One of the advantages of being on Earth for a lot of time - like more than 45 years, in my case - is that, in time, you get to see some very interesting patterns.
Specifically, I’m talking about internet - and more specifically about blogging.
The "Good Ol' Days Of Blogging"
I think my first blog post was made somewhere around 2008, and boy, a lot of stuff happened since then.
I mean, 10 years ago, blogging was incredibly simple: write some stuff on your blog, wait for Google to index your site, and then cash in big time by Google AdSense. Dead simple. That’s really all you had to do. Yes, those were the days…
But then stuff got complicated. For instance, 5 years ago, blogging meant something like this: write some stuff on your blog, then write something about it on Facebook, send a newsletter to your list, probably with a freebie that will lead to an upsell, then briefly talk about it on Twitter and then do some stuff on reddit too. And then cash in by selling some products on top of it, like ebooks or courses.
And now, with these strange thing called “blockchain”, and services like Steemit built on top of it, blogging is even more complicated. Now, on Steemit, you have to: write a post, wait 3 seconds for a witness to include the transaction in a block, then hope for some bots to see you and upvote you (if not, do some quick bot bidding), secretly pray for a whale to notice you, and then, 7 days after, get your money in the form of 2 crypto currencies, exchange them for other crypto currencies and then for fiat. All this while keeping your social skills sharp, interacting, commenting, mingling and campaigning (if you're a witness, that is).
I don’t know if you realize how complicated this is.
I call this “the over-engineering” of blogging.
Simplifying Our Lives By Over-Complicating Them
Truth is, this over-engineering doesn’t happen only in blogging. This is a rather marginal example, compared with the disruption cryptocurrencies are creating in the financial sector.
Also, the over-engineering of bogging is not good or bad, per se.
But it’s iconic for a trend we’re witnessing in all areas of our life: the technological gap.
We’re living in the middle of a technical revolution, one that, if successful, will create unprecedented wealth and freedom on Earth. If unsuccessful, it will probably create unprecedented inequality and limitation (that’s something we should be prepared for too, I think).
I wrote about it before and I will keep writing about it: the next major disruption in human history - which, in my opinion, already started - won’t be ideological, but technological.
The displacement of people from their current lifestyles (and, sometimes, from their current physical location) and the formation of new social aggregation models won’t follow capitalism, communism, nationalism or totalitarianism.
Society won’t be following a set of theoretical, ideologically correct principles. Nope. Although many of the old ideologies will be revived, repurposed and fed again to people unaware about what’s going on, and they may lead to the aggregation of small, temporary and fragile structures.
But the real gap will be technological, in which anarchy, in the sense of “personal freedom and accountability” (not chaos) will be the primary social aggregation force, subsumed to the technological advance.
The technical support for your news is already changing the world. It’s one thing to get your news from Fox News or CNN (both biased, just in different ways), for instance, and another one to get it from Twitter.
It’s one thing to get it on your TV and another to get it on your phone.
The more tech savvy you are, the better your sources of news. And, obviously, the better the sources of news, the more informed decision you’ll be making.
This is not theoretical, or fictional. This is happening right now. Entire generations are stuck behind, prisoners of the TV stations (as in technically obsolete ways to dispatch information) and their decision-making is heavily impaired.
And the technical gap will continue growing, and we will - very soon - notice others, more advanced ways to get information (intelligent interfaces, IoT, etc).
This gap will be the one deciding who’s gonna thrive and who’s gonna lose. If you’re on the frontend, you’ll adjust faster. If you’re on the other side of it, behind, you’ll helplessly notice your own, fast decay.
And for the first time in modern history, this will happen regardless of your ideology: you’ll burn just as fast if you’re a capitalist as if you're a communist. That won’t matter at all. What will matter will be your adaptation to the technological progress around you.
Why Did I Write All This?
Well, because performing on Steemit is hard. You have to do so much more than you had to do in the “good ol’ days of blogging”.
But it will also pay much more. In 3-5 years the blockchain based social media will be prevalent (wether we’re talking about centralized ledgers, like Facebook or Twitter - because yes, they’ll switch to the blockchain in one form of another, if they want to survive) or decentralized blockchains, like Steemit.
This is the frontend of the technological advance. This is the outer edge of the gap. Yes, for someone who started to blog 10 years ago this looks awfully over-engineered, and it probably is.
But that’s the world we live in. That’s where the needle is right now. And trying to move it back won’t work.
This needle can only be moved forward.
So, one which side of the gap are you right now?
I'm a serial entrepreneur, blogger and ultrarunner. You can find me mainly on my blog at Dragos Roua where I write about productivity, business, relationships and running. Here on Steemit you may stay updated by following me @dragosroua.
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You're stating that being paid on steemit is overcomplicated because you need to rely on mining, hopping from currency to currency and so on.
