Showing posts with label Google+. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Google+. Show all posts

Sunday, November 30, 2014

Is Your Blog Dressed For the Occasion?


If your blog could talk, what would it have to say for itself? How would your blog express itself in its author bio, if granted the qualities of consciousness, for a few minutes?

The blogger has got to regard his blog the way a reader approaches a book. Sometimes, (and much of the time you’ll find this is true) the book in question might lead off the trail to explore strange routes by the standards of a real book. But I guess that's alright if it keeps the blogger’s nose to the grind; keeps him doing what he set out to do in the first place that is, keeps him blogging.

The issue is not how much you ramble in your posts, but there’s got to be a way, a term, if you please, that breaks up the rich brew into distinctive parts. And the good thing about this is it doesn’t have to be summed up in one word. A phrase might do it, maybe a sentence or better yet, a paragraph.

Theme is the apparel your blog wears. You see a guy kitted up in a soccer jersey, feet spotting spiked footgear standing in the middle of a pitch and your mind yells ‘game on!’ You see a form in swim trunks bouncing on a board and you know what’s about to go down even without spotting the pool. That same form in a different garb say, a three piece suit, for instance, bending over on that same board and you scream suicide! Having a theme ensures your viewers are aware what your blog is about.

Back in ’09, my writing instructor had said, “start a blog. Write whatever comes to mind—concentrate especially, on your personal experiences.” You could say my blog theme at the time was as long as it was broad because my instructor had thrown the door too wide open. But I had something going for me and it was the fact I had been keeping a journal ever before I knew there was a thing called a blog. And much of the stuff in my personal journal was ‘personal.’ I had written up some poetry, stuff on writing, and short personal essays. In a sense, I had a foretaste of blogging before I went online. It somehow drew a fine line between ‘whatever comes to mind’ and ramble on.
You’ve got to create a ledge to cushion the effect when you hit bottom; when the ideas quit flowing and it seems you’re only passing time on the www. Having a theme gives you focus—a sense of place when your mind is fogged up about what you were really after scribbling all those words in the first place. Another subject worth considering when making a choice of theme is your readers.

Who’s your target audience?—what sort of folks do you want swarming over your blog? And I don’t mean in terms of locality unless of course, your posts are localized. (This is the internet after all.) What’s their story? What’s the reaction you intend to get? How important is it to you to get your message across to them?

Theme is probably, the most significant topic to consider when setting up a blog besides the fact that you got what it takes to keep the pump gushing. If you’re new to blogging or maybe you’ve been around a while but your blog didn’t pan out, maybe, it’s not your theme; maybe, it’s the way you present your theme. That’s definitely, a topic for another post but meanwhile, is your blog dressed for the occasion?

Keep your pens bleeding.

Akpan



Saturday, March 1, 2014

10 Favorite Sites I Found While Googling


When I was new to the internet, I was engrossed by the internet phenomenon called googling probably, just like everybody else. I plugged words and phrases which fell in line with creative writing or literature into the popular search engine and let it go to work. Much of the stuffs I ran into on the result page were... well, search results. I didn't have much use for these but there were sites which tipped the scales and reined me in, readily. I was obliged to browse beyond the landing page. I'd like to list a few of these Googling bounties in this post. I imagine it would be the reasonable thing to do considering the great deal of insight I gained trucking with these online resources.

This is the premier online writing community and the site I ever signed up for. And it is ‘where the writers go.’ I googled the word writing. And this site was the first to come up on the result page. I was drilled in the art of writing on this online community.
This is where I was introduced to one of my favorite writers Stephen King.

Before I went deep on writing.com, I was all over this site. Steven Barnes, the owner of the site and a mentor reawakened my passion for fiction writing. Over 400 newsletters on the craft have been delivered to my inbox. There are also lessons on personal development.

I can'remember what exactly I was hunting for on Google when I stumbled on this site. But I know whatever it was don't matter anymore; I've been coming back for more since I discovered WritersDigest.com. 93+ years and still going strong, this website is always pulling new stunts to keep a writers’ creative juice flowing.

