RE: Diary Game Project: is it easy to write a diary?
The experience I have gained in life has allowed me to understand that knowledge has nothing to do with respect, I can even say that most people who believe they have more knowledge than others, can become more disrespectful, perhaps, the ego often plays an important role in this.
The essence of the journal game is not to compete to know how long you can write 300 words, but to allow the user to have an option so that it can achieve a constancy in the platform, in fact, the 300 words is a requirement that arises for all publications regardless of what the main topic. this in order to give depth to it.
The diary game has shown those who read them that they are not just words, but real and true situations that people live day by day, without "newspaper" intermediaries, and add value in terms of social information.
To conclude, it is important that we respect all the other topics that are developed on the platform, in my life I have met people who do not like paintings at all "much less abstract", I have heard people who do not like music, there are even people who do not believe in God, but do not live criticizing them.
Thank you for the opinion Adel. I still feel that you do not understand what I wanted to clarify, it is the fact that many curator teams and even challenges put these 300 words as a firm condition, if it is less then they do not visit a post. Just to highlight it again:
Based on the title and introduction you use, you're implying that journals don't deserve the attention they get, because it's supposedly easy to write 300 words.
I want to tell you that newspapers are not only valued for the number of words used, but also the quality of photos, organization of content, even the quality of spelling. On the other hand, community curators only follow the basic rules issued by the Steemit team, who request that content must be exclusive to Steemit, bot-free, at least #club5050 and a minimum of 300 words "estimated", although a post by good images or drawings could be supported with at least 200 words, it all depends on the point of view of the curator.