But let's dig a little deeper: in the good old days, you had to rely on google ads which are in no way simple, then on all the banking system that transfers money from the announcer to your bank account, and then to your bank account to that of your baker whenever you decide to use your blogger-cash for something useful.
The only difference is that the later is much better integrated into UX'd neat solutions, while UX is not a priority for blockchained DApps.
But don't worry, that will come very soon. And at that point the gap will show its best and its worst
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I have no problems cashing out with Google adsense. After Google Adsense approved the payment, I can get the money via Western Union ASAP. I just wait for the approval of the payment every month and cash it using Western Union.
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You're right, from the user point of view, cashing money from adSense, or any fiat service in that aspect, is pretty simple (unless legal matters come in).
My point is that the underlying mechanisms for adSense, western Union and the fiat banking system itself is way more complex than that of steem. Steem just lacks a nice frontend for users to think it's simple
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I'm in mid-air trying to jump across. It's not easy for a dinosaur with stumpy legs to do either!
The world will change, it always does, so I'll try to be somewhere in the mix - usually at the back of the early adopter pack.
And I totally agree with your vision - there will be high tech and there will be low tech. For the high tech people, life will be great. For the low tech people life will be hard.
The trick will be, to be high tech, with all the advantages of that, without losing sight of our humanity and compassion for those that are low tech.
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I think I said it before but I really enjoy reading your more insightful posts, they always are packed with stuff to challenge the mind and imagination.
So I presume the people that are hear commentating will be at the forefront of this technological advancement .
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I'm not sure I'm on either side of the gap. I'm certainly not managing my blogging on Steemit as you describe and, if that's what's required of me to be successful, I will definitely bale out.
It may not be relevant to what you're writing about but what's missing for me in that analysis is the role of human relationships and connection. It's what keeps me going here when things get challenging. It's what I will always fall back on if I can't keep up with technology. And I'm not sure the value of that can ever be taken from me.
If the techological needle keeps moving forward won't there come a point where people will walk away from it all and find a way to live simpler lives outside of all that? There's quite a bit of that going on already.
I just can't conceptualise a world where technology is king for everyone.
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I just thought I'd say I'm blogging more of the way you are on Steemit, and that I agree, if I have to depend on bots and whales, then it ultimately won't be worth it, because that's not viable for more than a relative few, and it's not viable for Steemit when all what I'll call the "mainstreamers" hit.
I'll also agree with your evaluation of relationships, on Steemit, or elsewhere. It's good to find our niche and help those we can and have it reciprocated with technical knowledge or whatever it is. It's the human exchange that has the most value.
re: technology is king for everyone
I think we're living in such a world, and have been for as long as I've been alive (almost 52 years). From what I read, it's been going on for quite a while.
That is, if you consider that most of what we possess and use in our every day lives is the result of some kind of technological advance. The car was considered a technological marvel when the first working model was used. So, was the steam engine before it. The bicycle, the drawn wagon, the wheel—all of it was once a wonder of Man's ingenuity. As we hurtle into a new era of blockchains and AI, and whatever else there is, technology continues on.
What doesn't change generally, is the human condition. The need for human interaction. The need for human understanding. Anything that might try to replace that will ultimately be rejected I believe. Even from those of us who don't need as much social interaction on the daily. :)
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Technology is not king, but it's the game changer now. Just try to imagine your life without a cell phone. A simple thing. You can't really. But this simple thing is unconceivable for someone born, let's say, in 1920. Very hard to conceptualize and understand. Would you say that that person is at disadvantage because of that? If that person has an accident, a cell phone can save his / her life. That's where the technology gets relevant.
Human connection is still important, but it gets "broadcasted" on different channels.
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I do see it as a game changer but not the only game changer. And, believe it or not, I can quite easily imagine life without a mobile phone. Some days I don't use it or check it at all.
But thinking about it, it would be much harder to imagine life without my laptop so it's the same thing really. 😊 Sometimes I do consider taking a complete break from it but haven't done so yet.
I wouldn't say that someone in the 1920s was at a disadvantage for not having a mobile and, yes, they do have their place.
The human connection I'm referring to is not broadcastable. I mean literal human connection. although, hang on a minute, I consider this conversation to be human connection adn this is via techonology. Bloody hell, it's a mine field!! 😁
It's an interesting discussion and when you bring AI into it @glenalbrethsen it gets even more into the realm beyond my imagination. Perhaps my mind just doesn't want to go there.
I suppose I just can't envisage a world where there won't be people living simpler lives by choice, hopefully taking the best of technology and leaving the rest.
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You can imagine life without a cell phone. But your readers, imagination apart, do use a cell phone, and you have to take that into account in your blogging habits. At least for that technology is a game changer. Or game breaker for some people.