I don't know how popular Wikipedia was when I went online but I got my hands on this loaded web-based encyclopedia by googling. It’s amazing how much information I have accessed for articles through researching Wikipedia.

Now there's one website that's true to type. I probably googled the word fiction and the giant search engine coughed this one up. Did a lot of print outs too. Fiction writers can access abundance of writing resource right here.

As the name implies, you'll find information about almost anything on this site. I'm almost certain my search term included the word about. About.com goes bores deep into the heart of its subjects with its how-to articles. No dull moments here only copious party favors.

7. NPR.org:
Here's one that takes me back full circle. I was curious to know what Stephen King sounds like so I plugged the phrase “Stephen King Audio Interview(s) into the Google homepage.” I got npr.org (National Public Radio) for my troubles and my, did it pay? It’s probably, where I heard Tabby (King’s wife) mention Stephen King married her for her typewriter. *coughs*

I went hunting for writing prompts and got a little more than I bargained for. I kept coming back, too. I used some of my finds for my annual 30 day fiction challenge. You ought to give this site a shakedown if you’re stuck for inspiration. It’s guaranteed to thrill.

I know this one's really popular I could have found it without Google but I did not. A site like this one was like a dream come true for a young writer; a community which challenges writers to create a novel in 30 days was too good to be true only it wasn’t. Last year, I finally, wrote the first draft of my novel thanks to nano (or should I say thanks to Google?).

I discovered a few blogging sites through Google. My writing instructor had me search for them, signed up with a few actually. But somewhere down the line, I got stuck with blogger. This blog is one of the first I created and it’s gradually evolved into my principal platform.

Dare I say, I have been made better (enhanced seems the appropriate word) by these and a few other sites which I have withheld (or this post would be much longer and I’m not really up for that). So, what are your googling keepsakes?

Keep your pen bleeding!

Akpan


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Wednesday, January 22, 2014

The Shepherd's Journal: The Map to Atlantis


If Atlantis is history's greatest jigsaw puzzle, the Shepherd's Journal is its most coveted text.
The Mythical World of Atlantis, the
companion booklet to the Disney anime,
Atlantis, The Lost Empire

Now here's a cause for speculation; imagine that a shepherd (by all means, uneducated) and considered a lunatic in his time authored man's most elusive literary work. Disney's fictional grimoire is a bit of an internet sensation, as well. When I created an article comparing the Shepherd's Journal with Lovecraft's Necronomicon, I didn't have the slightest idea I was on to something. But here I am today to tell you the page views that post has received speak for the popularity of the two fictional grimoire of forbidden lore. (It's been viewed about 3,000 times!) And it's all thanks to Google search redirects-surfers, it appears-just never get enough of the Shepherd's Journal.

And there's the reason for this hard, short look at the mystery of the book called the Shepherd's Journal and formerly, the Scrolls of Aziz; it comes shuttling through the foyer of popular demand. At least, surfers now have an alternative text discussing the respected grimoire besides the fact it's on the same blog (well, it's my idea, isn't it?). And though this post may not be as big a hit as it's harbinger, it'll serve as a much-needed supplementary component that improves intelligence on the revered journal.

The bulk of details I'll be dribbling about has been acquired from The Mythical World of Atlantis—Theories of the Lost Empire from Plato to Disney, the companion booklet to the Disney anime, Atlantis: The Lost Empire. Every time you read the phrase, the booklet on this page, I refer to this single companion text.

It was authored by an Arab called Aziz, a shepherd who was considered a lunatic in his own time. The work itself was first thought to be the writings of a mad man, but later proved to be a detailed account of Aziz' encounter with a vast underground civilization assumed to be Atlantis.
            Aziz, the shepherd while tending his sheep, slipped through a rift in the ground and disappeared only to resurface a full two years later babbling gibberish.

The Shepherd's Journal is said to be a firsthand account of the lost Empire of Atlantis and its exact location. Formerly known as the Scrolls of Aziz before Pope Sixtus V rechristened it the Shepherd's Journal, the text was originally in scroll format before monks cut them and bound them into journal format adding illustrations to the material. It came into the hands of the monks when a Turkish fortune hunter who stole the grimoire for its value from the library in Constantinople, took ill and died while receiving treatment in their monastery. But before revealing the importance of the journal to these monks.

