About

You are reading technology journalism, a genre that is too rarely associated with enjoyable reads. Probably because human being out there tends to think that this is just another story (for the techies with the big glasses) about bits, pixels and motherboards.

There’s an increased demand for geek writers who understand subject-verb agreement as well as what a megapixel is. It is important to these writers to be able to write a story that do not require an advanced degree in electrical engineering in order to be understood. They can never lose sight of the human element at their core.

Most of writings out there, they are the long-winded, impenetrable pieces that may contain a worthwhile nugget somewhere around the 4000th word. This is not a bible we are writing. Its simply just an artistically crafted article by a tech-educated muggle.

The best technology writing tackles such thorny issues head-on and in measured tones, never sacrificing accuracy for the sake of a political agenda (some say TechCrunch did this). It is the authors’ awareness that technology, for all of its byzantine details, is essentially an expression of human desire. The desire to learn something new, to seek a knowledge.

From the private lair, a single occupied room, I am Buzzlair Voufincci, a 21 year old Software Engineering undergraduate student, tech-educated, highly passionate in arts and music, trying his best to learn to write technology story in a more humanly words hoping that the story he writes would inspire other skilled writers to try their hand at writing about technology, regardless of whether or not they can tell HTML from XML or a
microchip from a nanochip.

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