Post by account_disabled on Dec 25, 2023 4:54:29 GMT
I asked myself this before, before I signed up. I was reading on Facebook about this and what they had added to this book on Anobii. Unlike them, I only added books to my library. So in the end I was enchanted by the magical world of Anobii and last November I signed up. I also wrote down three reviews of books I had read. Now, I had added books to Anobii too, even though I hadn't told everyone on Facebook. Understanding Anobii wasn't easy. Signing up is easy, but once inside… what was I supposed to do? I tried to understand what I could use a site like that for.
I was hoping for an additional promotional vehicle for my book blog . I found that my three reviews received a total of 3 helpfulness points. What this means is unknown to me. There is a link to my blog, but my Special Data bookstore has only been visited by six people. It could probably be a useful social network, if you put hundreds of books into it, if you spent hours and hours on the site writing and asking and answering. Perhaps. But why waste my time on Anobii, when I have a book blog of my own? Why write book reviews on Anobii, when I can write them on my blog.
Someone wrote to me that he uses Anobii to find out how many books he owns and which ones he has read . I also use a kind of Anobii to know the books I have read. It's a list I've been writing since the late 1980s on paper, recently brought into a file. And in another file I have the list of books I own, all sorted by literary genre. I know how many books I own and how many books I have read, without needing to have Anobii. I just open my files, without even being connected. I'm not interested in letting others know how many books I own. The ones I read yes, because I publish reviews on my blog.
I was hoping for an additional promotional vehicle for my book blog . I found that my three reviews received a total of 3 helpfulness points. What this means is unknown to me. There is a link to my blog, but my Special Data bookstore has only been visited by six people. It could probably be a useful social network, if you put hundreds of books into it, if you spent hours and hours on the site writing and asking and answering. Perhaps. But why waste my time on Anobii, when I have a book blog of my own? Why write book reviews on Anobii, when I can write them on my blog.
Someone wrote to me that he uses Anobii to find out how many books he owns and which ones he has read . I also use a kind of Anobii to know the books I have read. It's a list I've been writing since the late 1980s on paper, recently brought into a file. And in another file I have the list of books I own, all sorted by literary genre. I know how many books I own and how many books I have read, without needing to have Anobii. I just open my files, without even being connected. I'm not interested in letting others know how many books I own. The ones I read yes, because I publish reviews on my blog.