Solari said:
I was tempted to write a blog on shell/perl scripting and how I work around everyday problems for work and miscellaneous stuff, but then I guessed that no one apart from nerds with hardons for code would read it.
Do

. Technical blogs are, in my opinion, the greatest learning and sharing resource on the internet. Technical articles and tutorials on the web and in print tend to be incredibly stale, while those published from blogs are much more enjoyable to digest as they come with some character, style, opinion and background to them. Funnily enough, I attended a conference yesterday, that I learnt about from a blog, featuring many highly respected people in the industry, of whom I'm primarily familiar with their names and work through their writing in blogs.
I owe a great deal to blogs and bloggers - they're the conduit for all the latest development, thought and discussion in the industry I work in (web development). And it's especially prevalent in an industry that moves so fast and is so widely dispersed. Sometimes feels like trading; requiring an analyst to keep track of what one should be focusing on!
I feel quite strongly that without the advent of blogs, the Web wouldn't be half as adventurous and forward-thinking that it is today. Certainly I feel I wouldn't know half as much as I do if I only had a few dry and limited publications to get relevant information from.
But then, I have a loose opinion of what a 'blog' is - to me it's really any periodical from regular contributers focusing on a single topic or sphere of interest that is published in an informal manner i.e. blogs are the new 'zines. I agree, however, that generic diary-type blogs are of no interest to me and just part of the general Web cruft that one has to wade through. Fortunately they're usually restricted to places like blogger and livejournal, so it's easy to exert a little quality control.
I don't have a live blog right this moment, but as I say, I do read a lot:
http://www.bloglines.com/public/beardscratchers 