Skip to main content

One post tagged with "Writing"

Posts about the craft of writing, voice and tone decisions, content architecture, and how writing choices shape audience engagement.

View All Tags

The Three Voices of Technical Research: Why My Blog Sounds Nothing Like My Paper

Three terminal panes side by side showing the same WAF-blocking finding in three voices: the blog (opinionated, orange tab), the guide (neutral, green tab), and the paper (impartial, blue tab). Tagline: same research, three rooms.
· ~10 min read
Ryan Goodrich
Technical Writer, AI Enthusiast, and Developer Advocate

Someone recently asked me a question that I've been thinking about ever since: "Doesn't writing your blog posts with humor and sarcasm undermine your credibility as a researcher?"

It's a fair question. The blog posts on this site are... aggressively me. I compare WAF blocking to "hiring a security guard who prevents anyone matching the physical description of 'reads books' from entering the bookstore." I describe AI crawlers as looking like "a DDoS attack with a liberal arts degree." I write sentences like "I am a documentation-first developer with a research compulsion and a growing collection of Markdown files about Markdown files," and then I publish those sentences on the internet where potential collaborators can see them.

Meanwhile, the analytical paper I'm writing about the same research uses phrases like "the structural misalignment between content publication intent and infrastructure-level access enforcement." Which is the same observation as the bookstore metaphor, expressed in the register of someone who wants to be taken seriously at a conference.

Same research. Same data. Same conclusions. Radically different voices. And I'd argue that if I used only one of those voices everywhere, the whole project would be worse.