Review 119

Creamy is a pleasantly infectious page. A simple, effective design lends itself to the functional navigation, and the delicious weblog, of which I couldn’t stop reading.

Getting into the mind of a 17 year old girl was something this 28 year old guy never thought possible. This website proved me wrong. Well written, sassy log entries kept me interested, while peripheral pages with pictures, a sh*t-list, a bio, and more provided support. Reliving my teenage years of angst through the eyes of Natasha was quite an experience.

I encourage you to stop by and see for yourself.creamy

Review 153

There are two types of blogs: the good ones, and the bad ones. We’ve read some of each in the past, so we’re all familiar with what to expect. The good blogs have something unique about them, usually the angle or the tone that makes them different and worth reading. A site devoted to a particular field and is well written is worth visiting again and again.



And then on the other hand, there are the bad blogs. “This morning I had a cheese sandwich for breakfast and then got caught in traffic.” We’ve all known mornings like that, but we don’t go around telling the world about it, because the world has no reason to listen.



By now, you’re probably wishing that I would just get to the point: and here it is. It is possible for a site about nothing, just the boring, ordinary events of a person’s life, to be captivating. It depends on how it is written, and in the case of Aftershock, it is written with such subtle flair and dry wit that you find yourself drawn in immediately, swallowed whole in a dissection of a life where nothing particularly consequential happens in any one day (I hope I’m not insulting anyone out there who has a pretty spectacular site – Superman maybe).



That is why you should read this blog, and that is why it is a very good site: it adds a new context from which to view our own dull lives.Aftershock

Review 169

Schildt.nl is an interesting site. It is designed well and looks very high-tech. Many of the weblog entries fit this theme, being related to computers, the Internet, or web design.

Most posts had links to something worth checking out, and a sentence or two about what the author thought about them. Not the most in-depth entries, but I don’t think that was the point.

The rest of the site is well integrated to fit the same theme as the weblog page. I was impressed by the way information was presented. The author gives us the chance to learn about what he does and who he is. It would be interesting to see more writing, whether it be how-to articles or opinions. I got the feeling that the author has a lot of internet related knowledge worth sharing.NULL

Review 393

With a name like Virtual Comedy Club you’d expect this site to be full of hilarious humour and you’d be wrong.



Its even better than that.



A lot of the jokes and comments only REALLY work in America , stuff like the

sports caster gene or the Pizza Hut bit.

But even stuff I only know very little about still raised a smile and even a chuckle now and then.



The layout is good. It doesn’t try to be too fancy and pretty much leaves you to get on with reading the jokes.



Updated often and guaranteed to put a smile on your face.

Even the description is good



“Bad jokes, topical rants and typical observations. An evening of stand up comedy without the brick wall or $10 cover charge. It’s always open mike night here”



Virtual Comedy Club

Review 164

I feel left out of a joke when I read this site(not a good thing). some other fool is alot like the artwork the said weblogger does , abstract. often times we are introduced into situations where we have no idea what the author is talking about. the design also got me quite irksome (why two scrollbars?). often times it reminds me of watching a movie at the halfway pt and having to ask people what happened. this site shows promise and i think it was unfair of me to have to review it when it is so relitivly new in the cruel world of short attention spans that make up the internetSome Other Fool