The ticker on my steemd.com profile page says I have been here for 317 days.
It has been an interesting experience.
Somehow, I feel mildly self-congratulatory because 317 days would make this the longest I have blogged "pretty much daily" since about 2004... and that says a lot about the "stickiness" of the Steemit community. I usually tend to flit around a lot and lose interest quickly.
Or web sites shut down. That seems to happen a lot.
Cutting Through the Clutter
One of the things I have really come to love about Steemit is the incredible variety of people, types of content and approaches folks bring to being here.
A type of St. John's Wort...
I also really appreciate the way many in this community seem to truly care about what's going on here... and even though viewpoints differ vastly, they generally work towards their version of "what's best for Steemit."
Except, of course, for those who don't. And who just see this as a giant cash harvesting operation and "damn the future."
Living here in the Pacific Northwest, that part reminds me a bit of the various forestry management controversies we have faced here.
My "Steemit Forest" analogy is this: If all you care about is "the money NOW" then you are just the same as the people who want to clear-cut old growth forests "because you can make more money that way" and then next summer end up whining and complaining because there are "no forests" to take your kids camping in.
Well... DUH!
Short-sighted moronic hypocrisy.
But... Getting back OFF the Soapbox
Thistles
Looking back at my posts from the last several months, I realize I have sort of gotten sidetracked by internal Steemit politics and site stewardship and spam fighting and perhaps lost track of why I signed up to be part of this gig, in the first place.
I just thoroughly enjoy blogging and writing, and I love the way Steemit reminds me of the "social blogging" platforms of old. We used to write a lot of "personal journey" content and musings on the human condition and interactive stories and so forth. Bit of nostalgia there, I suppose...
I really didn't come here to "write about Steemit" and I really didn't come here to write about "the many facets of cryptocurrency trading." I realize and recognize that these are an integral part of the fabric of Steemit, but just how many "Why are my rewards so low?" posts do we really need?
Whereas I'll be the first to admit that the rewards are really super cool (There! I said it!), they are not the be all, end all in life. Therefore....
Why Are You HERE?
I realize more and more people are going to simply answer "for the money" and alarmingly many would also have to admit that they signed up "for the money" without having even the slightest inkling of what they might need to DO in order to get that money.
Summer Foxglove
It's one of the things about humanity and human behavior that has often baffled-- and even scared-- me a little. How can you distill your life, what you are doing in it and what gives you meaning down to just the phrase "making money?"
Then I feel slight pangs of guilt over the fact that "happiness" and "enjoyment" (in work, in life) are relatively modern concepts. And if you live in a developing nation, they may not even be concepts, as of yet. I know that people of my grandparents' generation tended to put "practicality" ahead of most other things.
And maybe I am out in "left field" because I come to Steemit for entertainment and enjoyment... not because it's "work." The rewards are merely a delightfully unexpected bonus.
So why are you HERE?
I'm here to "create stuff" and "share experiences" and "interact with others."
Same reason-- ironically-- that most of us got Facebook accounts, a long time ago.
Return to "Free Form" Blogging
Wild yellow daisies
This morning, I came to the realization that I had been tossing around randomly for long enough... and it was time for me to get back to basics. Blogging. Often Personal Blogging. Not "writing articles" and not "trying to create a 'popular' post." Just plain old free-form blogging.
It's not "useful" in the sense that you can make money with it, nor can you cook dinner with it or rebuild a car engine with it... but it is remarkably "useful" in the sense that people often feel a little more connected to the greater whole when they read something and think... "you know what? I RELATE to that!"
That has its own kind of value.
To that end, I decided to become part of @jaynie's "Steemit Bloggers" community. Because that's ultimately my niche around here... and pretty much where I started out, back in February when I first arrived here.
This place is all about creating unique content (whatever that means to YOU!), sharing, interacting, engaging, curating and highlighting the best of the best.
There's that old saying "Do what you love, the money will follow..."
I think that applies here, too.
The Funny Thing About "Communities:" They are Already HERE!
As an afterthought... I have spent a lot of time here pinning my hopes on "something" to progress with Steemit as a result of the "Communities" feature-- promised in the White Paper-- being implemented.
Winter sunset...
I thought this feature would make the site more usable and more interactive.
As I browsed through the different Discord channels I have become member of, I realized that "Communities" have already formed themselves, regardless of STINC's intentions.
I think that's one of the beautiful things about people who think independently-- they don't sit around and wait for "someone" to "do something." They take it upon themselves to BE that "someone."
And so... the "Steemit Bloggers" Community is already here... no need to wait around for it to be coded into the interface. Which isn't to say that's I'm going to stop creating "misc. content," just that I found myself an umbrella to put it under.
