I like _writing_ because it's an effective way of learning (at least for me), since explaining something is very different than "just" doing something. I don't track visitors/analytics on my blog, so I don't really care how many people read it, but it forces me to dive just a little bit deeper into topics than I usually would for side projects and experiments. I also have no problem admitting if I misunderstand something and/or that my way of describing something might not be 100% accurate, but at last it forces me to reason about it.
I find that I write a lot about my homelab these days, since a lot of the things I experiment with there are not things I would encounter at work, since they tend to be behind several layers of abstractions (think running bare metal hypervisors and messing around with ansible and zfs pools + hardware vs. getting a new EC2 instance via terraform).
I run my own forked blog template (ink-free for hugo) and have added fun little statistics - turns out, based on a pure word count, I wrote about 1.3x "The Hobbit" by Tolkien since 2016 (~128,000 words: https://chollinger.com/blog/tags/). My blog is decidedly a worse choice as far as literature goes, but writing all these articles taught me a lot.
Your first comment resonated a lot for me: "I like _writing_ because it's an effective way of learning (at least for me), since explaining something is very different than "just" doing something."
I also find writing as an effective way to learn and (for me) also writing often forces me clarify my thinking and synthesize what I've learned in order to effectively communicate my thoughts in a way that makes sense outside of my own head.
This is very true. I'm serializing a science fiction novel on Substack. I offer a completely free subscription, and a paid one (with a few extra goodies included). I have about five people subscribing for free, so someone is reading (which is really what I want) but last week someone actually bought a subscription, which was completely unexpected and thrilled me to death.
I like _writing_ because it's an effective way of learning (at least for me), since explaining something is very different than "just" doing something. I don't track visitors/analytics on my blog, so I don't really care how many people read it, but it forces me to dive just a little bit deeper into topics than I usually would for side projects and experiments. I also have no problem admitting if I misunderstand something and/or that my way of describing something might not be 100% accurate, but at last it forces me to reason about it.
I find that I write a lot about my homelab these days, since a lot of the things I experiment with there are not things I would encounter at work, since they tend to be behind several layers of abstractions (think running bare metal hypervisors and messing around with ansible and zfs pools + hardware vs. getting a new EC2 instance via terraform).
I run my own forked blog template (ink-free for hugo) and have added fun little statistics - turns out, based on a pure word count, I wrote about 1.3x "The Hobbit" by Tolkien since 2016 (~128,000 words: https://chollinger.com/blog/tags/). My blog is decidedly a worse choice as far as literature goes, but writing all these articles taught me a lot.