MyHTML

As someone who was born in the early 90’s, the Internet was prominent in my juvenile journey. I vaguely recall touching on basic HTML in Year 10 Information Technology, creating web pages that link to more pages, in an endless motion of opening pages featuring only a single link and photo.

If you’d seen me during those formative years of high school, you’d think I had less than zero interest in learning to code, and maybe that was actually the case.

Then came the age of social media. I didn’t get into the social media boom until MySpace gained attention through the up and coming musical acts being found on their many pages. This is where I, and many of my friends, gained a flare for basic HTML.

Profile Edit page of a MySpace profile

The MySpace boxes asking for short descriptions of various interests for display on your profile quickly went from plain text to being riddled with HTML that casual users were learning for the sake of their profiles to pop. Soon after, I found myself being able to write out entire lines of varying text appearances, just to show that I could.

Just to give you a taste of a bit of my overwhelming expertise, the code displayed below:

Screen Shot 2015-01-23 at 3.52.14 pm

shows up on a page like this:

This sentence is here.

This is a link to Google.

In my blogging adventures that I’d previously mentioned on this blog, I’ve also uncovered several Tumblr users that have immense knowledge in creating entire website themes, yet they weren’t schooled professionally in coding, it just came about through trial and error. With the help of the Internet’s many tutorials, getting at least a light grasp in HTML is no longer ridiculously intimidating and easier to accomplish than ever.

What I’ve also discovered is that in my possible future career of being a Public Relations practitioner, HTML experience is vital in getting noticed amongst the sea of applicants. With the world of PR (much like many industries) shifting focus to online counterparts, the ability to code even at a basic level will allow you to stand out in a crowd that may have no experience at all. With employers streamlining competencies, a PR practitioner may find themselves handling various outlets of a campaign that are online, and the basic knowledge can avoid them from being intimidated by a prompt to create HTML material.

Anyway, I guess all this post is uncovering is why I have a (shockingly) basic grasp on HTML which has helped me stay afloat in several classes that require it. Perhaps Networked Media (for which this particular blog has been set up for) will allow me to attain a tighter grasp, and even a further interest in delving deeper into coding.

A close tie of mine has also made an observation regarding our voyages in the class into HTML on her blog, Dale Cridland.

My Introduction to the World of Blogging

I’d never been one to keep a journal for my day-to-days, yet the amount of journals I’ve been given through the years would challenge that, but the elating experience of attending concerts with a few friends and leaving with a dozen more felt like it needed to be documented, and had the potential to be an interesting read.

4 years ago I began a blog on a microblogging and social networking platform called Tumblr to keep track of little details I’d otherwise forget from those shows. Those details then snowballed into essay-length recounts of everything from the lead-up to the concert, right up to whatever I managed to take home with me after the act was long gone.

Screenshot from my personal blog

Screenshot from my personal blog

Since then, I’d been consistently surprised at the amount of like-minded people that contact me on the basis of a single similar interest, and through the years have either upheld continued correspondence or, when possible, have met and become friends. What began as a one-note blog turned into a digital snapshot of my day-to-day, travel diaries, reviews of movies and television, and whatever else I felt I could express well enough in words.

With this experience, I’ve grown to see blogging in a different light, and have become aware of what this relatively new phenomenon can accomplish in the world of networking and social norms.

This week’s reading bundle included ‘Blogs in Media Education‘ by Adrian Miles. It explores the use of blogs in further education as blogs can be utilised to inform and educate. It rings similar to the workings of Bruns’ ‘produser’ theory, where users can both present what they have learnt from the knowledge they’ve consumed, and represent that information to inform themselves and others.

What’s important to note though is the use of ‘network literacy’. Much like a student referencing books and journals they which to associate in their schoolwork, blog authors should also comply with proper associations to source knowledge and ideas to retain legitimacy for both the author as well as readers. In another piece by Adrian Miles, ‘Network Literacy: The New Path To Knowledge‘, he addresses the ingrained literacy we have when it comes to the process of attributing books and journals in our work. With the rise of the Internet being used as a method of acquiring knowledge, the same literacy should be upheld online.

In a previous elective I undertook last semester, we were required to also utilise a blog to submit analysis about Television Cultures and systematic TV tropes. That was the first instance I properly referenced any of my writings that I’d published on the Internet, and unlike previous coursework done purely on Word, the duty of referencing on blog posts felt alien. I’m unsure as to whether that feeling rose because I’d never felt compelled to in my personal writings or just because it’s not something that was ‘ingrained’ in my learning habits.

Throughout this course, I’ll be exploring these issues in the blogging sphere, as well as documenting my own experiences online.

Inaugural Post for 2015 Summer Semester!

Week 1, Day 1.

So this is the first post, basically a quick run around of the WordPress machine to get a feel for what I’ll be dealing with in the next 6 weeks.

It will essentially be running in conjunction with the subject blog Networked Media.

As there’s essentially nothing entirely relevant yet to post here, here’s one of my favourite tracks.

It’s important to note that I really enjoy modern artists covering old, old tracks. Just for sound quality’s sake.

And to add a bit of personability to yet another online blog, here’s me to the left of Stephen Colbert: