Category: English Post (Page 34 of 97)

MY BLOG HAS REACHED 100,000 PAGE VIEWS!! (Video message inside).

I am really happy and a bit surprised too, I didn’t expect this milestone to arrive this soon!!

My calculations were off by an entire month! Based on the traffic and site views, this update wasn’t supposed to happen until September, I guess the blog was doing better than I thought! It caught me by surprise!!
100,000 page views!!
I’ve been building towards this update for so long, I can’t believe it finally arrived, I missed the magical moment when the counter turned 100,000 (thank you LTT) and despite some minor hiccups, I managed to make it here thankfully.
I promised my fans I’ll make a thank you video when I reach a 100,000 views, you can find it on this link.

Thanks to all of my regular readers, family and friends. And I’ll see you in another update 🙂

Blog updates and fan reactions, going for 100K views

This could be the last update I provide before reaching my 100,000 views milestone which I have been building towards for years now!
To begin my update properly, I have to thank the fans from around the world (mostly Libya) for showing me their support and standing behind me, it really makes my day even if you think it doesn’t!

Positive feedback
Just an example of positive feedback I’m getting from fans

Following up on my latest post (unplanned downtime) I began to look into second device options (still don’t know exactly what to get, any help?), and reading this article changed my views about my work flow completely, a must read if you are stuck in a third world country that’s struggling, funny thing about that post is that it relates to two of my posts, unplanned downtime and blogging from a civil war zone, so think of it as a survival guide in a country going down the tube, there is an Arabic version too if you like.

I finally finished creating my Facebook page, it took so long because I maxed out on friends and then turned my profile into a page (yes you can do that!). Despite my opinion against Facebook, I have to admit it’s my biggest visitor source, I can’t just let that go to waste without building on it, can I?
 Here is the link to the page.  

Hey! I have 5,000 friends 😀

I’ve started blogging on other sites too, lately I’ve posted on Itwadi and the feedback was rather positive, the post is in Arabic, expect to see my posts in other blogs very soon! I even started a section on my blog to collect all my guest posts in one place! It has only one post, but it’s going to change very soon god willing!


My fan feedback is very important to me, I wanted to what kind of posts you would find interesting. The poll was on the blog home page for 2 weeks, and not a single vote was casted! Luckily I put the same poll on Twitter and got some feed back I could use, the result was: 40% in favor of technical posts,
40% for Libyan affairs, and 20% for Diaries. No clear edge here, but I’ll try my best to give the fans what they want, and maybe to try on vlogging for a change.

Twitter poll results
Twitter poll results


I created a new youtube channel, I’m yet to add a proper user name to it, I need to get 100 subscribers first, subscribe please 😀  
I will post my 100,000 video on it once I make it and reach 100K, I’m still wondering whether to make an Arabic video with English subtitles or vice-versa, as it turns out Youtube doesn’t allow multiple audio sources on one video,  and I’m not open to the idea of posting two videos (when the idea was pitched my fan base was mostly English speaking, my blog caught the Libyan attention after the passport post series, and still does) uploading on video will be painful enough!

Page views number
Isn’t that a nice page view number?


 Thank you for reading this rather detailed update, please tell me what you think in the comments section below, and share the post with your people using the social media buttons 🙂

Unplanned downtime!

I wasn’t planning on staying down for a few days, but it happened anyway.
My laptop fan broke as I was cleaning the laptop from dust (who would have thought the fan blades were so soft!) and I had to look for a replacement, which proved to be a real pain!

Getting the fan

I didn’t know that the hardware / repair shops in Tripoli relied on junk laptops to provide spare parts! I thought they imported the parts in the same manner they imported laptops, but no! These people never seize to amaze me!
Repair shops buy damaged laptops to use them as spare parts, and since my laptop is such a rare limited edition laptop (not really) I had to look in over 20 stores around the capital to find a store that said maybe they can provide me with the part, I had to go home and comeback the next day.
The spare part looked much worse than the one I had running daily for the past four years!! And it was really expensive for a used one too!

Laptop fan
A laptop fan

You might wonder to yourself: Why didn’t I just get it off of Amazon or Ebay?
For a very simple reason, it would take so much effort and resources that it would lose all meaning! I’d probably rant about it in a another post some time.
The reason why the fan is so rare: It has four wires rather than the usual three like most laptops on the market have, so an extra wire cost me two days worth of downtime! Only in Libya..

I learned three things from this experience 

  1. My laptop is a “unicorn” by Libyan standards, it’s rare and shoots pixie dust out of it’s fan when it flies above the rainbow (for the amount of money I paid for this fan, it better start shooting pixie dust!) and just for the record I bought it from Tripoli, a generic entry level laptop from a common manufacturer.
    This is how repair shops view my laptop
  2. Don’t ever, and I mean EVER, attempt to clean the laptop fan by any means other than compressed air, a lesson well learned indeed, even the smallest amount of pressure can break the fan blades and render the laptop useless.

  3.  I never realized how much I relied on my laptop to do my daily tasks, which makes me think of getting a second laptop as backup, I always had a thing for Netbooks and had one for a couple of years before buying this laptop, maybe I’ll get one for the sake of portability, or I might even invest in a Raspberry Pi 3 or something as a backup system, I’ll blog about my findings when I make progress soon enough! My smartphone did a good job filling the gaps here and there, but there are some things that a smartphone can’t do, to me it’s not doesn’t qualify as a backup system.

To summaries everything said

I can’t afford such downtime at a time like this! I’m almost at my page view goal of 100,000 views which I have been hyping all year, I’d hate to miss that moment with my main device taken apart collecting dust somewhere (my desk in this case, no way I’d let my data at some random repair shop).

