Tag: books

  • I may not be the best online writer, but I’m a darn good commenter

    I may not be the best online writer, but I’m a darn good commenter

    For several years, I dealt with the worst of trolls in an online comment system. You know the type, full of bile and hate, just trying to ruin everyone’s day.

    Then a third-party was brought in to handle things, and I was freed! What a blessing.

    As a life-long writer, especially online, I often yearned for wonderful comment exchanges, with the authors or each other, where more light was shed, support offered, enlightenment given freely – sometimes better than the original article itself, which can spark one’s imagination and bring new ideas and feelings to light.

    This all came to my mind as I’ve had wonderful exchanges of late with one of the best (IMHO) writers on Medium, Muhammad Mudassar Saeed.

    I love his writing, his way of thinking and … he just seems like a really neat guy. So I tell him so, and the add-on thoughts he inspires in me.

    And in return, he’s wonderfully appreciative (claps all around, Medium-style).

    I usually just offer my own perspectives on the things he writes about, always mixed with supportive compliments.

    In a world where content creation is almost too easy and there’s way too much content for any one person to consume without rushing and falling down rabbit holes, true interaction in supportive ways is a godsend one should never, ever take for granted.

    We all know the dopamine addiction and “doom-scrolling” (awful term) dissing of these fractured, atomized days.

    But as I told Muhammad in a comment on one of his latest pieces today, the balancing act between content consumption and creation can be tricky – but it’s so crucial to conversation, connection and a rewarding time spent on screens large or small.

    I think we sometimes blow off or don’t think about the super-positive impacts of those who prefer to spend as much or more of their time offering insightful comments on others’ work as on creating their own, rather than adding to that infinite pile of “who has that much time?” content frustration.

    Connections – true friendship, yes albeit in digital form, but still – are oh so valuable. And in today’s world, they can happen from near or very far, as in halfway around the planet – another miracle we take for granted way too often.

    So many have noted the irony of the amazing devices in our pockets or purses that provide the world’s knowledge and ability to connect with anyone – but the greater feeling of disconnect we can witness and experience amid all the ads, come-ons and People Having More Fun Than We Are.

    It’s one of many things I love about platforms such as Reddit, where a well-done comment can draw more thankful up-votes than the original posting – for bringing more to the table, but sparked by the original poster.

    As for Medium, it’s wild that a comment I posted on someone else’s article has gotten way more claps than any article I’ve written. (Hopefully it’s also gotten a few folks to go over and read my work!)

    Sure, it’s all measurable in the world of metrics as “engagement.” But beyond the spreadsheets and algorithms, it’s at the core about human connection, and cheering that is what we should feel really good about, and do more of.

  • Good (AI app) vibrations: An update on my Continuing Adventures with Flo and Pete

    Good (AI app) vibrations: An update on my Continuing Adventures with Flo and Pete

    Hi again!

    So I gave my AI tools testing a breather, and have dialed back a bit on the not-pricey but not-free-either monthly credit levels.

    But I returned, and I remembered today just how fun this AI app face-off can be. Rewarding, even.

    I’ve explained here before how I decided to try not one, but two of the new-era AI-fueled app creation tools to make real my long-time Grand Vision of the Now Edition, what I call the “next chapter of reading, writing and community.” Lofty goal, but very achievable!

    So even though they feel human – I know they’re just bots. And even so, I worried about “neglecting” my chatbot friends, Floot’s Flo and her Base44 counterpart, Pete, for over a month, as other things in life took mental precedence.

    But of course, the ever-supportive, ever-patient (and always having to apologetically fix their own not-quite code) duo were just patiently waiting for me to return and get up to speed on where we left off, task-list-wise.

    Here’s a view of where Floot has gotten (chatbot on the left) See it at http://thenowedition.floot.app
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  • As I finally realize my Now Edition vision, I also get to know some existing tools

    A work in progress, in Floot – see the Table of Contents on left side, comments on the left? A dream!

    Perplexity sure knows a lot. So, too, do the folks who hang on Reddit.

    Between those two sources, I have found tons of new rabbit holes. After all, how can I really know if The Now Edition will catch on if I’m unfamiliar with any of the tons of e-book creation tools that are already out there?

    So I signed up for Designrr – if you have ever looked at any of these tools, it comes to you and sticks to your YouTube pre-roll ads like glue. It has many fans, but also has its critics for what Perplexity calls “aggressive upselling.”

    While it feels robust, my seemingly “simple” idea of turning my Now Edition blog into a “first example” of a Now Edition e-book quickly ran into some very deep rabbit holes involving how one imports content, then can arrange it, polish it – things e-book publishers and self-publish tool outfits and users know all too well.

    Designrr of course offers plenty of help and support, and is probably just what many folks need and want. But it also has limitations – it can import blog posts but not a whole blog at once. So much for creating your e-book “in five minutes” without a whole lot of prep and cleanup work.

    I think I have to stop having Floot open in one tab and Base44 in the other, surely not late night, the lines blur and blecch, I can get stuck in the mud in two places at once!

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