Post by account_disabled on Mar 7, 2024 2:52:49 GMT -8
Publish Frequently Without Being Particularly Differentiated Are Almost Guaranteed to Eventually Walk Into a Penalty of Some Sort. And Each Additional Person Who Reads Marginal Undifferentiated Content Particularly if It Has an Adheavy Layout is One Additional Visitor That Site is Closer to Eventually Getting Whacked. Success Becomes Self Regulating. Any Shortterm Success Becomes Self Defeating if One Has a Highly Opportunistic Shortterm Focus. Those Who Write Content That Only They Could Write Are More Likely to Have Sustained Success. A Mistake People Often Make is to Look at Someone Successful Then Try to Do What They Are Doing Assuming It Will Lead to Similar Success. This is Backward. Find Something You Enjoy Doing Are Curious About. Get Obsessed Become One of the Best.
It Will Monetize Itself. Neil Strauss Neilstrauss March How the Iphone Brian Mccullough Who Runs Internet History Podcast Also Wrote a Book Named How the Internet Happened From Netscape to the Iphone Which Did a Fantastic Job of Capturing the Bahamas Mobile Number List Ethos of the Early Web and Telling the Backstory of So Many People Projects Behind Its Evolution. I Think the Quote Which Best the Magic of the Early Web is Jim Clark Came From the World of Machines and Hardware Where Development Schedules Were Measured in Yearseven Decadesand Where Doing a Startup Meant Factories Manufacturing Inventory Shipping Schedules and the Like. But the Mosaic Team Had Stumbled Upon Something Simpler. They Had Discovered That You Could Dream Up a Product.
Code It Release It to the Ether and Change the World Overnight. Thanks to the Internet Users Could Download Your Product Give You Feedback on It and You Could Release an Update All in the Same Day. In the Web World Development Schedules Could Be Measured in Weeks. The Part I Bolded in the Above Quote From the Book Really Captures the Magic of the Internet What Pulled So Many People Toward the Early Web. The Current Web Dominated by Neverending Feeds a Variety of Closed Silos is a Big Shift From the Early Days of Web Comics Other Underground Cool Stuff People Created Shared Because They Thought It Was Neat. Many Established Players Missed the Actual Direction of the Web by Trying to Create Something More Akin to the Web of Today Before the Infrastructure Could Support It.
It Will Monetize Itself. Neil Strauss Neilstrauss March How the Iphone Brian Mccullough Who Runs Internet History Podcast Also Wrote a Book Named How the Internet Happened From Netscape to the Iphone Which Did a Fantastic Job of Capturing the Bahamas Mobile Number List Ethos of the Early Web and Telling the Backstory of So Many People Projects Behind Its Evolution. I Think the Quote Which Best the Magic of the Early Web is Jim Clark Came From the World of Machines and Hardware Where Development Schedules Were Measured in Yearseven Decadesand Where Doing a Startup Meant Factories Manufacturing Inventory Shipping Schedules and the Like. But the Mosaic Team Had Stumbled Upon Something Simpler. They Had Discovered That You Could Dream Up a Product.
Code It Release It to the Ether and Change the World Overnight. Thanks to the Internet Users Could Download Your Product Give You Feedback on It and You Could Release an Update All in the Same Day. In the Web World Development Schedules Could Be Measured in Weeks. The Part I Bolded in the Above Quote From the Book Really Captures the Magic of the Internet What Pulled So Many People Toward the Early Web. The Current Web Dominated by Neverending Feeds a Variety of Closed Silos is a Big Shift From the Early Days of Web Comics Other Underground Cool Stuff People Created Shared Because They Thought It Was Neat. Many Established Players Missed the Actual Direction of the Web by Trying to Create Something More Akin to the Web of Today Before the Infrastructure Could Support It.