The Greeks were the first to study the journal and discovered the text was written in Atlantean (language of Atlantis). Solon who proposed the journal was written in Atlantean language showed the journal to Plato.
Charlemagne took the journal to Constantinople where it was stolen and ended up in Lindisfarne. The Vikings plundered Lindisfarne and took the text to Iceland. After the Viking expedition to Atlantis was destroyed Thorfinn, the sole survivor of the expedition returned the journal to Iceland.

The fictional book, The Shepherd's
Journal as seen in the animated film,
Atlantis: The Lost Empire
Vespucci, the Portuguese explorer was gifted the journal by the Mayans who considered it an honorable gift. Vespucci, after fruitless efforts in interpreting the content, took it to his friend, Leonardo Da Vinci to decipher it. According to the booklet, Da Vinci was perhaps, the first modern man to fully translate the Atlantean language. The journal documented the fact that the sun does not move long before Galileo and his companions came on the scene.

Da Vinci was left-handed, and after he saw the journal, he had taken to writing from right to left so that his notes could only be read in a mirror. Da Vinci was probably afraid his writing would be controversial, if not heretical.
            Benjamin Franklin mentions studying the Shepherd's Journal during a visit to Versailles in 1788, in his diaries.

Napoleon's troops recovered the long-lost journal in Egypt. They stored it there for a time, with other artifacts, which included the Rosetta Stone. It got into the hands of the British who shipped it to Great Britain where it was stored in the British museum. Scholars of the day thought the journal of no particular historical significance and it was given to the British library.

Ignatius Donnelly, an American senator with Irish ancestry borrowed from the British museum and smuggled it to Ireland and then to Iceland. It remained there until the Whitmore-Thatch expedition retrieved it and brought it to Washington for study. It is the same Thatch who became the grandfather of Milo James Thatch—the cartographer and linguist. Milo formed a part of the team, which discovered Atlantis in the animated movie.

You can believe any of the facts about the Shepherd's Journal so long as you keep it at the back of your mind that the journal itself was nothing but a plot device.

Keep your pen bleeding.


Akpan


Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Why You Should Google Yourself

English: The three biggest web search engines
Courtesy: Wikipedia

WritersDigest.com at a time featured/tweeted an article with the title What Agents Want to See When They Google You. I'm not sure those are the exact words but it's close enough for a working title. This post is similar to that one. Difference is what literary agents seek don't count for much in light of what you anticipate.

Search engines like Google, Bing, Yahoo, Ask, and let's not forget the giant Russian search machine, Yandex.ru, (this is one of my blog's top traffic sources) could be a lot more fun for writers and creators of web content if you know how to wield them to boost your writerly ego. You can learn a lot more about your online presence and image by reading what other users—especially, if these users constitute people you've never really associated with on any of the social networking platforms—are saying about you.

The coolest way to find out what sort of image you have created online is by googling yourself. You may have to use a different browser than the one you're used to (search engines like Google often than not gives you cached copies of web pages you've visited on the first page of search results). You might want to use a different system all together. You might be amazed what folks say about you/your blog/website. I have.

You ought to find out whether the image you've been angling to portray—the one which drove you to create a site—aligns with what readers see when they view your platform. In other words, ascertain that the idea you put on the line is what is delivered into their bosom. This is one guaranteed method to help you determine you're hitting your target audience and find out your blog/site tows the same line as who/what you wish to be identified with.

Here, a personal example, I once Googled myself and one of the search results happened to be a website that collects URLS and groups them into different categories based on each site’s primary focus. There were categories of all varieties. It had blogs/sites listed under sports, education, apps and so on. In the midst of these assortments was a section devoted to blogs/sites centering on writing—creative writing. You can guess the one that featured my blog.
Yandex Homepage

I was thrilled to know that somebody recognized my blog for what it stands for. Rather, for the impression I set out to achieve from the onset when I created it. I think it did add some to my writerly ego. You deserve to know what people around the web think and say about you or your site. And that's why you need to open your browser right this minute and get right down to work.

