My Long-Lost Blogger Blog

By Mike Maddaloni on Thursday, April 25, 2024 at 06:14 AM with 0 comments

screenshot of long-lost Blogger post

Where last December I wrote about celebrating 17 years of blogging apparently this was not exactly the case. According to an email I got from Big Tech behemoth Google shortly thereafter, in actuality I started blogging much earlier in 2006 than I remembered.

The email in question came from Blogger, a blogging platform Google acquired in the early 2000’s. In the message I was told that my inactive blog would soon be shut down. My what? I had no recollection of a blog at Blogger, so I clicked on the link and lo and behold there it was. At this long-abandoned site there were 2 posts both written on January 27, 2006.

What to do?

What was I to do? Should I keep it? Heck, it’s enough to write for one blog these days, forget two. So I decided to let it lapse but captured the 2 posts below, which I am archiving here. Interestingly they are similar to the early posts I wrote here at The Hot Iron in that they were rather short. These were written in the days before what was then called microblogging and later social media, so they were more concise thoughts rather than something in depth.

Welcome back to early 2006... here are those 2 posts – warts and all – for immortality, at least as long as this blog is here.

Just what we need! – Friday, January 27, 2006, 4:30 pm

When the creator of email, Ray Tomlinson, was asked what was the first email message text he sent, he did not remember. Where just across the river from Tomlinson's MIT lab in Cambridge, MA is the site where around 100 years earlier another professor, a guy named Bell, remembered the first words he said over his new invention, the thing we call the telephone.

So in that same spirit I don't think my very first post in my very first blog will be that memorable either. However I hope that my future posts will make up for it!

My money is on scaffolding – Friday, January 27, 2006, 4:54 pm

I live in Chicago. Sorry if I gave too much information. :)

One thing you will notice as you walk through the downtown section of Chicago, known as The Loop... is scaffolding. Sure, there is the amazing architecture, art and design that makes this city the great place that it is. But as you are walking, there it is - scaffolding.

Of course it is a symbol of growth and regeneration, but it is also a pain. As you are walking the sidewalks, there is a tunnel, blocking your view and passageways as you take in the Windy City.

So if you can't beat them, join them! So does anyone know of any any publicly-traded scaffolding companies?

Deconstructing a Long-Lost Blog

Where in one regard my forgotten Blogger blog was digital residue that needed overdue cleanup, in another it was a serendipitous encounter with the past that people don’t often get – the time I learned of a long-lost Shutterfly account was another. Embrace opportunities such as these, for we don’t know what else we have forgotten or if it will ever come back to us.


This is from The Hot Iron, a journal on business and technology by Mike Maddaloni.


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The Hot Iron At 17

By Mike Maddaloni on Saturday, December 30, 2023 at 07:53 AM with 0 comments

AI generated image of a 17th birthday cake for The Hot Iron

What better a way to celebrate a birthday than with a cake? As these days I am not eating the ingredients you typically make a cake with, I went to OpenAI’s DALL-E AI image generator to make one. As you can see from the accompanying image with post, I have some major work to do on my prompt writing in the new year.

That being said, I didn’t put much time and thought into my prompts, which are the natural language queries you enter to get an image. Of all of the prompts and adjustments to them, this image was the best of them all.

best AI generated image of a 17th birthday cake for The Hot Iron

Where I don’t have plans to use AI to create major portions of the content of this blog, you the reader should expect to hear more about it as I – and most of the known world – will be thinking and acting on AI in the future. If something is AI-generated, I will also note it as such. I do hope to have more timely topics that live up to the genesis of the name of this blog, along with takeaways and giveaways of the books I read. That being said I don’t want to get ahead of myself as I suck at predictions, especially when it comes to my productivity with my humble blog.

Happy 17th to The Hot Iron and a Happy 2024 to you!


This is from The Hot Iron, a journal on business and technology by Mike Maddaloni.


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Fifteen Years Of The Hot Iron

By Mike Maddaloni on Thursday, December 30, 2021 at 11:36 AM with 2 comments

photo of Scrabble board with fifteen years of The Hot Iron

I guess if a month goes by without any posts here at The Hot Iron, then that next post should have some significance to it. It just so happens that today, December 30, marks the anniversary of this humble blog going live. And December 30, 2021 marks 15 years since that first Hello World post.

Thank you to all who are reading this now, and to those who have read what I have written here over the years. Where I don’t often hear from readers, stats say people are reading, so I don’t feel like I am talking to myself. I sometimes equate this to my days in college radio when I would do a great show and ask for requests, yet the phone would never ring. However when I would run into people on campus or out on the street, they would tell me they listen, and even mention songs I played so I knew they were sincere. Of course the balance of sharing information and my ego are heavily in play when I write.

What will this 15th year of blogging have in store? We’ll see.


This is from The Hot Iron, a journal on business and technology by Mike Maddaloni.


