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<title>Why?</title><biblioid class="uri">http://norman.walsh.name/2003/04/28/why</biblioid>
<volumenum>6</volumenum>
<issuenum>2</issuenum>
<pubdate>2003-04-28</pubdate>
<date>$Date: 2005-09-11 10:27:02 -0400 (Sun, 11 Sep 2005) $</date>
<author>
      <personname>
<firstname>Norman</firstname>
	<surname>Walsh</surname>
</personname>
    </author>
<copyright>
      <year>2003</year>
      <holder>Norman Walsh</holder>
    </copyright>
<abstract>
<para>Yes, why?</para>
</abstract>
<dc:subject rdf:resource="http://norman.walsh.name/knows/taxonomy#SelfReference"/>
<dc:subject rdf:resource="http://norman.walsh.name/knows/taxonomy#Sticky"/>
</info>
<epigraph>
<attribution>Toto</attribution>
<para xml:id="p1"><indexterm>
	<primary>Toto</primary>
      </indexterm>Where
are we going? And why am I in this handbasket?</para>
</epigraph>

<para xml:id="p2">This site exists for three, maybe four, reasons:</para>

<itemizedlist>
<listitem>
      <para xml:id="p3">I wanted to administer a web server. I'm an elected member of
the TAG<indexterm>
<primary>W3C</primary>
<secondary>Working Group</secondary>
<tertiary>Technical Architecture Group</tertiary>
</indexterm> and we spend a lot of time talking about how the web should work.
Running my own server is a way to explore the ideas we talk
about and better understanding how the pieces of web architecture fit together.
So partly, I wanted a playground for web technologies.</para>
</listitem>

<listitem>
      <para xml:id="p4">I wanted a site that I could easily and quickly update.
The <link xlink:href="http://www.berkshire.net/">ISP</link><indexterm>
<primary>ISP</primary>
	  <secondary>Berkshire.net</secondary>
	</indexterm> that
runs my other domains has suffered through a couple of ugly cracking attempts.
As a result they've pulled security so tight it's inconvenient for me to
login to make updates: I basically have to dial them up directly.</para>
<para xml:id="p5">However, the sites they've hosted have run flawlessly for years, they
do their jobs well, and they've always been heplful and responsive, so I'm not
complaining. If you put me through what they've been through, I'd be a little
paranoid too.</para>
</listitem>

<listitem>
      <para xml:id="p6">This site is an experiment in a web design paradigm that's
completely different from anything I've built before. There is no navigation
paradigm encoded in the content at all. Everything not absolutely intrinsic
to the articles is stored separately from them.
How this all works is
<link xlink:href="/2003/05/14/how">described
elsewhere</link>.</para>
</listitem>

<listitem>
      <para xml:id="p7">It's a <quote>blog</quote>-thing. I've really enjoyed writing
and publishing my travel journals on <link xlink:href="http://nwalsh.com/">nwalsh.com</link>,
and I've often thought that maintaining a diary or journal might be interesting.
I'd been thinking about putting something like this together when
Tim Bray<indexterm>
	  <primary>Bray</primary>
	  <secondary>Tim</secondary>
	</indexterm>
launched <link xlink:href="http://www.tbray.org/ongoing/">Ongoing</link>. Yeah, I thought,
that looks good. (Four stars, by the way, go read it now, it's a damn sight more
interesting than my scribblings.)</para>
<para xml:id="p8">I'm by no means convinced that I have the enough to say to justify a blog.
I can't imagine saying anything interesting often enough to make it worth your
while to visit, but you're more than welcome to stay if you'd like.</para>
</listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</essay>

