2025年的博客:向虚空呐喊
Blogging in 2025: Screaming into the Void

原始链接: https://askmike.org/articles/blogging-in-2025-screaming-into-the-void/

作者反思了互联网的演变,感叹从个人博客和开放内容组成的去中心化“旧网络”转变为如今由社交媒体主导的格局。虽然承认人工智能在信息传递方面的效率以及付费内容模式对写作者的好处,但他们认为网络正在萎缩,可访问性降低。 尽管面临这些挑战,一种怀旧的博客写作愿望再次浮现。作者没有选择构建新平台,而是利用人工智能编码工具——不是为了*创造*,而是为了*简化*——将现有的博客软件精简至其核心:极简代码、无追踪器,并专注于开放的网络标准。 他们重建了自己的旅行博客,并正在更新这个技术博客,拥抱这种精简的方法。最终,作者承认自己可能“徒劳地呼喊”,缺乏数据分析,但仍然感到有必要为他们怀念的网络做出贡献。

Hacker News 新闻 | 过去 | 评论 | 提问 | 展示 | 招聘 | 提交 登录 2025年的博客:向虚空呐喊 (askmike.org) 13 分,askmike 发表于 2小时前 | 隐藏 | 过去 | 收藏 | 2 条评论 superkuh 发表于 15 分钟前 [–] 我博客帖子的主要用途是在 IRC 和论坛上链接给别人。我不需要也不想要搜索引擎流量。确实,博客已经没有了金钱或与金钱相关的持续活动。这很好。社交媒体吸走了追逐利润的人和他们为了保持在推荐引擎永恒浪潮之巅而进行的原地踏步活动。回复 noosphr 发表于 6 分钟前 | 父评论 [–] 现在 IRC 的状况如何?自从 00 年代中期以来我一直没有关注,想知道人们现在都去哪里了。回复 指南 | 常见问题 | 列表 | API | 安全 | 法律 | 申请 YC | 联系 搜索:
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原文

Posted at December 04, 2025

Before social media became what it is today I used to blog a lot. And I wasn't the only one, many people did. There was this idea of a decentralized and open web: everyone had their own little space on the web (with a selfhosted blog, or a platform like wordpress or blogger).

The internet looks very different now. People consume (and produce) more on the internet than ever before, but almost all content lives on these big social media platforms designed to keep everything and everyone inside. It feels like the web is shrinking.

There seems to be some resurgence into the old web now, time will tell if it gains any real ground. It's an uphill battle: Besides most online eyeballs now being glued to social media apps, we're seeing AI take over the way people interact with the internet altogether. Back in the old days if you wanted to know more about something you'd google the term and start going through the websites Google said are most relevant. Now AI is a lot more efficient in getting you the answer to whatever you want to know in front of you in real time. If the answer was on a forum, blog or any other website the AI will fetch it behind the scenes and summarize it for you. From a UX perspective this is the obvious direction things will continue to go.

A second problem is that of quality: people who put a lot of time in their content (and are very good writers) can now more easily get paid for their work, through paid email newsletters and paywalled websites. All of their content doesn't live on the open web anymore (but at least there are no ads here). This is probably a win for writers, as well as the quality of the overall content being produced (and read) globally, but it's a loss for the open web.

So if you have a blog nowadays with all kinds of useful information (ignoring the discoverability as well as whether other people actually find it useful), how many people are really going to read it directly? Should you still put time into designing your blog and writing good articles?

Regardless of all of this, I feel a (nostalgic) desire to blog again. I used to keep two blogs: this techblog you are reading now and a travel/picture blog called mijnrealiteit. Whenever I get this feeling, I start with updating the blog software: Throughout the years both blogs have gone through different iterations: from custom CMS systems, to WordPress instances with custom themes, to ending up with simple statically generated websites. You can find some historical posts here.

So towards an AI coding tool I turn, which have the power to write/change hundreds of lines of code in seconds with a simple one sentence instruction. AI coding tools are a widely debated topic in programming circles. They can clearly write a lot of code very quickly, and in my experience there are definitely cases where the speed/quality outpaces what a human developer can do. But there are also many cases where it writes junk (called slop) and does things that make no sense.

I actually wanted to do the very opposite of what "vibe coders" typically use AI tools for: instead of providing a simple (and vague) instruction to let the AI go crazy and build a new blog from scratch, I used it to strip/simplify my existing blog software towards the open web hygiene I value:

  • Remove all external javascript (visitor trackers, etc)
  • Remove other third party dependencies as well, like fonts loaded from Google
  • Make the HTML/CSS structure "minimal" and dead simple, with a design that works well on mobile and desktop
  • Migrate away from the unfortunately unmaintained static site generation framework WinterSmith, instead use a super simple script that just generates all pages inline.

You can find the code for mijnrealiteit on github, I'll publish the code for this blog soon as well.

It's all live now, as well as super minimal "about me" site on mvr.com. So I can get back to blogging! Will anyone actually read anything I post? I won't know since I removed all trackers. So for now I am screaming into the void.

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