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I'm not sure I follow you @gbd. What difference does it make to my readers whether I'm blogging on my cell phone or on my lap top? 😊
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In that direction not much (except that I would admire you for being able to blog from such a poor keyboard).
It's very important to know your readers though, and if they read you on a cell phone you should take that into account, for posting times, post length, page design...
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those old folks now get senior alert buttons...you know the old commercials "Help I fell down and can't get up."
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Things change, the value moves from one place to another.
I think it has become so complicated because normal blogs have been invaded by too much advertising, so somehow some difference must be made.
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I am waiting for the first "Steemit to the Moon!!" reply.
It cannot be far away;)
2008?
Noob!
I had changed blogging technology twice already at that time!
:))
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Amazing. Great blogger indeed you are @dragosroua . Reading your post for the very first time and I must admit you're prolific in this art.
Indeed I agree with your statement...
"This needle can only be moved forward."
Blockchain is here to stay. P.E.R.I.O.D!
Such is life.
Followed and upvoted.
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tine-o tot asa!
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Look, I'll take this any day over the Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and Snapchat BS. It's just a massive mix of insecurity and narcissism and it's impossible to tell the difference, though people are more insecure than they let on.
I'm not seeing any posts on Steemit dedicated to showing everyone how awesome your life is when it's not. And if I only blogged on my site, no one would see it. At least I usually get a few people to read my post.
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Very entertaining to compare how we used to live only a decade ago and how we live now :)
It is also interesting to think that lots of young people have never lived without the Internet :)
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Actually I think Steem is easier for the end user than other methods, I wouldn't know how hard it is for witnesses. But on Steemit the hard part is getting an audience, which is the same as on other blog sites, but once you do have traction you can write an article and almost certainly get money for it. I have seen hundreds of people who do make nice amounts on every post.
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Man, this is so true. I was sighing as I read what you're saying because I've experienced it all. Well, mostly. I started on Blogger around 2007 or so. In 2008 I switched over to Wordpress where I've been ever since. Did the works on it: created a lead magnet to get subscribers, kept tweaking the popup to get better results. And, honestly, it's just been so much work and hasn't really paid off. It's been frustrating.
I write because I need to create. I need to share. It's what I do. So, for me, it's been nice to have Steemit because it allows me to share leadership lessons and other things, which I wouldn't normally share on my personal blog. I do pray for the day in which Steemit begins to turn the corner into better material, like Medium, but we'll see. For now, I keep writing and sharing on here.
Finally, one thing that Steemit has going for it is how easy it is to write. I go to the website, the POST button is prominently staring at me. You can just jump right in. On my Wordpress blog, just logging in is a little but of a hassle. I have all kinds of security measures in place, because it's gotten hacked before, that just logging in is a stressful experience for me.
Oh well.
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You amaze me, @dragosroua. And I don't say this in the thigh-hugging way a minnow praises a whale to get an upvote. I say it truly, as someone who's been trying to write valuable content every day for a while.
You post a lot, 4 times a day on the good days, and you still have time to make your posts amazing. You write thorough, well-thought information, well-formatted, maybe with a bit of a lack of proofreading... But for as long as I've been checking out the bloggers who post a lot, I think that your blog is the one I enjoy the most.
And about your article. At first, I doubted that this is the future of the internet. Blockchain is a little slow and the internet has always tended to look for performance optimization and aesthetics. But nowadays that view is starting to change. Perhaps it's because of your explaining the way Steem works and the differences in the currencies. I don't know. But I'm getting a bit more convinced about it.
I hope at least that these months I've invested in growing my Steemit account haven't been in vain. I, like you, spend a few hours a day trying to write some content for my blog. But you're always winning at the quality/quantity ratio. I have no idea how you do it. I'll try and improve my time efficiency for that. Thank you for inspiring me.
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The first million (of words) is the hardest. After that, it somehow gets easier.
Seriously now, I really appreciate your supportive words. But, truth to be told, I'm really in this game for more than 10 years now. On my "traditional" blog, http://dragosroua.com, I wrote more than 1,000,000 words in the first 5 years. That's about 1,000 words per day, except weekends.
I wrote and self-published 10 books (a quick search about my name on Amazon will reveal them). Some of them bad, some of them good and some of them even translated in Korean or Farsi.
I know I suck at English, and this was one of the biggest "incentives" for me to keep doing it, until I get better. In my first two years of blogging I had "grammar nazis" on my blog, checking it regularly just to make fun of me. :) The fact that English is not my native language, or that I didn't have a single English lesson in school (learned French and Russian) has really no relevance here.
So, about your question: just do it.
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Thank you for your answer. I'm pumped about it now. I'm going to write a lot. :)
This is seriously amazing. My family has a publishing house so I'm immersed in books and the publishing world. Ten books. I'd go for that if I had more discipline. I need to build this up. Steemit has helped me a lot in this sense. The days I don't write are days when I don't earn anything, so if a week later I'm going to be wanting money, I need to do it today lol. That has been my motivation.
