Been thinking hard about blogs again, as I do every few months. I've had a website since at least 1998 and was blogging before I knew there was even a name for it, hand coding pages with dates and entries in HTML. Still maintain my website at https://gregpak.com. Still think of it as the center of my web presence, a place I completely own and control that a fickle billionaire can't easily ruin. Still wonder what it would take to make blogs take off again.
Greg Pak

Writer of over 600 comic books, including PLANET HULK, MECH CADET YU, LAWFUL, and DARTH VADER

Greg Pak

The obvious first answer is a great blog reader app of some kind. Back in the day, I didn't use an app. I just had a bunch of URLs of fave blogs that I'd run through a few times a day. But I know folks greatly mourn Google Reader. And I've tried Feedly and NetNewsWire, and they're fine! But I don't remember to go look at them everyday.

I'm realizing the real sticking point is that I just don't have that many friends/colleagues who are regularly updating blogs. Hope that changes.

Thinking about all this in part because of a post by @TheRaDR on Bluesky about the possible end of the age of social media. It does feel like it's imploding! The profit imperatives of big social media companies all seem to point toward systems that are loathe to provide the kind of moderation/safety that users really need. And so many companies want walled gardens, preventing creators and organizers from actually directing followers to their projects.
So I keep thinking about blogs. They really do solve a bunch of these issues! Of course, any blog with comments has all the terrible moderation/safety challenges of any of these social media sites. I haven't had comments on my own site in YEARS for that reason -- too much to handle. But as a place where folks own and control their own content, blogs are hard to beat!
But what would get folks to visit blogs again on a regular basis? I'm fascinated by actor/comedian Andrew Daly's return to blogging a few months back. He just started posting the kinds of little jokes he'd previously posted on Twitter on his blog. And it was awesome! But I imagine it felt a bit lonely after a while, without much feedback. https://andydaly.com/blog/
Blog - Andy Daly

Blog

Andy Daly

But what if a bunch of people were doing that and were linking to/referring to each other's posts?

Remember blogrolls? Webrings? Could something like that work again?

@gregpak those were also useful when they helped sites get crawled and indexed and this surfaced in search engines. Multiple generations of SEO and counter SEO later that’s probably much less the case.