As a result of which, you will be seeing that new footer, below, on my posts from now on.
How about YOU? Why did you join Steemit in the first place? Are you you using the site in the way you thought you were going to? Are you part of any of the many communities on Steemit that seem to have spontaneously created themselves? Leave a comment-- share your experiences-- be part of the conversation!
(As usual, all text and images by the author, unless otherwise credited. This is original content, created expressly for Steemit)
Created at 171213 15:20 PDT
Well I can say I came here to share my creativity and get a small compensation in the near future. As opposed to wasting my time in places like Facebook. You're one of the first true bloggers I met here and overall I like your style (the non-sleeping kind). I personally enjoy short, interesting blogs or posts, and lose interest in two-three page blogs (I don't have that kind of time). Overall, I enjoy the social aspect of this platform (especially commenting on long time and newer friend's blogs, I enjoy encouraging them or having a silly time). I have particular interest in many different things, but not on the technical aspects of this site (I'm much more into practicality), nor into all the money talk, and not much into the smooching I see often either (too blunt?). So this is my two cents.
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Thanks! I have been experimenting with different kinds of content, each in their own way designed to stimulate engagement and dialogue.
Occasionally I use the @zappl front end to just post brief questions for discussion, and that has still worked quite well, with some posts getting 30-40 comments and sometimes more... and then I do "long form" blogging like this, as well... because that happens to be my "natural fit" around here.
In the beginning, I felt slightly out of place because I am neither a crypto freak nor a developer... I'm simply a content creator. Doesn't mean that stuff isn't interesting now and then (I even write about it a bit) but it's just not my main fare... nor do I want it to be, and I'm not really trying to win the "popularity contest" a lot of people seem to be engaged in. Which is not to say that I don't appreciate the rewards and upvotes and stuff...
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I think it is a logic and also normal evolution that at some point we all steer into the politics/internals topic even more so when finances are involved.
Imho it is even an element of longevity too.
Why did I join? Because I loved the Steem blockchain and its potential. That I could leave all eyeballs behind from previous online gigs was a bonus. I even tentatively touched on personal blogging, and also creative writing, again.
It’s a nice bonus that we can have rather eclectic blogs, but it won’t last as always more people join. The tech bloggers are here already, the howto content spinners are having a blasts with the additional Utopian bot upvote, the news regurgitators are in cheetah’s constant line of fire.
I think we still have time and will be able to continue our (also) personal blogging but the web is recursive and even with communities, it is more than likely that we will experience a similar war for attention as the internet has experienced in last 10 years. A war with always decreasing interaction as an outcome.
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The "declining interaction" part always saddens me... but I recognize its recursiveness.
People build communities, the communities do really well so people see that and bring their bots and automation, as a result of which the communities give way to just being "oceans of information" with no personality... and then the people who brought the automation sit there and lament that "the community is gone" because automation doesn't really interact on a human level. And so, you end up with an iteration of the classic spoof "Have your answering machine talk to my answering machine," while nobody is actually HOME.
I just hope we can keep this going, for a while.
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I still hope for two things, but my hope is very realistic and thus small:
I recently wrote something about why Steem is so powerful. It has everything to do with the recursiveness of the Internet. Right now already I can see at least 8 attempts by the Steemit community at replication of Internet giants. That even before SMT technology is available.
The community of Steemit, recursive as it is in behavior and evolution (we just got our first
Million Dollar Pagepixel site!!!), is it’s main asset and Steem with SMTs is one of the strongest proponents already of the Internet3.0 (the Infrastructure Internet). A decentralized one at that.Downvoting a post can decrease pending rewards and make it less visible. Common reasons:
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"Native advertising." Yes, I wrote about something similar a wile back... rather than replicate it here, I'll just say "You're welcome to purchase an upvote, but at that moment your content becomes PROMOTED content." Here's a link:
https://steemit.com/dailydiscussion/@denmarkguy/daily-discussion-no-5-addressing-the-paid-upvote-bot-controversy-calling-a-spade-a-spade
I don't like "making laws" in an environment like this, but nothing wrong with simply "classifying" content. On all the other social sites you can pay to highlight your content... and then it's clearly labeled "PROMOTED POST."
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The thing that really hooked me on Steemit was that people seem to be more open and authentic here. I mean there are some posts where I'm left shaking my head but for the most part I feel people are really trying to be themselves and add their contribution to the community.
Me personally I want to share my life and encourage people that there is more to life than the box we've been put in. This is a place where I feel like I can really go for the gusto and be myself. With facebook, at least in my experience, there seems to be this awkwardness of posting something very deep without people really connecting with what you're saying.
