It Has Been a Long Ride: Today is my 5th Anniversary of Joining Steemit
Taking a momentary sidetrack from my usual blogging fare to mark the fact that today represents the 5th Anniversary of when I first discovered this place!
January 29th 2017. Wow...
As I have probably mentioned before I found Steemit completely by accident.
A friend of mine on Facebook had sent me a link to an article because we were both reading up on various private initiatives relating to Universal Basic Income. So he sent me a link to "some article" with the question "what do you think of this?"
I didn't actually think very much of it, but to make a long story short... it turned out that that particular article had been published by somebody here on Steemit. And what really hooked me — and remains testament to the importance of engagement — was the fact that at the end of the article there was some very intelligent and respectful discussion in the comments section.
I thought to myself "wow, these people are actually having an intelligent discussion, they're not just flaming each other with opposing viewpoints!" And I learned that you could click on a user's name and end up on a page that showed what they had published, both in terms of content and comments... and I did precisely that with a couple of the people who left more relevant and eloquent comments.
At that point I still had absolutely no idea what this "Steemit" thing was, but I was a little surprised that I'd never heard of it because I considered myself pretty plugged into lot of blogging venues and places where people would post their creative content.
I ended up creating an account primarily because I wanted to leave comments on several very intelligent posts I had read. And that was pretty much the first moment at which I became aware that this was a blockchain based platform and it was centered around rewarding content creators with cryptocurrency.
To be honest, I was a little miffed that account creation was not "instantaneous;" my account had to be manually approved. Or something like that...
It didn't put me off too much, though... as a fairly prolific writer, I was quite familiar with venues that literally "checked your references" before granting people an account.
I like to tell the preceding story because it illustrates (A) that there really is no marketing that could possibly have reached me and (B) the importance of sharing our content externally as a way to help the user base of Steemit grow.
So now it has been five years, and there have been lots of changes in the course of those five years.
I've seen seven cent Steem and I've seen eight dollar Steem. Most of the time, I must confess, I have really been more interested in the content creation part of the equation than in the earning rewards and cryptocurrency part of the equation. Perhaps that sets me somewhat apart from the majority of users here but I think it's mostly a reflection of my lifelong love of writing.
But I have definitely been rewarded for being here and so the whole "Better Life as a result of Steemit" could definitely be applied to me as well, in so far as the only times I have actually powered down was once to buy a new set of tires for our truck — which was utterly amazing — and a second time powering down to pay our property taxes so we wouldn't lose our house... which was also utterly amazing so thank you for that!
Those five years have been rather turbulent haven't they?
A lot of people have come and gone, very few of the people who were around when I started here are still around today, sadly.
We have had everything from botched hard forks to rewards pool rape to trolling spammers to downvote wars to the fork that actually split the community in two… and yet there seems to be a remarkable resilience in this community that I have not generally seen on other blogging platforms.
I have no idea what the next five years will hold. But I hope it's something good!
I have no idea whether this will even be a content creation venue in five years from now. But as long as it is, I plan to continue writing and publishing my thoughts here on a regular basis.
Thanks to everybody who has followed me and engaged with my content over the years! I appreciate the connections and the support and the encouragement and even your friendship. Here's to another five years!
Thanks for stopping by and have a great remainder of your weekend!
How about YOU? How long have you been part of this community? Is this your first blogging experience, or are you an "old pro" at this? Do leave a comment — share your experiences — be part of the conversation!
(All text and images by the author, unless otherwise credited. This is ORIGINAL CONTENT, created expressly for this platform — NOT A CROSSPOST!!!)
Created at 20220129 15:32 PST
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2017... it doesn't seem that long ago yet to many of us it really is a lifetime.
Despite having no knowledge of Steemit when the Hard Fork happened, I sometimes look at some of the posts from around that period and I wonder what Steemit could be now if people had worked together instead of against the unknown of Justin Sun.
Hard to say, isn't it? Mind you, Steemit had plenty of problems before Justin came along and rocked the boat; the utterly hapless Steemit, Inc. (including "Ned's Hair!") that couldn't ever get anything done to save their lives... I do ponder that, sometimes... and wonder if there might not have been a fork, anyway but by people simply were tired of the pervasive inaction.
At least now we're starting to see at least a little development coming from some of the witnesses; there is not "they" that will make this place magically work, there is only us...
Thanks for stopping by!
I look at Hive and am impressed by the quality of content - the main reason you joined Steemit in fact and then I see things like this
Where a "friend" downvotes content for some pathetic reason. I'm pleased that we don't have that here.
And me 🙂
Ah yes. that's right... you're a coder, as well!
Hive is doing well because they are building stuff that generates demand for the token, which in turn also drives the activity level on the blogging side. The success of Splinterlands had a huge impact; for a while they alone were generating 5,000-10,000 new signups a day with people who were gaming, not blogging... but they all needed to buy Hive tokens to get game assets. Within the next couple of months the SPK Network (A YouTube-ish thing) and the Ragnarok game will come online and likely have similar impacts.
It makes me happy the Xpilar is doing DeFi because it's diversified use of the chain... and I say that as a dedicated blogger.
I don't understand how any of the Splinterlands add-ons work. Am I correct in thinking that players can mine / win tokens by playing the game? It'd be great if somebody much smarter than me could develop something like that on Steem and give us another lease of life.
It does make me wonder though... if there are so many different methods to earn Hive, will that reduce the reward pool for the blogging side of things and perhaps give Steem the potential to be the primary write-to-earn platform again?
I don't understand DeFi either!.
A lot of this stuff is really "above my pay grade!"
As best I understand it... meh...
Hive is becoming more and more like Ethereum: a "utility" token. With Splinterlands, you need Hive to buy game assets, or rather, to buy the game tokens that run the game. You don't earn Hive from playing Splinterlands, you earn Dark Energy Crystals (DEC), Splintershards (SPS) which is the governance token... but it all runs on the Hive blockchain. A bit like Pancakeswap is its own little world (speaking of DeFi) but it runs on the Binance Smart Chain, and you need BNB tokens enter and exit.
The Hive tokens behind Splinterlands exist independently of the game; you just have to have some as HivePower in order to have enough resource credits (which we have here on Steemit, as well) to be able to do much. Hence, these dApps essentially lock up tokens, thereby reducing the "market float," which tends to lift the price. In the first 8 weeks of Splinterlands, something on the order for 40 million Hive left exchanges and more or less were "locked up" in account creation and purchasing game assets.
I think the best thing Steemit can do for itself — at least in the first iteration is to "re-imagine" itself with a new "more 2022" front end and a marketing effort that pitches that this is a "new and improved" Steemit for bloggers and content creators.
I think I understand, thanks for explaining 👍🏼
I need to make more progress with the front-end - life keeps getting in the way so I haven't been able to spend any meaningful time on it recently. What I have decided though, is that I can mute all of the spammers and those abusing the system from my front-end so that Steemit can appear to be much more savoury than it really is. I very rarely look at the main news feed these days but when I do, it looks like half of the content is spam and crap getting auto-upvotes. Steemit needs a good, old fashioned clear out where accounts are ruthlessly deleted.
5 years. Wow! This is a considerable period of time. You can be considered a respected veteran here. You have seen everyone and everything on this platform. And all the time you are constantly finding topics for new posts.
Do you think Steemit looks promising now?
Thank you!
I'm thinking Steemit is just starting to find its own feet and identity in a post-Justin Sun format, and some of the developers and witnesses are just starting to experiment with doing things without waiting for Steemit, Inc. to be the driving force. And that's a positive development.
Well, I think the next six months will show how we will develop in the future.
Beautiful flowers & plants images!