Review 261

This is a relatively new weblog. As far as I could tell from the archives, it has only been around for less than a month. The site also has the look of a new site. Everyone has been there before. You have a tool to do what you want; you just don’t know the full potential of the tool. In time, Matt could have a really good site. He has the building blocks to make a good structure. Hopefully it won’t come crashing down.



The posts themselves are relatively short and just about him and what he is doing. Since the site is still new, he talks a lot about the site itself. He also hasn’t found his niche. What I mean is most sites in time get to be the same thing but you want to go back for more. He can have a site like that.

Less Then Doubt

Review 250

The first thing that I noticed about Required Field was the simple design. Very clean with good sharp lines.



The site is links to different news stories. It amazes me how many different news weblogs there are and they all have different news to report. I found the links on the site could relate to things that are important to me.



I really like the “personal” entries on each of the links. Just a small hint into the author’s life. Instead of searching all of the news pages for news myself, I am just going to read this site.required field

Review 277

Fragile Sin is a site that I used to read every day until I started this page. Then I stopped reading all of my daily reads because well I so many to pick from now that I don’t pick. Of course I had to catch up on what was going on in her life and I spent a good two hours just reading.



She has been doing this for almost two years now I think. I know that it has been at least one year. She has progressed like most good weblog authors do. They start out with an idea, and a simple site. In time they experiment with different designs and what to write about. Then they just find their little niche and that makes them who they are.



A little bit about her is she is a camgirl. Of course with all the recent camgirl controversy, she loves the fact that new camgirls are representing all of them. She has some funny points.



Most of her posts are just about things that are happening right then to her. She doesn’t try to make something funny, if it is funny, then it is. Her links are rare because she only posts quality links instead of quantity.



She does have a photos section. All of the pictures are of her. Yes she does have naked pictures of herself. The photo’s page is even called Fragile Sin Exposed.



She does have a live streaming cam with specific times and days that you can watch it. Of course that comes with a price. But seriously, so much of the site is available for free, its just a streaming cam instead of a refresh every 90 seconds.



I like her attitude of helping other people out rather than herself. She is very concerned with other badasschick girls than herself. Just one more reason to go read her site.

Fragile Sin

Review 346

A cute well designed layout greets you on its first loading. Well about as cute as grass can actually get. Throughout the entries sporadic posts of what can only be described as Suzu-ness occur that give an interesting light to this weblog. It’s from an anime site, but the owner takes care evidently to make it interesting to all of those non anime fans out there. From interesting happenings in her life, surveys, to the whereabouts others, this weblog is an all around interesting one to review, and funny tooOccasional Coarse Language

Review 340

Year of Our City was well-presented

piece of work, with a cool robot

graphic to welcome you to the page.

The stimulsting visual presentation

was backed up by a detailed weblog,

full of rich content.



The author wrote his entries well,

telling amusing tales of his life at

work, his misadventures into the

ladie’s room, and other cynically

charged anecdotes. By no means

did he hold back his opinions, which

gave the weblog some flavor; just be

warned if you are offended by strong

language.



I particularily enjoyed his venting

about teenage girls pimping

themselves on the internet with their

Amazon.com wish lists, and the

“consumerism cancer” such idolatry

represents.



There were no links to other areas of

the web site, so I was left feeling a

little abandoned. Some info about

the author or some other information

would have been a good compliment

to a good weblog.



Year of Our City (not sure why it is

called that) is definitely a good read.





Year of Our City