So in a nutshell I get into it for the realness I felt from the people here and the depth at which people view the world. Just like you. And I wanted to be able to reciprocate that by sharing my own life.
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In our own similar ways we are what society might call "cage rattlers." We rattle people's comfortable paradigms by simply pointing out that different ways not only exist but might actually result in a more desirable outcome. People do feel rattled when their comfortable ways come into question... sometimes it is very subtle, sometimes not so much.
It has never been my hob or intention to proselytize in any way... I simply share, and sometimes that's great and something it is (evidently) seen as a threat, especially if the reality I see is that life is totally possible without the "establishment" try to desperately to please and work within.
I left Facebook (mostly) because people were simply petty and small-minded during the US election campaign... people just wanted to "point fingers," rather than "discuss issues." I watched people who had been friends for years part ways with bad blood between them... dead set on calling each other "idiots" rather than exploring the underpinnings that led to such a conclusion.
And so, I return the compliment-- I am glad there are people like you, here on Steemit.
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I started asking myself this question about 2 weeks ago...when I was considering quitting steemit. I wasn't able to achieve what I came here for, to share my fiction. It seems my random blog posts do much better. But then I thought about it and I really enjoy making those random blog posts and made a lot of friends! So I got back to steemit and after three days there was this sbd explosion which was a nice "welcome back"
I feel motivated to grow to 70 rep and 10000 followers because maybe then my fiction will get some reads, but in the mean time, it's fun making friends and experimenting with writing about different things.
And I always super excited to find a new discord channel
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It would seem to me that fiction is a pretty hard "sell" on a social media site, UNLESS you're part of a community that's specifically centered around it. That said, I know quite a few people are/have serialized their books here... most notably @ericvancewalton. I'm pretty sure there is a fiction writers' channel on Discord... I just haven't looked it up because it's not my gig.
:: pause ::
OK, so do you know @thewritersblock? That's the Steemit front account for a Discord writers' channel with 300+ members.
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https://discord.gg/8EgU8Dv <---- link to The Writers' Block.
I hope you don't mind.
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I think the reason I don't find people to read those posts is that I never feel i have the time to read fiction and so I haven't connected with those people. I should try though. I mean sure there is good stuff. You would like to think that not all your listeners are going to be musicians if you are a musician , or that not all your viewers are going to be painters if you are a painter though. I don't know that one. I don't usually have writers block but maybe I can help some who do!
I think it might be better for me than steemit bloggers, I was kind of overwhelmed with the strictness of that channel
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Is there a way to strike a balance and post your fiction here too? Or do you just feel there wouldn't be enough engagement, resulting in that dopamine low when you've put a lot of effort into something and only get 1 thumbs up...(so not talking about me, nope, not at all LOL)
Seriously though - your writing - what I remember reading on Pateron a while ago was goosebump inducing. You know - the best writers generally spend many years before gaining recognition. You'll get there, you have the talent, and clearly the dedication + motivation - - all you need now is discoveration (yes, I can make up words if I want!). ;-)
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:-) thank you so much! You are super encouraging in every possible way. I will continue to look for ways to post fiction but I no longer have high hopes for it and will only post it on occasion to see if anyone bites.
I love giving goosebumps :-)
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That's so disheartening ! I mean I guess since there are many outlets online that are geared toward fiction - with an audience who appreciates it - it makes sense. That said - remember Steemit is still technically in Beta (right?).
We already know certain niches do better than others on here - BUT think of it like the early days of YouTube...I'm sure it was similar. One day every niche on steemit could have a wide audience (which will be both good and bad) - so you could be a pioneer in carving out and establishing the fiction niche on here - also by promoting it on the fiction geared sites you are already on (you probably do that already).
It will take just one or two major fiction authors to draw attention to this platform. I get that posting fiction doesn't pay for you right now (psychologically or monetarily) - but if you have stuff you've already written, consider posting it, knowing it may not be a hit yet - but in the end it just might!
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There is a fiction community but the readers all seem to be other fiction writers. You are right, if there were two or three successful authors on here it would probably make it easier for some other writers to ride on their coat tails. I just trust at when I am getting 20 comments per post, and I'm regularly in hot and trending some people will both to read my fiction and I guess I can do that through blogging.
I just posted two paragraphs yesterday. I'm trying to release it in bite size pieces now so people don't need to feel taxed by reading a whole story.
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The internet definitely has shortened the F out of attention spans. I'm guilty of it when I'm online! Somehow, when I'm holding a book made of paper - I can usually just focus on it, and the whole world disappears. If I'm reading the same exact book on Kindle - forget it, I find myself checking sites every chapter.