I hope that this way of thinking will lead me to be a better writer in the future, when it will be easier to just write a lot of good content, the way yo do it :P
Thanks again for the double inspiration. I feel like I earned a lot from your words.
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"Simplifying lives by over-complicating them" nails it from my point of view.
More complexity behind a system naturally entails more potential weak points. I think Humanity is making itself too heavily reliant on technologies without having in store any plan B. Imagine how much stress it causes for people already when their mobile phone with all their data on it malfunctions.
There is just ever more information people need to consider and take care of in whatever it is, overtaxing the brain's capacity, hence requiring the execution of more and more "commands" to keep everything in place, like a machine which repeats motion sequences over and over according to a certain code. This again leads to overdrive of certain parts of the brain yet inactivity of others, making them rudimentary like a whale's feet. These inactive parts are mostly the ones responsible for our creativity, the absence of which in turn aggravates the conception of ideas for a plan B if this should ever be necessary...
But ok, it is the way it is :)
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This is a very rich post. First...
I didn't know that before now. Well, it all happens in a flash.
That is also very correct. For example, no one gets to know the details of cryptocurrency on the world news. Even real technological advancements and breakthroughs may just be summarized, maybe after the whole experiment and production has been completed. Details are always gotten on the internet - A personal thing.
Even technological companies that refuse to do advance research will eventually be thrown off balance. This is evident for example with the change from java phones to blackberry/android. Soon, I see a new technology of mobile devices springing up, so those android companies that refuse to invest on research might be thrown out of market by then.
Technology is growing so fast, we are probably going to move from nanotechnology to picotechnology soon.
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A lot of people just "blog for the sake of blogging." It's like the Underpants Gnomes' plan. Step 1: Steal underpants. Step 2: ? Step 3: Profit; Step 1 on the Internet is "blog". I've seen lots of real world businesses go damned far on word-of-mouth alone. The best marketing you can do is to go out and do your damned job for your customers, be a pro, be recognizable. If you do a good job and look good while you do it, people will talk about you. They will. They really can't help themselves. Writing about "society's (or whatever's) problems" and "maybe how to solve them" is not really a job, and nobody's going to tell their friends about you no matter how good you think you are at writing. Believe me. I tried. Now I work on motorcycles. And I write about them. Sometimes I even get paid for it!
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I remember blogging 12 years ago myself. Ah, those halcyon days of Adsense revenues. Funny thing is, you mention how difficult it is to blog on Steemit, but it's even more difficult out there in the real world.
Ten Steps to Blogging Success
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blogging is only for professionals now its gonna be very hard to get rank
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The world is changing very fast in our day and it is like this in every point of life not just blogging
We are now in the begging of the crypto revelation which give much more freedom to the simple man
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Welcoming new technological challenges and improvements will certainly help to close the gap.
One needs to be perceptive and unorthodox to survive in this era..
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Hopefully someday users will decide what should be trending on steemit and not the bots.
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I do feel a disadvantage at times not being a computer programmer.
Steemit is a great place for people like me to thrive and meet others of like mind wanting to write and create.
I will leave you with that...haha!
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Been there, worked hard to get one at the end of my uni. Felt great :) Played Civilization (a horrible game at that time) for 24 hours in a row :))
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I resist getting into computer games because I know that would be all I would do. lol
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Over-engineering is a good term for it. I never got into blogging before Steem, because I didn't want to commit to regular content creation. As it happens, I'm not great at that on Steem either, but at least I can comment!
You have to do something exceptional if you want exceptional results!
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I haven't thought of it this way:
Speeding up and technological boom are obvious, but it's very interesting when you actually take a step back and look at the broader picture.
Your time-travel to highlight evidence of over-complicating a niche over a short time span is very vivid in the eyes of anyone who lived at least in part these transformations.
Taking this one step forward, I remember someone saying (not sure exactly who), that we will willingly and eagerly want to become cyborgs. The process would be seamless, because nanites will be developed to improve our health, memory, etc. Just another potential leap we may or may not be prepared for.
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is to say that before it was much more comfortable to charge and upload blog
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You're from the old school, my friend. regards
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Yeah you can say Fox News and CNN are both biased, but I think more irrational biase is coming from CNN.
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This is very excellent. Thank you for sharing
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our life here and there is so keen to our present moment..am so much happy to see you share this with us @dragosroua
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Thank You so much for creating steem.suply, great idea You had. You right from 2008 things about blogging have changed. Steemit is good platform to evolve, and to learn
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thank you for this information. I did not know that in 2008 the blog was easier than today.
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you have great experience but blogging is even more complicated nad i have starting yet! steemit give us great opportunities!
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you are on the game in blogging because you have learnt a lot from the beginning and have shared the time just make better with competition
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