I first posted to this blog on December 13, 1999. I had a Web site for years before that, but that was the date of my first recorded post to Irreality.
I don’t know how many blogs have been going for a decade, but when I realized that this one had, I thought it was worth mentioning. Plus, I haven’t posted in a while — even though I have quite a few ideas waiting in the wings.
When I started out Irreality, it was probably more of what you might call a “life stream” now. It has evolved into a much less personal and more technical outlet for me today. I think this change is natural given what has happened in my own life and, also, in the life of the Internet.
On the technical side, I began with a subscription to UserLand Manila and hosted it on my own server. I had been a user of UserLand’s Web scripting and development environment for several years already in 1999. I recall the jump to Manila being both exciting and familiar. It was fantastic to click “Edit this page,” and be able to do just that. I wouldn’t be surprised if most of the decade-plus blogs also started on Manila. (A few I can think of from that era are Backup Brain and Have Browser, Will Travel.)
I’m pretty sure the original server was either a Power Mac 7200 or 7500, running on my cable modem connection, with a hostname from DynDNS.org. Many years of collecting cast-off equipment were required to keep that system up and running at reasonable performance levels.
Somewhere along the way, I purchased a domain. What a leap that felt like at the time!
I finally gave up on Manila when it gave out on me earlier this decade. That allowed me to stop running the blog on my own hardware, on my own Internet connection, with my own power and so on. Unfortunately, I still haven’t converted all of my archives over to Drupal, the content management system I use today on a shared hosting environment. Sometimes, I wonder if that is for the better, but I still do aim to process that MT Import data.
I’d like to thank my wife for delivering a “happy blogiversary” cake with the requisite good humor.