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    <title>100DaysToOffloady &amp;mdash; Normand</title>
    <link>https://blog.gemnoc.ca/tag:100DaysToOffloady</link>
    <description>My little corner of the Fediverse / mon petit coin du Fédivers</description>
    <pubDate>Tue, 14 Apr 2026 22:11:52 -0400</pubDate>
    <item>
      <title>[EN] Personal Blog Redux, Part I - Or What Not To Do When Starting Your Blog (Apart From Avoiding Stupidly Long Blog Titles)</title>
      <link>https://blog.gemnoc.ca/personal-blog-redux-part-i-or-what-not-to-do-when-starting-your-blog-apart</link>
      <description>&lt;![CDATA[As I mentioned in my introductory blog post, this is not my first time at blogging. It&#39;s my third try! Today I&#39;m talking about my first (failed) try, and what lessons I learned from the experience. !--more--&#xA;&#xA;The Genesis&#xA;&#xA;Twelve years ago, I was into webcomics. I had a long list of webcomics I read daily, it would take me at least half an hour to go over them all. In my childhood (and through my teens), I used to draw a lot, and my dream was to be a cartoonist. But while I could draw, I never had any genius comic ideas (or so I thought), and I always deemed my friends&#39; ideas not good enough. The reality is, I have a big perfectionist streak, and I have a tendency to be very critical of myself first, and others second (I am more forgiving of others&#39; efforts than mine). This has often prevented me from going and actually doing things.&#xA;&#xA;So then, I had just quit my job in Montréal and moved back to my (smaller) home city. I was on a semi-sabbatical, doing remote freelance work on-and-off, and I had time on m#100DaysToOffloady hands. I had this one idea I thought was good enough to finally act upon: I would make a webcomic based on my cat.&#xA;&#xA;The Project&#xA;100DaysToOffload&#xA;Anyone who lives with a cat (believe me, there are no cat owners) will have stories to tell about their companion. I thought I could tell funny ones people could relate to. Feedback from family was enthusiastic. So I started planning my webcomic:&#xA;&#xA;It would be a typical three-panel or more comic strip, with the punchline in the last panel&#xA;It would be based on the WordPress blogging engine&#xA;It would use a webcomic-specific extension to provide navigation arrows to go back and forward through strips without having to scroll down&#xA;&#xA;It would take me a year of mostly procrastinating to finally launch it. I registered a domain name. I registered with a shared web hosting service. I installed WordPress, searched for WP customization, extensions. Registered on a forum to get help on setting up a webcomic extension (made friends with a professional French cartoonist, which was very cool). I made a list of strip ideas.&#xA;&#xA;And so, my webcomic was finally online. But as I didn&#39;t have any content to publish, I posted a placeholder or two, among them an old gaming-related comic strip I had made 12 years before for a computer club&#39;s monthly zine. I posted a few sketch studies trying to define my webcomic style. As a joke, I posted a &#34;false start&#34; strip, where I finally introduced my character... But it actually wasn&#39;t! (Older readers will instantly recognize this emblematic comic character - copyright holders, please don&#39;t sue me!)&#xA;&#xA;False Start&#xA;&#xA;(Translated from French:)&#xA;&#xA;  “And now, here&#39;s the one we were all waiting for... Here&#39;s”&#xA;  “... FELIX!”&#xA;  “- Uh, no, he&#39;s not the one we were expecting!”&#xA;  “- Really?”&#xA;  “- Not at all!”&#xA;  “- Ah.”&#xA;  (“- Also, the other one isn&#39;t being paid...”)&#xA;  (“- Riiight!”)&#xA;  “Sorry! Casting error! Don&#39;t call us, we&#39;ll call you!”&#xA;&#xA;And... that was it. I let my blog fizzle and die. My blog had been online for eighteen days.&#xA;&#xA;After three years of neglect, I finally pulled the plug.&#xA;&#xA;What Happened?!?&#xA;&#xA;I spent all my energy on building the website and forgot to work on the most important thing: the content. When my website was close enough to what I wanted, I was fed up with it all, and I had no more motivation to actually work on the comic strips.&#xA;&#xA;Conclusion&#xA;&#xA;What I took away from this experience was that I was obsessed with the medium, when I should have cared about the message. (I guess that means I disagree with Marshall McLuhan. :-P )&#xA;&#xA;Rather than starting working right away on the website, I should have started with the webcomic itself! Defining the drawing style, putting ideas to paper, and most importantly, building up a buffer of comic strips ready to go. All crucial things I hadn&#39;t bothered doing.&#xA;&#xA;Among other things, this is one of the reasons why I chose WriteFreely for this blog&#39;s engine. I don&#39;t want to spend time on configuration, customization, a custom banner, custom CSS and what not. I want to focus on the content.&#xA;&#xA;So, I modestly offer this advice to anyone who wants to start a blog or any project, really: don&#39;t lose sight of what you were aiming for in the first place. Stay focused, don&#39;t get sidetracked! And foremost, content is what matters.&#xA;&#xA;Thanks for reading, kuddos if you made it to the end!&#xA;&#xA;This post is day 2 of my #100DaysToOffload challenge. If you want to join in, visit the 100 Days website.&#xA;&#xA;tags : #EN, #100DaysToOffload&#xA;]]&gt;</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As I mentioned in my introductory blog post, this is not my first time at blogging. It&#39;s my third try! Today I&#39;m talking about my first (failed) try, and what lessons I learned from the experience. </p>

