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  <title>Comments for I was re-reading Dan&apos;s manifestito</title>
  <subtitle>A Blog About Making Culture</subtitle>
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    <id>tag:www.dashes.com,2001:/anil//1.545</id>
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    <published>2001-01-10T05:15:43Z</published>
    <updated>2005-08-12T06:49:29Z</updated>
    <title>I was re-reading Dan&apos;s manifestito</title>
    <summary>I was re-reading Dan&apos;s manifestito today, and I realize that, somewhat deliberately, I&apos;ve never talked about why I have this site, or why I update...</summary>
    <author>
      <name>Anil</name>
      <uri>http://anildash.com/</uri>
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      <![CDATA[<p>I was re-reading <a href="http://www.lakefx.nu/manifestito.html">Dan's manifestito</a> today, and I realize that, somewhat deliberately, <strong>I've never talked about <em>why</em> I have this site</strong>, or why I update it almost every day. I still don't know if I should explain that, or if anyone even cares if I do. But  that's my name up there, so I guess I can do whatever the hell I want...</p><p>I guess I could start by saying that most of Dan's rant applies to me as well. That's probably why he and I link to each other fairly often, similar thoughts. I started running this weblog back around the time that <a href="http://www.peterme.com/browsed/browsed060999.html">&quot;weblog&quot; was first being shortened to &quot;blog&quot;</a>, but I've never been very interested in the form so much as the function. I'm a pretty extroverted guy when in public, but <strong>I'm probably never happier than when I'm reading about something new I don't know about</strong>. The only way to &quot;meet&quot; someone <em>while</em> browsing the web from the comfort of my little apartment has been the blogging community.</p><p>And that's cool; Meeting fellow bloggers must be a pretty appealing concept to me if it can get me to go visit <a href="http://www.sxsw.com">Texas</a> in a couple of weeks. But that's more of a <em>result</em> than a motivation. So why then? Well, because I like having a little place where I can put my thoughts and rants and, yes, <a href="index.php?peeves.php">peeves</a>. Last week, thanks to <a href="http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,40979,00.html">Wired</a>, somewhere around 5,000 people read my Peeves page alone. But I don't expect them to care about what is bugging me on a day-to-day basis.</p><p>However, I <em>do</em> think that a consistent peek into someone's thoughts, the parts of themselves that they choose to reveal in this sort of forum, does a remarkable job of helping to find similar minds. <strong>And that's pretty valuable.</strong> I find it a lot more fun and effective to learn from people with similar minds to my own, and I like that this medium of the web that I spend so much time working on, and apologizing for, and talking about, and arguing over, can give me something back by giving me a little digital coaster for the times when my brain spills over.</p><p>And best of all, sometimes <a href="mailto:anil@dashes.com">you people email me</a>. Maybe because it feeds my unattractively large ego, but hearing from people is incredibly satisfying: Positive feedback for me, on thoughts and writings that I would probably have been doing anyway. <strong>So affirming, no wonder it's addictive.</strong></p><p>And oh, should I add an &quot;about&quot; section?</p>]]>
      
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