I wonder if anyone else is aware of this service. It looks fun. Hopefully, it can be for whatever I'm into, fannish or not. Most otaku on the Japanese side of fandom would usually use Privatter or Fusetter for reasons like privacy and common courtesy—both of which I find lacking in English-speaking fandom communities. When their main goal is engagement, it's just not a thing. During these past few years I find myself pulling away from this group at large. I don't want to be noticed. But I do want to be seen.
Does that make sense? I changed the theme to make it a little special. I wrote a little more to fill it with my thoughts better. If I wanted this to be private, I have a journal at home. But whenever I type out a thought and publish it on the Internet, I obviously want it to reach somebody.
These days, these thoughts tend to spread a little too much.
I'm afraid of my thoughts leaving my audience, but it's a silly thing to worry about when I haven't even found my audience yet. The internet wasn't always this loud. I'm so used to lurking. Privacy doesn't drive sales, so none of these blogging platforms offered by the West let you protect posts with a password. They would offer to do it if you paid up, though. Clothes aren't free.
This is me trying on free clothes.
Header 1
Header 2
Header 3
Bold. Italic. Strikethrough. This is highlighted text. Not sure what I'll use it for yet. It's hard to highlight more than one word on mobile.
This isn't a very organic way to try these features out. Admittedly, I just think the UI is cute. I think anyone can see that from how long I've been writing on this page.
This is the coffee I had yesterday.
You can lock elements, but I'm not sure who that's for. People who tend to accidentally a whole paragraph, I guess?
Another page apparently.
Wow. But I don't have to publish it separately, I think? Is it a sub-page?
I'm not going to make you read another page. No one's here for that.
Let's end this with something old school.
Mood: groggy
Watching: When Life Gives You Tangerines
Listening: Sofia Isella
Reading: AI Engineering by Chip Huyen