Difference between revisions of "Blog.skyrien.com"

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m (Skyrien moved page My blog to Blog.skyrien.com: better name)
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My current personal blog, maintained as a Wordpress instance since 2008 is at [http://blog.skyrien.com], which is an aggregation of previous Xanga, LiveJournal, and hosted-Wordpress instances. The timeframe currently spans 2003-Present.
= Background =
I first started writing online purely as an expression of my creative self, in 1995 those now nostalgic early days of the internet. It was 1995 and I was 10, and via MSN, which back then was a decent dial-up internet service provider (and a PC-centric alternative to AOL, with more class than CompuServe).
I first started writing online purely as an expression of my creative self, in 1995 those now nostalgic early days of the internet. It was 1995 and I was 10, and via MSN, which back then was a decent dial-up internet service provider (and a PC-centric alternative to AOL, with more class than CompuServe).


I had first gotten access to the internet and in South Korea, I became part of the 0.4% and rapidly growing share of the world that was connected to each other via the then-named "information superhighway". MSN was mostly still a published experience.
I had first gotten access to the internet and in South Korea, I became part of the 0.4% and rapidly growing share of the world that was connected to each other via the then-named "information superhighway". MSN was mostly still a published experience.

Revision as of 10:22, 12 July 2015

My current personal blog, maintained as a Wordpress instance since 2008 is at [1], which is an aggregation of previous Xanga, LiveJournal, and hosted-Wordpress instances. The timeframe currently spans 2003-Present.

Background

I first started writing online purely as an expression of my creative self, in 1995 those now nostalgic early days of the internet. It was 1995 and I was 10, and via MSN, which back then was a decent dial-up internet service provider (and a PC-centric alternative to AOL, with more class than CompuServe).

I had first gotten access to the internet and in South Korea, I became part of the 0.4% and rapidly growing share of the world that was connected to each other via the then-named "information superhighway". MSN was mostly still a published experience.