I hope you enjoyed this update I provided, I feel the need to stay connected with my readers as often as possible.
What about you? Let me know what you think in the comments section below! 
Do you have a good idea for a backup system? 
Share this post using your social media and help the blog grow.

Blogging from a civil war zone!

What’s it like being a blogger in a war torn country?
My commitment to blogging brings a huge responsibility with it, and a potential risk as well!

Bloggers under fire

Blogging from a civil war zone is really dangerous, where the wrong word or opinion could mean the end, especially when people in charge can’t read and won’t read, and even if they read (god forbid) they don’t understand what they read or try to do anything about it (except trying to harm who ever wrote that to make sure that they never write again!).

Imagine this: you are sitting minding your business and you hear gunshots, you don’t know where they come from or why they happened, but you know it’s going to affect you one way or the other, and there is always that fear that one of them will land in your house or near your head (happened to me once or twice already).

Priorities 

Libyan authorities always had means to track down activist and bloggers on-line, the equipments and systems that came from France and other countries allowed the previous regime from pin pointing blogger’s locations and enabled them to hack the blogger’s personal accounts, even with the regime change these systems are still active and at large, aimed against the wrong people!
This system allows killers, drug dealers and human traffickers to roam the streets like crowned kings while focusing on social media activists and bloggers, I guess that arresting human traffickers isn’t a priority after all, they are running a travels agency! With no visas or accommodation of any kind..

A bit of the same old

I guess things aren’t much different from the previous regime for bloggers, opinion prisoners were   common back then and things are pretty much the same, freedom of speech and privacy are non existent in Libya, unless you say what “they” want you to say.

How does the people view bloggers?

Sadly even the people who are the victims here can’t see the point in blogging, won’t blog and will make fun of bloggers and try to bring them down, won’t even read the posts! (would spend all day on Facebook but won’t read a 500 word post!) saying that it’s a total waste of time!

Actual risks bloggers face

As a blogger you can lose your job, receive death threats, get arrested for no reason and receive bad treatment if your blog doesn’t appeal to “someone” and it could be anyone now days!
Kidnapping is common, a blogger could be “kidnapped” for his opinions, tortured and killed without a trace.  

Just one of many militia fighters running wild in Libya


There is no law enforcement in Libya, just militias roaming the streets and terrorizing people, it would be interesting to see a militia blogger (although the grammar would be horrible!).

We need to blog

Blogging feels like a luxury at times. Especially when people in here (and I am one of them by the way) can’t find money to buy goods and services, inflation made the price of everything sore high , with non existing health care, and the ongoing war between rivaling militias every now and then making life impossible, closing roads and creating barricades and fighting inside residential areas!  

The airport road, one of the main roads in Tripoli blocked by angry protests

Despite all these conditions someone needs to document this daily suffering and get the message out to the world, that there are people who live here in dire situations, I guess I’m that someone in this case.
Even if it’s a risk to my safety, I am afraid it’s a risk I’m willing to take, I can’t just stand here and watch my people suffer and do nothing about it, my passions and interests can take a pause now until the situation improves a little.

Actual blogging experience 

It’s very difficult! With power cuts that last up to 12 hours each day in Tripoli affecting all aspects of life, including the Internet service, making it even worse than it is already
It’s almost impossible to predict the power outages and adjust blogging time to it, and it’s affecting blogs negatively because no one is reading the blog, my main demographic is suffering from all day power outages! Let alone the damage it does to laptops and other hardware, I lost two laptop batteries, and that’s nothing compared what others lost in this mess!
Uploading images takes forever and so does loading blogger, this won’t stop me from posting as often as I can!

Giving the people a voice

Blogging is my way to reach out to the world and speak my mind out about how things are truly are in here, even if it’s dangerous, we need to break away from fear and speak out against this sham!
While politicians spend their days in luxurious hotels around the world, Libyans are dying every day, and the situation is getting worse by the minute. I started to think that they benefit from extending this crisis indefinitely, who would need them if life is OK in Libya?

Who is calling the shots?

As a person I lost count of how many governments we have working  head to head, or how many  legislation bodies this country has, who is running Libya today or when will the constitution will be written (if ever). everyone is talking like they run the place while in reality no one has control over anything.
Libya does have a constitution, why not use that and modify it? Since it has been disabled by the previous regime since 1977. I don’t know the answer to that either.
As I write this, there is no electricity as usual, I haven’t been able to draw money from the bank for months, and its a 120 degrees outside with no means to cool down, and I’m still doing much better than people in camps and immigrants who live in unimaginable conditions here in Libya.

Tripoli voted the second least livable city in the world 2016  

I thought I was just ranting and complaining about how bad it is really, turns out I was right!
Tripoli was voted the second least livable city in the world 2016 according to the independent with Damascus taking home the first place. I’m sure if Libyans work a little bit harder they will take home the first place.

Libya, what a waste!

It’s really sad to see a country with such potential like Libya go to waste! We have so many assets to work with! The youth, oil and gas, tourism, a huge space and just a handful of people, with proper management we could be living like royalty. But we aren’t sadly, we are dying slowly everyday with the world watching.

Leptis Magna, one of Libya’s most recognized monuments


I hope this post is noticed by the right people, I know there has been a dialog in Libya for years now but no one stopped to ask what does the people think, I speak for myself here but I dare to think that many will agree that we want peace and security.
We want our country back, is that possible?

Thank you for reading this post, please let me know what you think in the comments section below, and please share it with your friends and family, that would help me a lot!

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