I'm sure long term that's going to have an impact on the fiction of the future (maybe you'll be a Steemit pioneer !!)
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Wow ... your post is why I came back here. You took the thoughts out of my head, and spun them into a beautiful narrative or something like that. I think I left because I got seduced by the 'how can I make $$$' on here - and it made my experience an uphill battle instead of a release, and place to just muse and blog and be.
Since changing my perspective - it's much more enjoyable to read contributions like yours without looking at the upvotes and $ of peers and wanting to cry lol. The potential of Steemit is the people like you. Love the forest destroyer analogy. Whatever we make on here should inspire gratitude, not greed.
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Wow... thank you! It always feels good when it seems like I "reached" someone.
Sometimes I wonder whether I stuck to it the way I have because I arrived here with a deeply cynical attitude, having firsthand watched 50+ "get paid for content" sites go down in flames over the past 20 years. Steemit says "Get rewarded for creating content" and my reaction was "Yeah right... good luck with that-- I'll give you 18 months, and then you're TOAST!"
However, I liked the "feel" of the place... as I wrote in the post, it reminded me of 2003-style social blogging, and THAT I could get behind.
I did get involved (and bogged down) in the whole rewards/content/spam circus not because I was worried about the rewards but because the situation here was unfolding carbon-copy in the style of the last 30 failures I've witnessed... an army of spammers and plagiarists arrive, start flooding the community with automatically generated crap, driving out the REAL content, new memberships drop to zero, site dies. Except... Steemit is turning out to be more resilient than I expected. There are surprisingly many people here who DO believe in the "gift economy" idea and that we can all benefit each other. And that's pretty cool!
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I came surprisingly for the content. I believe I started in the summer of 2016 and hadn't a clue about cryptocurrency (still barely do) but a youtuber I found mentioned Steemit and considering I love to write I thought I'd check it out.
Steemit seemed to me to be a place less saturated with fake-news and the mainstream media and over the last year or so I've gotten to read a ton of awesome posts. I do love being able to search for 75 "articles" on how blockchains work or what type of cryptos to invest in. However, I love what you're saying about bringing back personal blogging because one of my favorite things about the Steemit platform is how I can log on and see photos from across the world or see the life in a teacher in Pakistan or a digital nomad in Mexico.
It's truly an awesome platform and the Steem/SBD is really just an added bonus.
-Namaste
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The content here is pretty awesome, when you consider what kinds of "fluffery" make up the daily fare on most social sites. I think people here feel less encumbered by possible fears of censorship and being yelled at and banned by other users (Reddit) with dictatorship complexes. There is a lot of really great stuff here, and the truly international aspect adds another layer.
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Yes, I totally agree - the other sites scare me with their censorship and banning protocols.. Steemit is a breath of fresh air :) it's like we can ACTUALLY be sovereign, independent adults with our own thoughts and opinions. who woulda thought?
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I admit, when I first saw Steemit, I thought about it from the money standpoint. But, if it where not for the fact that you can make money while helping others make money, I probably would not be here. that was a HUGE part of my decision making process.
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I'm all about the whole "gift economy" and "pay it forward" thing... I think the whole people-helping-people is a pretty good model, and it has certainly inspired me to "stay with it" around here.
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I'm here to restart my writing and blogging career. Right so years I was recovering from an illness and lost all interest. But steemit reintroduced me to my passion to write.
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In a way, that's what brought me here, as well... I kept "niche" blogs all along, but I missed the free form format, so I ended up here. Much success to you!
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free form blogging....good idea
HOWEVER...millenials.
anything longer than a paragraph and they loose interest
so I've come up with
ZAP.
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I agree with you in this matter.Please give me some tips for improving the steemit platform.
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Adam Smith wrote about the invisible hand
use the same principle
do what you wanna do..
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Thaks for your quickly replies..@everittmickey
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Zaps are good. Many people think in 140-character soundbytes,
Over the past couple of weeks, I have used the @zappl front end about 10 times-- pretty much like twitter, but on the Steem blockchain.
So far, good engagement.
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very good engagement.
I get the same or better response from a zap as I do from a thousand word episode of one of my books.
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I totally came here for the money, but then changed into something else entirely.
Never having been a massive social media junkie (twitter for 3 months prior to joining steemit), I have found this whole platform very interesting, and a place to express my interests, passions, silliness, and deeper thoughts and feelings...
(well, deep to me, anyway.)
My current blogs are definitely within the 'silliness' range of the spectrum.
