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	<title>noCreativity.com &#187; Smashing Magazine</title>
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		<title>I&#8217;ve said it for a long time, just didn&#8217;t quite make my point</title>
		<link>http://nocreativity.com/blog/ive-said-it-for-a-long-time-just-didnt-quite-make-my-point</link>
		<comments>http://nocreativity.com/blog/ive-said-it-for-a-long-time-just-didnt-quite-make-my-point#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 26 Nov 2009 11:45:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Ronny</dc:creator>
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		<category><![CDATA[Smashing Magazine]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://nocreativity.com/blog/?p=793</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[I just finished reading an article on Drawar.com about how Smashing Magazine killed the community. I have been thinking about what you&#8217;re about to read for some time now but it never occurred to me that Smashing Magazine was one of the reasons why everything changed. Let&#8217;s start in the beginning (because there&#8217;s a lot [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I just finished reading an article on <a href="http://drawar.com" target="_blank" target="_blank">Drawar.com</a> about how <a href="http://smashingmagazine.com" target="_blank" target="_blank">Smashing Magazine</a> killed the community. I have been thinking about what you&#8217;re about to read for some time now but it never occurred to me that Smashing Magazine was one of the reasons why everything changed.</p>
<p>Let&#8217;s start in the beginning (because there&#8217;s a lot of things to cover here).<br />
I&#8217;ve been reading Smashing Magazine for more than 2 years now. I started reading in their very early days as &#8216;Smashing Magazine&#8217; (Before, it was a smaller online magazine with a different name).</p>
<p>They actually caught my eye with very very interesting articles that focussed on one topic. Every article covered ways to do things and things you shouldn&#8217;t do, in a very specific aspect of (web) design.  That content was of great value since it was on-topic and very high-end.<br />
However Smashing Magazine&#8217;s content  not only caught <em>my</em> eye&#8230; Lots of people started reading it on a regular basis and subscribing to the RSS feeds. That&#8217;s when they really started making money, and therefor stopped actually writing &#8216;real&#8217; articles and started going down the &#8216;<em>lists</em>&#8216; road. At that point, it only took me about 2 weeks to stop caring about Smashing Magazine (besides when they linked me). I still check the site every now and then, but honestly: If an article starts with a number I don&#8217;t even read the rest of the title. It&#8217;s all they&#8217;ve been doing ever since&#8230;</p>
<p>The worst part: Lots of other site have been doing it too, just because Smashing Magazine prove the concept works. I myself have only published <a href="http://nocreativity.com/blog/the-this-is-so-cool-that-i-just-had-to-share-this-with-you-post" target="_blank">1 single post</a> like that in the 2 years I&#8217;ve been blogging. And hell: I&#8217;m proud of it!<br />
And the more I actually talk to other people about this issue, the more I realize the very people we write for think the same way. They don&#8217;t want a list of whatever. They want your secrets. They want to know why you did something the way you did it. They want to know why you prefer ketchup instead of mayonaise. They want a personal opinion. If they want a list, they&#8217;ll just Google whatever it is they need. Google lists everything by default anyway.<span id="more-793"></span></p>
<p><strong>Community</strong><br />
I&#8217;ve been a <a href="http://flashfocus.nl" target="_blank" target="_blank">FlashFocus</a> team member for a few years now. I&#8217;ve come to learn the invaluable importance of a living and talking community. The community, the members, they are actually FlashFocus. Not the design of the site, not the features. It&#8217;s the people. It are the minds that are conflicting, the minds that are making us work. It&#8217;s those very people we put time and effort in a site for, so they can go on and have fun, share experiences and projects, ask questions, write tutorials, etc. And man, believe me: Every time we -the FlashFocus team- come up with a project, our team is so full of motivation because we are about to give the community something new to play with.</p>
<p>That&#8217;s all we&#8217;re working for: The people.<br />
The same goes for the web: The Web-community, the Flash-community, the CSS-community, any niche you can think off&#8230; People are doing stuff, creating cool experiments, sharing thoughts. Those different people in a niche, sharing their ideas, experiences, opinions, etc&#8230; Those people are what we actually refer to as &#8216;The community&#8217;.<br />
Back in the days when Smashing Magazine wasn&#8217;t that popular, I remember reading lots of blogs &#8211; some of them even contradicting each other &#8211;  because there was so much interesting stuff to read.<br />
However since &#8216;lists&#8217; became the holy grail, these blogs either died a silent death or became &#8216;copycats&#8217;. So I stopped reading&#8230; Those blogs lost their personality. They weren&#8217;t what I was looking for&#8230;</p>
<p><strong>Lists</strong><br />
But what&#8217;s so bad about those lists you say? Yea, okay, they&#8217;re an interesting resource. But that&#8217;s it. They&#8217;re a resource. A reference. But I only use reference lists when I need them. Not when I&#8217;m up for an interesting read. The bad thing about those lists: They&#8217;re just a list. Not an experience, not a tutorial, not a story about your latest project, not a personal opinion about the latest <a href="http://thefwa.com" target="_blank" target="_blank">FWA</a> site.</p>
<p>I love to read personal blogs of friends. A lot of my friends are still students, and therefore only have about the same amount of experience as I have. So I&#8217;m not really getting any/a lot smarter regarding the topic they blog about (which is mostly the same as I write about). But they have a fucking personal opinion. That&#8217;s what I care about. Sometimes that opinion is completely different from my own, which results in a discussion and makes you think. And that is what connects people. Thats what connects <em>t</em><em>he community</em>.</p>
<p><strong>Hmz&#8230; But why?</strong><br />
So why would they actually do that? They&#8217;re a great site with great writers, right? Yes they are! In the end it&#8217;s all about the money&#8230; It&#8217;s business. End of discussion. Just check the sidebar, the content-top, end of content&#8230; Ads everywhere. Not too disturbing but it tends to flirt with the levels of acceptance&#8230;</p>
<p>(This is a major problem these days. Everyone tries to puts ads EVERYWHERE. Look at Youtube: Putting ads INSIDE the video&#8217;s. I&#8217;m sure the visitors/users percentage is going down. But even then: they are still making more money than before, so why bother? They don&#8217;t care (enough?) about their community to actually not put ads in videos&#8230; As long as they&#8217;re monetizing as much as they can, they&#8217;ll just leave it like that.<br />
I myself tried putting up ads too, and yes: I made some money off it. But it just doesn&#8217;t feel right. Using my readers as a way of earning money makes me kind of feel like I&#8217;m trading my soul to the devil)</p>
<p>So in the end, for Smashing Magazine: It&#8217;s about making money. And money is only a good reason to get a job. Not to have a personal opinion&#8230; So basically&#8230; Smashing Magazine is a great resource&#8230; But it&#8217;s nowhere near an inspiring blog anymore.</p>
<p>And having said all this: This is my personal opinion. Speak your mind! I&#8217;d love to hear your thoughts on any aspect of this topic.</p>
<p>By the way: The actual article I was referring to in the very beginning of this post: <a href="http://www.drawar.com/articles/smashing-magazine-killed-the-community-or-maybe-it-was-me/39/" target="_blank" target="_blank">Link</a></p>
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