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Post Made Community Wiki by Jeff Atwood♦
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Honestly? I think it's probably some combination of the following:
I'm definitely one of those developers, though. I admit it! And I'm a bad case, too, because I keep writing them over and over and over again, probably because I'd rather be coding than blogging. But the biggest reason, for me, is that the services out there really do suck (IMO), and it's hard to sit back and just accept that without imagining ways it could be done better. That's usually how it gets started. I wrote a bit about this last year actually, after quitting TypePad (it just wouldn't do what I wanted -- i.e., 2, above) and rewriting the site I'm actually, right now, in the process of rewriting yet again, for probably the fifth or sixth time over the past seven or eight years, doubtlessly for the last time:
Everyone's reasons are different, but most folks probably do it because they can. Spolsky said something about this a while back, in a podcast I think, or an interview -- something about how the first thing every Web developer wants to do is build an image-upload service. service.* Why? It's what they know. And it's something they'd use themselves, if it were done the way they believe it should be done. To be fair, though, a good commercial blogging service? That's a hard problem. If it weren't, it really would've been done by now, and it hasn't. Not perfectly. Anyone can build a CRUD app for himself, select *, sort by date, done deal. Building a good, full-featured personal-expression engine, though, intended to serve hundreds of thousands or millions of users? Done right, that's a much more complicated undertaking than one might think. * See? Told ya. |
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Honestly? I think it's probably some combination of the following:
I'm definitely one of those developers, though. I admit it! And I'm a bad case, too, because I keep writing them over and over and over again, probably because I'd rather be coding than blogging. But the biggest reason, for me, is that the services out there really do suck (IMO), and it's hard to sit back and just accept that without imagining ways it could be done better. That's usually how it gets started. I wrote a bit about this last year actually, after quitting TypePad (it just wouldn't do what I wanted -- i.e., 2, above) and rewriting the site I'm actually, right now, in the process of rewriting yet again, for probably the fifth or sixth time over the past seven or eight years, doubtlessly for the last time:
Everyone's reasons are different, but most folks probably do it because they can. Spolsky said something about this a while back, in a podcast I think, or an interview -- something about how the first thing every Web developer wants to do is build an image-upload service. Why? It's what they know. And it's something they'd use themselves, if it were done the way they believe it should be done. To be fair, though, a good commercial blogging service? That's a hard problem. If it weren't, it really would've been done by now, and it hasn't. Not perfectly. Anyone can build a CRUD app for himself, select *, sort by date, done deal. Building a good, full-featured personal-expression engine, though, intended to serve hundreds of thousands or millions of users? Done right, that's a much more complicated undertaking than one might think. |
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