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5 years of The World of Stuff
Sun Apr 06, 2008 09:56 EST (UTC -5)

Yesterday, I went tubing on the Ichetucknee River at Ichetucknee Springs State Park. In case it sounds moderately exciting, "tubing" just means floating on an inner tube. Which is not to say that it's boring. In fact, it's fun in a relaxing way. It's "chill," as the young people say. I was with some friends (including my roommate, Adam) and friends' friends who were girls. We had bought our own inflatable pool rafts (Adam got a giant seahorse), while the girls rented a large inflatable raft from one of the many tube rental places near the river.

We meandered down the river at a rather lazy pace except when we were paddling out of the way of fallen branches and things. The girls in their little boat decided to lie back and not pay much attention to where they were going, so they bumped into a lot of things and often fell far behind the rest of us. But they sang. They sang "Aura Lee" in serene three-part harmony. I asked if they knew anything by the Beatles, and they tried out a few lines of "Because."

After conquering the river, everyone left except Adam, his friend Stephen, and me. We were going to go to Ginnie Springs for even more tubing adventures, but it's privately owned, and the admission was more than we were willing to pay. Instead, we ate at Conestogas in Alachua and then got back to campus.

Hm... what else? Oh yeah. The World of Stuff is five years old today.

Don't look at me like that! You know I wouldn't forget. I've been looking forward to the day, actually. It's a milestone. Five years. Half a decade. It's pretty big. Of course, I can't forget about the chain of events that led me here.

In February 2003, I was a thirteen-year-old eighth-grader, and I had a problem. I didn't have a single web site. I had two: The Dvorak Keyboard and You and flipacoin.net. I decided to create a new site of which both would be a part. (flipacoin.net never fit in well and was finally spun off two months ago.) Since the new site was just going to be a collection of random pages, I thought the very general name "The World of Stuff" would be funny.

The original home of the site was free, ad-supported Angelfire space that my friends and I had used to advertise our two-off comic book series, The Superbuddies (hence "superbuddies" in the original URL). They weren't too happy about me wiping over the Superbuddies site, but I think they can agree that my site has been more successful than our photocopied comics that we had trouble selling even to our friends. (I still have a few copies of both issues; I found them recently, and they're pretty good. I should put the scans online here. Full circle??)

On Sunday, April 6, 2003, I decided the site was ready. After writing an introductory note on the main page, I made the following announcement on the "It's a Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad Forum!" Forum at Where's George?:

Subject: Need to waste some time?...
Posted by Slowpoke on April 6, 2003 at 7:30 PM:

...I bring you my new web site, The World of Stuff! It's basically just my web pages strung together, plus some new ones. I've been working on it for months, so I think I deserve a shameless plug. :)

Two days later, I e-mailed the link to five friends. And that was about all the publicity I had for a while.

Over the next few months, I made note of occasional updates on the main page. During the summer of 2003, the site moved to its own domain name and -- to keep people coming back -- evolved into one of those newfangled "blog" things. Over time, I found my style, and my posts eased into the format that you're familiar with today. But it became tedious to manually add posts to the main page, maintain archives, and update the RSS feed. On January 2, 2005, I started using the WordPress blogging platform, which automates those tasks and allows readers to comment on each post. I also strove to give the site a polished appearance. The layout was redesigned on October 16, 2004, and again on January 1, 2006.

When blogging was still new and exciting, The World of Stuff was mentioned in the South Florida Sun-Sentinel in September 2003 ("Blog Stars") and by City Link Magazine in April 2004 ("Meet the Bloggers"). In the past four years, there has been a significant lack of press coverage. But news articles don't really matter. In fact, they did absolutely nothing to increase the popularity of the site. But it has become more popular. People have found the blog somehow (probably from here), and they've kept reading. They've post comments and e-mailed me, and I've responded. So we have this cool two-way dialogue going on, me and you.

While we're going meta, here's an Ask Jordon question.

natasha: What is the purpose of the numbers beside the months in your archives?

The archives page has a link to each month's posts followed by the number of posts made in that month.

And one more:

Carol: I'm new here but I'd like to know what you are majoring in.

Computer science.

Now, as I was saying, having a community of readers is a really cool thing. Sometimes I ask myself who I write for -- that is, whether I would still write if I didn't have an audience. I'm not sure whether I would. Knowing that other people are reading this gives me a sense of fulfillment. I like to entertain, inform, and provide a window on my life to others. I'm glad I've been doing it well enough that people are coming back for more.

Thanks for your continued readership and support over the past five years. I love you guys!


13 comments
  1. Hey Jordon! I don't know if you remember me,but I remember you! My name is Cynthia,but you might remember me by my nickname from Where's George: MamiDR. If not,that's fine. I just wanted to congratulate you on five years of TWoS! My sister is Carol--the girl that asked what you're majoring in. Anyway,do you still "George?" I really enjoy reading your blog whenever I can. I think you're an extremely intelligent young man and have always wished you much success in everything you do. Keep up the good work! Take care.

    Cynthia -- Sun Apr 06, 2008 19:45 EST

  2. Oh yes, I remember you, Cynthia (or, shall I say, MamiDR). I've hardly entered any bills in the past year, but maybe I'll get back into it. Thanks for your support and the kind words.

    Jordon -- Sun Apr 06, 2008 19:52 EST

  3. How many years? How many friends?

    The Law of Fives is never wrong.

    Luke -- Mon Apr 07, 2008 15:09 EST

  4. Actually, six friends. I didn't mention one. The Law of Fives is wrong.

    Jordon -- Mon Apr 07, 2008 17:29 EST

  5. hey jordon, I've been web surfing most of the day and wanted to know how you were. I know I can talk to you on facebook, but today I felt like commenting on your website. Happy five year anninversary!

    Lisa -- Mon Apr 07, 2008 19:59 EST

  6. The Law of Fives is NEVER wrong: "all phenomena are directly or indirectly related to the number five, and this relationship can always be demonstrated given enough ingenuity on the part of the demonstrator."

    I was secretly referring to my bowling night, when there were five of us present. Thank you for pointing out that you also had five friends.

    Luke -- Mon Apr 07, 2008 20:10 EST

  7. I believe I said I had six.

    Jordon -- Mon Apr 07, 2008 20:31 EST

  8. hey jordon! it's jennifer (you know kristen's friend, i was in your calc class) well i wanted to congratulated for keeping up this site for 5 years! i admit i peruse the site from time to time because your blog entries are entertaining and i get bored. keep up the good work! (wow i'm starting to sound like a teacher)

    jennifer -- Mon Apr 07, 2008 21:54 EST

  9. jennyfair! you WILL be a teacher so it's good to start sounding like a teacher. you know, even though teachers aren't people or anything...

    wow, this post is poppin' with comments.

    kristen -- Mon Apr 07, 2008 22:59 EST

  10. Thanks, Jennifer. I'm glad you drop by every once in a while. You too, Lisa.

    Jordon -- Mon Apr 07, 2008 23:02 EST

  11. congradulations and happy five years.
    xoxox.
    love always.

    natasha -- Tue Apr 08, 2008 08:49 EST

  12. Congratulations on 5 years! Does it feel like it's been that long? Anyway, thank you for taking the time to answer my question. I appreciate it.

    Carolina -- Tue Apr 08, 2008 12:58 EST

  13. It doesn't really feel like it's been that long, Carolina. Blogging has just become second nature to me, so it's hard to say.

    Jordon -- Tue Apr 08, 2008 13:02 EST

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