An invitation to think of WordLand as a place to write the kind of posts you write on social media.
I'm going to start doing that myself.
In order for that to feel right, I have to give you a page where your posts can be viewed as if they were tweets, for lack of a better term.
Giving your words the feel of being short and quickly disposed of, yet without the limits of twitter-like systems, if you keep writing after you started with a very basic idea.
When you put this idea together with the WordLand editor, it might feel like something familiar, yet wildly more powerful. More of the web than any of the twitter-like systems which were weaned of their webhood at birth. And while the features they removed could have been added back, the lack of features was viewed as a feature itself. I never believed a word of it.
As a writer, I want to choose when I use a feature. As a reader, I don't want their use of features to clutter up my reading. But we both, writer and reader, can have what we want. If you have more to say, as a reader I want you to say it. But if I lose interest, I don't have to keep reading, continues the reader.