(Hey , I'm feeling 'Christmassy' for the first time in decades, gimme a break! lo)
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One of the great things Steemit has going for it is the freedom of expression thing. That's something I'm very appreciative of, in this community.
"Christmassy?" Wow...
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I know ! weird...
https://steemit.com/blog/@lucylin/why-christmas-this-year-is-bad-for-me
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Same goes with me, but the reason why i came to this platform is to share what i have or what i know. ~ the compensation is just an added bonus. I ve been to Instagram for quite a long time, i lose interest and so i stopped. But in this platform i can see and exciting future ahead. By far, this is still the most promising social media platform that will top-off the rest. Thats my honest opinion. Thanks for sharing your thoughts about this.
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I used to do a lot of so-called "social blogging" but then everybody seems to turn to niche blogging where you focused on some narrow and typically "useful" topic you became an expert at. I did that as well, and ran a couple of quite successful niche blogs (still have them). I thought of bringing some of that "specialty" content over here... and might yet do so, because it would be suitable as part of bringing awareness of Steemit the social site to a wider audience that knows nothing for cryptocurrency.
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If you sift through Steemit you'll find a lot of those 'niche' domination style articles lol - 'finding your niche' is why the whole affiliate marketing industry is such a shit show! Remember when simply having the keywords in your domain = a 1st page google ranking? Only the sites that did were usually just full of spam.
Judging from what you have here - your niche sites probably don't fall into that category - but crazy to think they could literally be the competition!
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Ah yes, the world of keyword spam and Google rankings... attained through "Black Hat" SEO tactics. I remember it well. In Google's defense, Mark Cutts and Co. did a pretty good job of making that stuff toothless.
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Except for when your site is legit, and somehow gets buried in the latest Google updates lol. I love how we talk about it like it was 40 years ago - haha. 1 year in real life = an Eon online. But yeah, overall Google's cut out a lot of the crap (depending on the niche - some obscure niches new rules don't apply , or seem to fall through the regulatory cracks).
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When it comes to the "niche" thing, ive heard that a lot of times. I wanted to pursue a niche but a this momeny i still dont know which one yet. For now, i gona keep doing what i think i wanted to and see which one go best. Then that will my niche. I just hope that Steemit will maintain its integrity and will not get spoiled.
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Yeah - I think Steemit is the ideal place to explore whatever you want. Niches are important for websites, unfortunately because SEO is essential. You have to pay for a domain, hosting, SSL, etc - and don't have the luxury of constantly rebranding.
That's a part of what Denmarkguy was saying about Steemit as a blog community. There are a bazillion places online that are all about niches - and of course, many authors succeed with that model here- but it's nice to have the freedom.
The problem with a niche is that you have to be either super dedicated or super passionate - ideally both - because there's no room for veering off topic!
It's up to the community to maintain 'integrity' by downvoting stuff that's clearly spam. Strength in numbers. Of course, that can be a doubleedged sword when whales fund crap accounts - and they decide to retaliate...still a lot of kinks to be worked out - but I believe there's enough love here to make it work!
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This is beautiful.... We are here in Steemit because gives us freedom and gives us a new and different idea of life....
Steemit is not just a source of sustenance.
Steemit is a Wonderful life and a beautiful future...
We're lucky we were at the beginning of Steemit.
I'll be proud of the future because I was a member of this great community
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I honestly think that im already late at joining Steemit. But i also believe that we are not yet that late. I almoat say, if only i did this last year. But no, lets look forward ahead. As i said, i think this platform sa a bright future. Keep it up.
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It's not that late, really. If the spam and bot issues are just mildly contained, we have a very long way to go. There are 1/2 million users now... we could easily go to 30 million or so. So we're barely 2% in...
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Yes, I would say we are getting in at the beginning of something good... hopefully this community will keep growing for many many years!
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hopefully we will keep growing for many many years!... because this community is part of our-self now
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Sir you have explained more information about steemit.I am a new already have joined 20 days ago please some tips me how i can improve in steemit platform?
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I agree with you denmarkguy, steemit is not mainly the place to make money but to build confidence in ones carriers, meet new people, see what people are made off, advice and give hope to the hopeless. This is were we can be heard by loved friends, see places we have not dreamt of seeing... Thanks.
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Thank you-- nice to see such a positive outlook! This is-- after all-- a SOCIAL site... so it makes sense that we use it as such.
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Thanks to you too, for enlightening us.
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wish i have those hands & keep upvoting such as this creative funny post!!
Thanks for sharing this..
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Thank you @sizuka.
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great work dude upvoted :D
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Thank you!
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Looking so nice the old yellow daisies@denmarkguy
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Thank you!
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I like flower you.beautifull and lovely
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