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Posts Tagged ‘diary’

Why Isn’t Pyxlin Free?

Tuesday, April 8th, 2008

ADVERTISING based business models are always called “FREE”. We debated extensively on whether or not to follow the route of Google, facebook, Youtube, and many others to offer a free Pyxlin. In the end the choice was obvious:

3 reasons for not doing a “free” ad-based journal system:

  • Profitable ad based models (”Free” models) required intrusive data mining that is not appropriate for personal journals (and Youtube is STILL NOT profitable).
  • With a “free” model we would not be able to afford to provide you with person-to-person phone support (it is nice to know you can call rather than search through time consuming Help Systems)
  • When was the last time you wanted to see banner ads plastered all over your journal? This allows you to control what is in your journal, or your kids journals for that matter. You don’t have to worry about inappropriate ads being displayed to you or your children.

Pyxlin is absolutely affordable, just $2.50 per month (less than a gallon of gas) to offset the costs of unlimited service (including unlimited phone support) and archiving. This allows us to focus completely on your experience, making sure that Pyxlin is the best journaling system in the world.

Pyxlin in the Daily Universe

Tuesday, February 26th, 2008

pyxlin article in the daily universe at BYU

Pyxlin was put in the BYU student newspaper this last week. Here is a link to the article:

Web Site Presents Future of Journal Writing

By Ashley Gessel - 21 Feb 2008

 

  With the recent trend of moving business to the Internet, it is now possible to do banking, shopping and social networking on the Web. Now, thanks to a couple of BYU students, people can keep their personal journals online with the Web site Pyxlin’.Cousins Jeff Harmon, a senior in business marketing, and Benton Crane, a senior in economics, created the Web site because they felt guilty and frustrated after falling behind on their mission journals.
“Keeping a journal is one of those things you know you should do, but doesn’t always get done,” Crane said. Read More

Go ahead, try something new

Wednesday, January 30th, 2008

You are probably deciding whether or not to try Pyxlin for your journal. A common question we get from those about to sign up is, “Is it hard to use?” This video made me think of my mom (so funny):

Using Pyxlin for your journal is as easy as email. Still have concerns? Just give it a free trial run, it doesn’t cost anything to try it.

“Journaling Jar” for Pyxlin

Monday, January 28th, 2008

One of my friends mentioned that at church she learned about “journaling jars”. I found this great example and description of a journaling jar at the jelly journals:

A Journal Jar is a jar that is filled to the brim with strips of cardstock that have questions printed or written on them, that are then rolled into little scrolls. These are the journal prompts. The idea is that each day you pull out one of the little scrolls and stick it at the top of a page in your journal and write your daily journal entry based on that question.

The Pyxlin Journaling System is by far the best system for typing, organizing, archiving, and publishing your personal journal. But we are far overdue for something like a digital “journal jar”. I started on the project last week. It didn’t take long for my creative juice reservoir to be completely depleted. Brainstorming for journaling prompts that are meant to help me brainstorm for journal entries was squeezing my brain. I needed to innovate. I had a brilliant idea!

I decided to use Amazon Mechanical Turk to create my prompts. I have used MTurk before for surveys and I know others who have used Mturk in clever ways as well. I am just asking each MTurker to write 5 journal prompts and then I pay them $0.05 for their work (take a look at the HIT here). So far they have come up with some fantastic prompts. In the end 1000 prompts will only cost me $11. Here are a few of the Prompts so far:

  • Given the chance to give your child only one quality as a person, which would you choose? How about if that choice were unavailable, what would be your second and maybe third choices? Why are these so important to you?
  • Which superpower would you choose to have if you had the option and why? Conversely, which superhero do you find to be the most overrated and why?
  • Which amendment to the constitution is the most important to you and why?
  • Is speech always free? When and where might it not be free?
  • Put yourself in Anne Frank’s place how would you have survived?
  • If you witnessed a fight at school would you report it? What could the repercussions be if you told the truth?
  • What will be the first thing that you do when you get your driver’s license?
  • You have one week to do whatever you want, all-expenses-paid, what things would you want to do? Where would you go?
  • If your best friend came to you depressed and upset like you’ve never seen before, how would you react?
  • In what ways do you sometimes wish to act to be a better friend, but don’t? Why do you find yourself unable to do these things?
  • You have one hour to come up with the most interesting television show you can and describe/pitch it.
  • “If someone gains, someone else loses.” How much does this reflect life, and how much does it come up short. Reflecting upon this, how could your attitudes have been different during events in your past?
  • Would you be a different person today if you had a different childhood?
  • Consider some of the parents others had growing up. What type of person would you be if you had those situations?
  • What if you life had been harder or easier? How do you think you’d be different?
  • Did I recently have an interesting conversation?
  • What is a scary dream that I remember from my past?
  • Who is the person that I feel has altered the course of my morals and values, and how did they effect me?
  • Where do I see myself, so far as my goals, personal development, residence, or job, in five years, and do I have a plan to arrive at this destination?
  • What is my earliest or happiest memory?

Liz and I were talking this morning, we are thinking to get over 1000 prompts for the Pyxlin journaling jar. Perhaps we could even ad a rating feature. Each time you use a Pyxlin prompt it would be nice if you could rate it with a thumbs/down or a 1-5 star rating. Over time has each of the journal prompts are rated thousands of times we will eventually have the best journal jar in the world.

What do you think? How would you like the Pyxlin Journal Jar to work? Let us know.

 Here are some other blogs I found interesting with journal prompts:

Journals

Sunday, January 27th, 2008

“Preserve your memories - seal them up well.

What you forget, you can never retell.

But a journal that’s kept fresh on the shelf

Will help someone through rough times -

Maybe even yourself!”

-Author Unknown

37% of journalers have had a journal lost or destroyed.

Monday, May 14th, 2007

Here are some other interesting stats that we learned from a survey of over 3000 people:

  • 21 percent of journalers have lost a journal by misplacing it (these are probably mostly handwritten).
  • 13 percent have lost their journal to a computer crash.
  • 2 percent have been destroyed in an accident (e.g. House fire, water)
  • 0.5 percent have been lost in a natural disaster (e.g. tornado, flood, hurricane, earthquake)

This is a total of 36.5 percent! Wow, who would have thought this many people have experienced losing their journal?

Don’t let this destroy your journal!

Could your personal journal/diary survive this? pyxlin can.

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