<h2 id="the-genesis">The Genesis</h2>

<p>Twelve years ago, I was into webcomics. I had a long list of webcomics I read daily, it would take me at least half an hour to go over them all. In my childhood (and through my teens), I used to draw a lot, and my dream was to be a cartoonist. But while I could draw, I never had any genius comic ideas (or so I thought), and I always deemed my friends&#39; ideas not good enough. The reality is, I have a <strong>big</strong> perfectionist streak, and I have a tendency to be very critical of myself first, and others second (I am more forgiving of others&#39; efforts than mine). This has often prevented me from going and actually doing things.</p>

<p>So then, I had just quit my job in Montréal and moved back to my (smaller) home city. I was on a semi-sabbatical, doing remote freelance work on-and-off, and I had time on m<a href="https://blog.gemnoc.ca/tag:100DaysToOffloady" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">100DaysToOffloady</span></a> hands. I had this one idea I thought was good enough to finally act upon: I would make a webcomic based on my cat.</p>

<h2 id="the-project">The Project</h2>

<p><a href="https://blog.gemnoc.ca/tag:100DaysToOffload" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">100DaysToOffload</span></a>
Anyone who lives with a cat (believe me, there are no cat <em>owners</em>) will have stories to tell about their companion. I thought I could tell funny ones people could relate to. Feedback from family was enthusiastic. So I started planning my webcomic:</p>
<ul><li>It would be a typical three-panel or more comic strip, with the punchline in the last panel</li>
<li>It would be based on the WordPress blogging engine</li>
<li>It would use a webcomic-specific extension to provide navigation arrows to go back and forward through strips without having to scroll down</li></ul>

<p>It would take me a year of mostly procrastinating to finally launch it. I registered a domain name. I registered with a shared web hosting service. I installed WordPress, searched for WP customization, extensions. Registered on a forum to get help on setting up a webcomic extension (made friends with a professional French cartoonist, which was very cool). I made a list of strip ideas.</p>

<p>And so, my webcomic was finally online. But as I didn&#39;t have any content to publish, I posted a placeholder or two, among them an old gaming-related comic strip I had made 12 years before for a computer club&#39;s monthly zine. I posted a few sketch studies trying to define my webcomic style. As a joke, I posted a “false start” strip, where I finally introduced my character... But it actually wasn&#39;t! (Older readers will instantly recognize this emblematic comic character – copyright holders, please don&#39;t sue me!)</p>

<p><img src="https://gemnoc.ca/lutim/XGa5byez" alt="False Start"></p>

<p><em>(Translated from French:)</em></p>

<blockquote><p>“And now, here&#39;s the one we were all waiting for... Here&#39;s”
“... FELIX!”
“- Uh, no, he&#39;s not the one we were expecting!”
“- Really?”
“- Not at all!”
“- Ah.”
<em>(“- Also, the other one isn&#39;t being paid...”)</em>
<em>(“- Riiight!”)</em>
“Sorry! Casting error! Don&#39;t call us, we&#39;ll call you!”</p></blockquote>

<p>And... that was it. I let my blog fizzle and die. My blog had been online for <em>eighteen days</em>.</p>

<p>After three years of neglect, I finally pulled the plug.</p>

<h2 id="what-happened">What Happened?!?</h2>

<p>I spent all my energy on building the website and forgot to work on the most important thing: <strong>the content</strong>. When my website was close enough to what I wanted, I was fed up with it all, and I had no more motivation to actually work on the comic strips.</p>

<h2 id="conclusion">Conclusion</h2>

<p>What I took away from this experience was that I was obsessed with the <em>medium</em>, when I should have cared about the <em>message</em>. (I guess that means I disagree with Marshall McLuhan. :-P )</p>

<p>Rather than starting working right away on the website, I should have started with the webcomic itself! Defining the drawing style, putting ideas to paper, and most importantly, building up a buffer of comic strips ready to go. All crucial things I hadn&#39;t bothered doing.</p>

<p>Among other things, this is one of the reasons why I chose <em>WriteFreely</em> for this blog&#39;s engine. I don&#39;t want to spend time on configuration, customization, a custom banner, custom CSS and what not. I want to focus on the <em>content</em>.</p>

<p>So, I modestly offer this advice to anyone who wants to start a blog or any project, really: don&#39;t lose sight of what you were aiming for in the first place. Stay focused, don&#39;t get sidetracked! And foremost, <strong>content</strong> is what matters.</p>

<p>Thanks for reading, kuddos if you made it to the end!</p>

<p><em>This post is day 2 of my <a href="https://blog.gemnoc.ca/tag:100DaysToOffload" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">100DaysToOffload</span></a> challenge. If you want to join in, visit the <a href="https://100daystooffload.com/">100 Days website</a>.</em></p>

<p>tags : <a href="https://blog.gemnoc.ca/tag:EN"><a href="https://blog.gemnoc.ca/tag:EN" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">EN</span></a></a>, <a href="https://blog.gemnoc.ca/tag:100DaysToOffload"><a href="https://blog.gemnoc.ca/tag:100DaysToOffload" class="hashtag"><span>#</span><span class="p-category">100DaysToOffload</span></a></a></p>
]]></content:encoded>
      <guid>https://blog.gemnoc.ca/personal-blog-redux-part-i-or-what-not-to-do-when-starting-your-blog-apart</guid>
      <pubDate>Mon, 08 Jun 2020 20:53:14 -0400</pubDate>
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