I haven't created much in terms of music, photography or ever writings in ages, which already puts a big question mark over whatever content might qualify for publication. Then, already, I've had a few employers actually mention having a problem with me stating boldly on my About My CV... page that "I am quite competent in Windows 3.11/95/98/NT/2000 administration and in Office 95/97/2000 usage, but flatly refuse to use any Microsoft product."

    [of course, in a world where the majority thinks that getting a job should be the only priority anyone ever had, and where companies can fire anyone for the most laughable excuses, standing up for your beleifs and values, by refusing to work in certain fields or within a certain framework, has become suicidal, but that's another issue entirely - then again, it says a lot about how little freedom capitalism actually offers: choose freedom or money, but you cannot have both unless what you think is whatever the Ministry of Disinformation has rubber-stamped]

    Given the combined current lack of content and problem in stating preferences for anything non-mainstream, I'm starting to think that the only thing left to put on a website is a politically bleached version of my CV and a generic photo to recycle with job applications and such. Then again, might as well upload the damn thing to Monster's CV repository and start using throw-away e-mail accounts for anything, at which point nobody needs an ISP or personal website anymore. *sigh*

    Damn! I beleive I just created a second dot-com doomsday scenario... Sorry to all startups who will close shop as a result! :P

    --
    Software is not supposed to be about how to work around a useability issue. - Ken Barber
  9. Re:hmm by ambisinistral · · Score: 4, Interesting
    It is a shame that Everdense sits at +5 insightful while you, who described exactly what most blogs are about, get no moderation boost (not that karma really matters in the least).

    I don't write blogs, have read enough of them to know they are -- when viewed from the outside -- pretty vapid and silly sounding. However, most of them are really nothing more than open letters to their friends.

    To me that's good. At one time it looked like phones were going to kill the fine art of letter writing, blogs appear to be the infancy of a new style of letter.

    --

    deserve's got nothing to do with it...