The results might amaze you. Then again, who knows? You might get a really good shake-up which may turn out to be the wake-up call you've needed all along.

Keep your pen bleeding!


Akpan



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Tuesday, August 21, 2012

7 Good Reasons Why You Oughta Blog That Idea!

Sometimes, ideas pop up into our minds and we don’t know what to do with 'em.
Had any peculiar thought lately and wondering if that idea is really worth blogging? Here, I present you with, not one or two, but seven terrific tips to lead you by the hand into the land of creative blogging.




1. The Internet Would Be a Seedy Place

Why would you leave a piece of info for only one website when you got a relevant message to share in a unique voice? The www is filled with info and resources because people like you and me never give up on giving what we got to give.


2. Increase Your Knowledge Base through Research

This one speaks for itself, really. The more you blog, the more you read across the web to get better ideas about what you do. The more you feed yourself through online/offline research, the more you will blog. It’s really as simple as that. 


3. Show Em What You Got

There won’t be any online research, there might be, on the other hand, but they would barely be fulfilling. If people didn’t blog their ideas, google search staffers would be out looking for jobs. Blogging your creative thoughts is another way of sharing your knowledge and getting ‘em across to surfers that need it.


4. Inspire Somebody to Write

On a personal level, I’ve read blog stories that got me so fired up I had to create something. There’s no telling who might get ideas for an article just by reading your stuff.


5. Build-Up Your Writing Muscles

Keeping at your blog expands your creative glands. You’re practically working out therefore, enlarging and stretching your creative muscles.


6. Keep Your Muse Busy

This point is not the same as the above. While point 5 is about exercising, point 6 is like trying to spark up a relationship, sort of. In relationships, a lot of sharing and communicating is involved. When you hang around your muse a couple of times you tend to sense the inward tugging of inspiration faster and with keener intimacy. I do, too. Look at the results!


7. Somebody Out There Needs You!

Or your ideas. Whichever comes first. This should be at the top of your mind every time you try to back out of an idea. Write or blog until there’s nothing left to give!

Keep your pen bleeding!

Akpan




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Sunday, December 18, 2011

Card #1: Variety ft. Nat King Cole


Nat King Cole


Although it's been said many times
Many ways, Merry Christmas to you
                             Nat King Cole,
                             The Christmas Song



If there was another way of saying Merry Christmas,
What would it be?
What feel would the phrase kick up?

A million and one times
I have pushed for something appropriate;
A word, a phrase.
Trying for variety, if you please.

If that strikes you as nuts, I won’t argue.
But I only want to shoot my message with creative force,
Mail it in over the transom.

I’m heavy with inspiration
Which don’t seem well acquainted with dialect.
Words make me inept.
I’m like storm cloud that’s forgotten how to turn its tummy.

Isn’t there someone who feels likewise?
Someone who knows the words or gestures that’s just right?
And while I’ll Google and Google, and for variety Google one more time,
Here’s a blast from the past that’s a golden gas:

Merry Christmas.


Eneh



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Sunday, November 21, 2010

Press Ctrl-D Now! (Bookmarking)






I can still remember the times when, logging on to my http://www.writing.com account, one of the very first images to load was a prod in the form of a message-in-a-square-box sort of. It was a genuinely helpful tip for members and visitors as well that said simply,

To Bookmark This Page, Press CTRL-D Now!

Bookmarks are web links saved on an internet browser as shortcuts to visited websites. Stored bookmarks display icons of linked pages, these are the buttons you will click to launch a parent URL.

