Watcheroftrends said:
I'm a bit of a Hemingway, so I feel the need to go into great detail when creating a post. This results in the "wall of text" phenomenon as is often quoted on forums such as this. I believe my posts are interesting and contain good information, but it seems that the length immediately makes people avoid reading them.
Well, either herein lies your problem, and you can easily remedy it by employing paragraphs in your writing, or you just don't know what a "wall of text" is.
I've noticed that the usage of the phrase "wall of text" is
way too prevalent here (and everywhere on the internet), usually used by people with a less-than-average intelligence and writing grammar, trying to justify their own inability to write as long posts while cramming fresh, concise and interesting information throughout.
Of course, I'm not implying that you are one of those people. Actually, heh, look, here I went off on one of those "tangents" you mentioned in your post.
(P.S. I quickly blotted up a crude visual accompaniment which should explain my point easily even to a mollusk, which can be found here. [http://img211.imageshack.us/img211/9099/wallid.jpg])
Also, yeah, I'm a perpetrator of this "short post" phenomen, but someone in this thread who mentioned famous quotes, is right. People who like to think they're smart often glance over a new piece of their mind they've committed to paper and think that even though they've written a long post, it contains so much to swallow, so much content and it all is edifying and never repeats itself etc.
Truth is, everything can be said with a much shorter train of letters (even with a single sentence) than someone else has before, either by striking off superfluous words and/or sentences, or by saying something that has multiple meanings, implications and more pizzazz and gets a point across with but a word, like, for example, by association to some other widely-known phenomen or something said in the thread before (while not just quoting and repeating, but adding a lot).