Blog privacy
Today we've added two new privacy settings for your blogs: Private and Password-protected.
What we're writing.
Today we've added two new privacy settings for your blogs: Private and Password-protected.
As Write.as turns two years old, we're looking forward to the years ahead. Now settled in as a simple, easy blogging platform, we've started planning our next major step.
We tell all kinds of stories in a million different ways. Language is flexible enough to live on paper, ride on air waves, or get digitally accelerated to any corner of the globe. And that last ability creates language in many forms: images and text on blogs, websites, or social media.
The blog is where we at Write.as spend much of our rumination. We believe the format can (and should) be more than “just a blog.” But instead of a full-blown website, we want a beautiful, portable digital work.
We've gotten questions from users since the beginning asking how they could see others' posts. We've always planned to explore what a community of pseudonymous writers would look like, but we've also known the amount of work that comes with that territory. How do we provide a safe place where people can speak freely but grow from their interactions? And if we did create it, what could we do better than what already exists?
Most of these questions remain unanswered. We don't want to be another social network filled with impersonal likes and reblogs. We want to help people connect over writing, and form the most human bonds they can, even if it's happening over a wire.
So while we contemplate that, we're taking tiny steps towards that goal. It started last month when we created a Twitter account called @readwriteas. And today we're proud to launch the read.write.as site, as well as public blogs for publishing to it.
Right now, you'll need to be a subscriber (starting at $10/year) to publish. If you already are, you'll simply go to your blog's customize page and choose Public for your blog type. From there, any posts you publish (or have recently published) will go to read.write.as for everyone to check out. We'll also pick some interesting ones to send out on the Twitter account.
This is all still an experiment. With it, we hope to lay the foundation of a future community here on Write.as. If you're reading this, you're at the right place to help form a new tiny culture on the web — and we can't wait to see what you do with it.
As Tropical Depression #9 nears the Florida peninsula, we look back on our northern summer and reflect. What new insights did weeks of 100 degree weather bring us? How did our code fare in intermittent power outages from a summer of short-lived squalls?
Well the sweat of the summer is finally starting to dry, and even the deadly subtropics couldn't stop us from our code. It also didn't stop you, the writer. Write.as users collectively published over 1,200 posts this past month, and almost 100 new blogs were born!
This is great news, but our 2.0 features (blogs and accounts) have been delayed in getting to the mobile apps as we've gathered feedback on the web. Still, waiting has led us to some exciting new plans for features like static pages and offline support that you'll see soon.
Until that day, we have the Write.as of today — built on yesterday with its eyes on tomorrow. Here's what we did in August.
/embed
to any post URL and get the code to put it on any web page.This is all pretty exciting, but we really can't wait for everyone to see what's in store for mobile. If you'd like to get an early peek at the Android app (releasing first), join our beta and send us feedback when it's out. Then look for our iOS update coming later in the year.
Until next time!
The other week we talked about how important identity flexibility is to us. We explained how each Write.as blog is like a lightweight identity, independent and never linked to the others. And while Pro users get 10 of those blogs / identities now, we know that sometimes you just need a spare or two.
So today we're happy to announce a new “Casual” subscription plan, featuring some of our best new features. For $10 / year you can:
We hope this plan will fit even the most occasional writer who still wants to directly support a product they love. And if it still doesn't fit you, let us know why so we can improve it. Enjoy!
We speak differently to the various people in our lives. Some conversations go deep, like ones with good friends that keep you up until 4 a.m. Some wade in the shallows of “this heat we're having,” like with a stranger on the street. Some swim in one part of the conversational sea, taking care to avoid the others, like when your parents want to know about your exam grades — or love life.
We're connected to (literally) an entire world of people on the internet, an entirely new — yet not all that different — experience. Instead of having every online service expect us to socialize as our one “true” identity, it should be easy to have a distinct, private identity for each online situation. Your conversations with friends should be private enough that your family or boss doesn't see them. Your published thoughts should only be seen by who you want. You should be able to speak your mind.
That's what we believe, and that's why creating multiple blogs on Write.as is so easy. Each blog is a lightweight identity, independent and never linked to the others. You can also move posts freely between blogs, or turn them into anonymous articles. And as we add more community features, you'll be able to fully interact as each one of your blog identities.
So to make this even more useful, today we're bumping up the blog limit for Pro users to 10 blogs, with more to come as we hear about people hitting that limit (let us know how many you need if you do). Enjoy!
Update March 1, 2019: the limit for Pro users is now 3 blogs. Need more? Get additional blogs here.
Update August 1, 2016: Don't need 10 blogs? We've launched a smaller plan, too.
Write.as does a lot behind the scenes to intelligently extract meta data from plain text and put it in its correct spot. For example, creating a post like the following example will automatically put Hello there in your browser's title bar, and This is what I think as your post's description for when you share it on the web:
Hello there
This is what I think.
Since we also support Markdown on blogs (and will soon on anonymous posts), you can also begin a post like the following example to put Better Sharing as your post title:
# Better Sharing
Write.as does a lot behind the scenes...
Today we improved this so it works really well, and even added some new meta data (to blog posts in particular) that make your posts stand out when you share them on social media or chat applications like Slack.
We hope these changes will encourage more sharing, as well as more readers for your blogs and posts 😊
See you later.
We're excited to announce our first version 2 update outside of the web application: our Chrome extension! This update has a bunch of new changes.
If you have an account on Write.as, any posts you make with the extension will automatically go to your account. From there you can continue editing, or move it to one of your blogs. If you've been using the extension for a while, you can also sync all the posts you've published over time.
The extension still works great if you don't have an account, too! We've added a new font, wrap, that's just like the Monospace font on the web where words wrap instead of scrolling horizontally.
Drop us a line if you have any feedback on the updates — we'd love to hear it. See you later.
It's been a great month for Write.as! Since our soft launch earlier this month, we've seen the most new posts of any month in our 17-month existence — many of which now live with other posts on new Write.as blogs.
We've been working hard on polishing everything up since our launch, and lately have made a few minor improvements we wanted to share:
As we approach July, you'll see new documentation on all the extra things you can do with Write.as, plus some updates to the Chrome extension and more. See you later.