1,000 posts and counting

I got a little alert from WordPress, the folks who manage my blog, that I’d just posted at least 1,000 entries on my blog. Yeah me! Except, except, it took me over eight years to get here. My first blog post was on 23 December 2013, after I’d come back from a business trip to Chitose, Japan. I’d spend nearly three weeks in travel round trip and staying there in support of a computer-generated training exercise. When I finally got back home here in Orlando I spent the following week decompressing and catching up with life before I wrote my first entry in this blog. And then I spent all that time up to this point writing just 999 more blog posts.

This month is the most prolific month I’ve ever had with writing entries. This entry, trite as it is, is my 40th for May 2022. If I’d been writing 40 posts/month over the last eight years, then I’d have nearly four times as many posts at this point in time. And even though this is my 40th for May, May’s not done yet and neither am I. I’ve got a lot more writing ideas running around in the back of my mind, and I mean to let them all come lumbering forth, every last one.

So I’m glad I finally made it to 1,000 posts. It took me long enough. Here’s to the next 1,000, and the next 1,000 after that, and so on and so forth.

plain-text internet and my attempt to slim down my website

I’ve been slowly winnowing my web site down for years, from dropping colors, to simplifying text, to dropping ads, to cutting out as many photos and images as possible. I hate over-bloated websites, as exemplified by Yahoo!, trying to use the Google landing page as my ideal. There’s a lot to be said by a site that just shows plain text, and as little as possible.

Although I’ve been thinking along the lines of a plain-text internet (or just keeping it simple) for many years, it was Daring Fireball’s coverage ( https://daringfireball.net/linked/2022/03/20/plain-text-sports ) of Plain Text Sports ( https://plaintextsports.com/ ) that crystallized my thoughts on the matter. To that end I’ve started to strip out even more non-essential items that don’t contribute to telling the story, and only add additional content to a web page that doesn’t slows down download and rendering. That means I’ll be writing more text-only posts (such as this one) going forward. When I do use any images, I intend to use as absolutely few as possible (except, perhaps, for the cats) and to make them all as light-weight as possible.

Unfortunately it looks to be a long slog. My site might look light-weight, but the amount of data it transfers is anything but. I wrote this using Chrome on my Lenovo IP Flex 5 Chromebook, so I used Chrome to give me an idea how much is transferred by this page when it’s accessed. I did this by selecting Inspect on the page, then Network to bring up a chart that will plot every element, the amount of time, and the number of bytes. I refreshed the page and discovered that my typical “light” page downloads nearly 5.6 Mb of data, and takes about ten seconds for it to fully download. In my defense it starts to display and render almost immediately, but those two numbers are horrific. What aggravates me is that the majority of that load is courtesy WordPress, not directly from my content. So I need to start looking for ways to trim things down even from WordPress’ bloat.

How to determine the size of a web pagehttps://globalwarning.blog/determine-web-page-size/