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Thoughts on Writing 1000 Blog Posts

By Mike Maddaloni on Wednesday, October 27, 2021 at 07:28 PM with 3 comments

photo of 100 Grand bars

My last post at The Hot Iron, Lower the Minimum Age to Work, was the one-thousandth post I have written for my blog over the almost 15 years since I started it.

I say that calls for acknowledgment and some reflection.

Where It Began

Over the years I have often mentioned why I started and have continued this blog. In short, I had a client of my Web business who asked me to stop building them a Web site and build them a blog first using specific software. After building theirs, I realized I had no “showcase” blog to use as an example to future clients. I had registered the domain name thehotiron.com years earlier, as I thought a play on “strike while the iron is hot” was a good name for a blog. At the end of 2006, what you are reading this from was born.

I slowly got into writing, namely as I wasn’t much of a writer previously. Some posts were things on my mind, others were on what was bugging me, and others were a way to promote myself and my business. Types of posts emerged over the years, such as mobile phone evaluations, book takeaways and What I Learned for the previous week. No matter what I wrote, I tried to contribute something unique to the global conversation. Looking back on random posts as I am writing this, I think I did a good job at keeping to this mission.

1,000 Could Have Been Sooner, Thanks Social Media

There’s no doubt on the impact on social media in the world. A little closer to home, it certainly impacted what and how often I wrote on my blog. Something that was bugging me could easily be boiled down to 120 characters in a Tweet or a little longer in a Facebook post. Over time however those social accounts have gone away or ground down to a halt, as I have preferred to write in longer form in a platform I control. Am I anti-social? No – I certainly do share links on social media to my blog posts. However it’s nice to have my collection of written thoughts in one place, making The Hot Iron the center of my digital presence – something I have written about before and will continue to in the future. Judging by the little bit of observing I do of hits to the blog, others do find me here and keep coming back.

What’s Next

A grand of posts down, another to go? We’ll see, as I stopped making predictions here a long time ago. A little celebration to go along with this reflection... now that’s something that will happen for certain.


This is from The Hot Iron, a journal on business and technology by Mike Maddaloni.


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No Pictures But It Did Happen

By Mike Maddaloni on Sunday, October 13, 2019 at 04:54 PM with 2 comments

photo of cole slaw at Good City Brewing in Milwaukee

There’s a phrase I see often on the little bit of remaining social media I use – “pictures or it didn’t happen.” It stems from claims that people make in these social channels, and people asking for photographic proof as they don’t believe those claims. However, I am here to say that it’s ok to not always have those pictures.

As I was driving home late last night in the rain from Milwaukee, Wisconsin (about a 1.5 hour ride) I realized I did not get a picture with my cousin whom I went there to meet. He was in the Cream City for a conference, and I wanted to get together with him as he was so close. We met up and went to dinner and had some great beer at a brewpub just next to the new arena downtown and had a nice time. After I dropped him off at his hotel, I got some coffee for the road and headed home.

It was in the process of keeping my mind off of the rain – and on the road – that I realized there was no picture of us; no selfie, and didn’t even ask our friendly waitress to take a picture. It wasn’t that we didn’t have a good time – we talked of the conference he was here for, tech, healthcare, beer, all good. We both had our phones with operating cameras on them, and it wasn’t even that I didn’t take any pictures last night – see above for the huge bowl of cole slaw that came with my brat burger, as I had never seen a serving of cole slaw that large, ever.

This is not the first time I have done something that could be considered a “Kodak moment” and didn’t capture it... yes, I am a Gen Xer and I remember that term well. Being in that age range probably means why I am not always “on” taking pictures, especially with my conscious effort to be on less social media channels and use the ones I am still on less often. Then there is the “management” of these pictures, for lack of a better term. What do you do with all of the photos you take? And what about the ones you may have taken in the dark ages with actual film? My guess is the boxes of photos and albums you have are similar to what I have.

Over the summer my family took a road trip West and went to Mount Rushmore. I was in awe of seeing the mountain carvings in person that I have seen in photos since I was a child. The pictures I took were great, especially with the family, but they didn’t quite match the magnitude and emotion I felt seeing it for myself. For me that’s ok, as I have my memories of that August night to go with those pictures to make for a complete experience.

As I was mulling all of this over in the ride home, I recalled an article by Derek Sivers where he talked about traveling without a smartphone altogether. Where he couldn’t take any pictures or use GPS for maps, he felt he remembered his time more without the device, and what it offered as well as what it could take away from the moment. Where I don’t think I would consciously do this, it at least made me feel better about the one picture I don’t have of the many thousands of pictures I do have.

By the way I highly recommend the cole slaw there; it’s made with red peppers.

Deconstructing Not Taking A Picture

In our constantly-connected world, moments when we are not stand out. If the fact that we weren’t connected didn’t distract from the life experience, then that’s ok. There are other ways to “capture the moment” such as recounting it to others, or even writing a blog post about it.


This is from The Hot Iron, a journal on business and technology by Mike Maddaloni.


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