Disparity Bit moves to supersized.org

October 16, 2006

The Disparity Bit has moved from its old location at wordpress.com to a new host. The blog is still in its infancy, so I don’t need to worry about losing readers due to the move.

The trigger for the move was the realization that I couldn’t include an image-link in my sidebar widgets on wordpress.com. I also couldn’t edit the site CSS or theme without moving to a paid package. (The image I had wanted to insert was the Creative Commons license logo for Attribution-ShareAlike. S9y has a builtin plugin for CC license logos; I haven’t checked yet whether I could insert a custom image into a sidebar.)

Of course I’m not entitled to expect wordpress.com to provide any particular feature in their feature, or to provide free hosting at all. But the s9y hosting at supersized.org seems better on several counts; I’ll write more about the differences in a future post, once I’ve had the opportunity to review them from the inside.

Later I’ll post more details about the practical differences between the two hosts. (At the new blog location, that is.)


Inaugurational post

September 16, 2006

I wasn’t going to start blogging. Blogging means spending time and effort and little bits of yours soul to attract random trolls who spontaneously combust[1] on your lawn come daybreak.

If you’re good enough, you can also attract people who laud your posts and help defend them from the troll hordes. And if you’re really good, you might get insightful replies that actually add something new to the discussion. Before you get there, though, you must deal with the trolls. After all, why would one write opinion pieces on a non-controversial topic? And trolling is the greatest natural attractor of Internet conversation.

But lately I’ve been spending time and effort replying to others’ blog posts. Seeing the results, I decided I might as well post my own articles. Writing a blog noone reads is still somehow better than leaving comments on the blogs of people who don’t read them. A kind of lonely grandeur.

This blog is dedicated to Eris, the new goddess rising in our skies.

[1] I’m reminded that trolls turn to stone. Back off, people; a troll wandering into a heavily defended Internet forum attracts an amazing amount of flames. Once it’s petrified, the magic field guarding it collapses and the stone turns to lava.