Bookmarking isn't exactly a new phenomenon. But, with most browsers (I'm yet to come across any browser that operates differently) it is by far the simplest and fastest tool for linking up to a webpage/site from your World Wide Web browser. And if you would like to view the latest, most up-to-the-minute version of a webpage, you can put your bucks on bookmarks. You want to keep this at the tip of your fingers, especially if your favorite sites offer news and round-the-clock updates (like CNN, BBC, MSNBC, Reuters and so on), or it might be a social networking site (Google+facebook, myspace, twitter, LinkedIn and so on). On the other hand, linking to a website that requires you to sign in to access your account/information does not earn you automatic access when you click your bookmark icon. Instead, you will be re-directed to a page probably with an instruction like this one:

Access Restricted. Log in To View This Page.

Other sites may offer,

To view this page, you must be a Registered member of this site.
And then, Already a member? Sign in. Not yet? Sign up.

If by clicking a bookmark tab your browser bypasses the log in page and directly opens secured content, then just maybe you haven't been off the site for long and probably did not sign out before shutting down your browser. It's also possible (this is common with some browsers) for your browser to re-open a cached copy of your most recent browsing session, password or not, especially if you have set it to save your log in information (password and username).

Different people use bookmarks for different reasons. What follows are my personal reasons for harnessing the resourcefulness of this indispensable internet tool, a layman's guide to bookmarking, you might say. What website links should be saved?

Favourite websites: Google has made bookmarking an easy treat with its chrome browser's bookmark tab. It sits just under the address tab, right in your face sort of. You can opt to save only the icons, leaves extra room for more bookmarks. I have right there on my bookmarks bar, links to my favorite online writing communities, my favorite social networking sites and my blogs. I am always one click away from my favorite sites.

Informative websites/sites you frequent: Wikipedia is one website I have found myself increasingly addicted to. So here's what I did, I linked to it on my chrome now I got tons after tons of information at my fingertips. You can save yourself the bother of typing and retyping web addresses every time you visit your mecca sites by saving the URL link. I have separated favorite websites from sites you frequent because my favs is where I belong, where I find expression as a person, I reserve that part specifically for sites related to my career. My sources of information are listed under frequented sites category.

Sites worth remembering: I have lost count of how many times my chrome crashed and had to restart. My crime? Opening too many windows and tabs at the same time. Sometimes, the windows ran into four or five and each of these contained between ten/twelve tabs, so we're talking close to forty tabs at the same time. It's like that when I stumble on a page busting with fresh resources and hundreds of links all so inviting and tempting. To save myself from the heartache of losing information to browser crashes, I bookmark all the tabs in a window once it starts running into six or seven tabs and then I would quickly close the window leaving only the primary window open. I know, I can always return to the bookmarks at a later time and harness the wealth stored in my browser!

As a boost, a bookmark can be renamed to suit the website it points to. And then, you could create folders and name them after the subjects they contain. This could be a lot more fun than having to search endlessly for a saved link. A folder containing online dictionaries like Wikipedia and Dictionary.com could be tagged, Encyclopedias or Information. If you are an avid online news reader, then you can create a folder for your news sites like google news, cnn, msnbc, bbc, yahoo! news and name it, News. You can tag a folder housing way too many unconnected links so that it defies a definite categorization, Miscellany, Miscellaneous, or simply Other Bookmarks/Others.

Another method of bookmarking which is becoming more and more popular today is Social Bookmarking. If you have ever shared a link on facebook, twitter, myspace, stumble upon, delicious, google connect, google buzz blog this, yahoo and other social networking sites, you are a culprit. According to http://wikipedia.com

Social bookmarking (is) a method for internet users to store, organize, and share links to web pages.

The obvious difference between the two modes of bookmarking is this, one is on your browser in your computer, and even though you will need an internet connection to open it, you can always view the tab whenever you launch your browser. On the other hand, the other (social bookmarks) is on the web and you must be connected to reach it. On the upside, you can access your social bookmarks on any computer! All you need is your password and username/email. So, where does that leave you?

You can start by downloading one of the fastest browsers in use today and by far, the easiest to configure. Google Chrome makes it convenient and swift to bookmark web pages and with its add this and blog this extensions, Chrome makes it super fast to social bookmark and share your links with friends and family. To download Google Chrome get the link, http://www.google.com/chrome/eula.html?hl=en

Your favorite websites are always a bookmark away!



Eneh


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