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People and Blogs: Nicola Losito
Written By: Zachary Kai and Manuel Moreale » Published: | Updated:
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People and Blogs is a series by Manuel Moreale featuring the people behind personal blogs and the stories of their corners of the web. This conversation is with Nicola Losito. Do go visit their blog and say hello!
Interview
Let's start from the basics: can you introduce yourself?
Hi, my name is Nicola Losito. Born in the mid-70s in Bari, I lived through the first wave (in Italy) of the television invasion of Japanese cartoons—which I would later discover are called anime—and US TV series like the A-Team, Knight Rider, CHiPs, Dukes of Hazard, MacGyver, and many others. Other playmates were American comics and the first consoles (Atari, Intellivision, Commodore). Finally, I remember with immense love the long afternoons riding around on a Vespa, or in the garage with friends taking apart and putting back together our Vespas, fixing the small hiccups that cropped up or trying to make them go faster. All this led me to university studies in Mechanical Engineering until a break to give 10 months of my life to Military Service, which was mandatory in my day. Upon my return, I had missed the boat with my studies and, by then twenty-five, I finally convinced my parents that the computer was not just a toy but a multipurpose tool. I also discovered I had a bit of a knack for it, so I changed my field of study and city, graduating in Computer Science.
Two years ago I received a great gift, a new heart from a 27-year-old guy that today allows me to continue living with my wife and see our son grow up. Comics, science fiction novels, motorcycles, and padel (instead of the tennis I played so much as a kid) are still part of my life.
I continue to read superhero comics, along with more mature European and Japanese productions, with the recent addition of a couple of Korean authors. I ride a Ducati Monster 1200S, and my son and I are venturing into the world of minicross with an unfortunate LEM 50 DX3.
Perhaps you have noticed that I have not told you about my job yet, because especially after the long period of illness and having re-evaluated the priorities of things, now for me it is just a task I have to face, something I no longer believe in and for which I can no longer get excited. Anyway, I have an anecdote to share: I found a job opportunity thanks to participating in a motorcycle mailing list for two or three years. The interactions on the list made me "interesting" or "reliable" enough that another member of the list eventually called me and invited me to participate in a selection process at the company where he had already been working for a dozen years. I started for fun, and it’s been twenty years now that I’ve been at the CNR. The lesson is: never rule out participating in something that interests you; you never know where life, passions, and the people you meet will take you.
What's the story behind your blog?
As far as I can remember, I started coming across "blogs" towards the end of 2001, and certainly by 2002 several college friends had one. Thanks to the advent of an Italian blogging platform very similar to the current Blogger (it was called Splinder), on February 28, 2003, I took the plunge and opened my first blog on that platform, starting to interact with all the other bloggers (essentially Italians) who had an account there, or on other then-nascent platforms. In September 2004, I registered my first and current domain, installed WordPress release 1.2, and imported the old content. Since then, I haven't left the platform, and I believe the current incarnation of https://koolinus.net/blog has only been re-installed once during these twenty-two years, performing updates release after release. Over time, I participated more actively in the international blogosphere, spanning various platforms: Live Journal, Jaiku, and WordPress.com practically since it was born in 2006 when I joined it to publish in English…
Today my online activities are concentrated on the "historic" blog in Italian; I’ve made nicolalosito.it my personal space for English language content and I use Scribble for micro-blogging. I’ve always used Tumblr as a pinboard for images and quotes that strike me, and another instance of WordPress on a hidden subdomain to occasionally publish something more intimate that I felt like writing anyway.
What does your creative process look like when it comes to blogging?
I essentially publish in three distinct ways:
- I curate a regular and periodic column called
linklogon both the Italian and English blogs, where since May 2015 I have been publishing interesting URLs that I collect (currently on Bear) during my daily browsing; - I publish how-tos on how I solve specific IT problems (which happens VERY rarely today, unlike in the past);
- I publish on the emotional wave that a song, a quote, a photo, or a dialog triggers in me. These days I mull things over a lot in my head, and I very rarely expose my thoughts publicly in writing.
A recent and controversial post you wrote, Manuel, is exemplary of why I have this attitude. This then resulted in me sharing the following quote which somewhat summarizes the current mood:
The fact is that certain things you can only say to those you know can understand them. Which is also the reason we talk so little about what really matters to us.
by Enrico Galiano, Eppure Cadiamo Felici
Anyway, in all these modes, I write directly in the WordPress editor (Gutenberg), publish, and then make grammatical and typographical corrections. As someone once said, the publish button is the best editor. WordPress database maintenance plugins are my great friends.
Do you have an ideal creative environment? Also do you believe the physical space influences your creativity?
Over the course of these twenty-two years, I’ve written just about everywhere: airports, hospital beds, car seats, cafe tables, desks at home or in the office. Very often with a soundtrack in the background, though in recent weeks often without music to accompany me. I’m working from home a lot—I’m "full remote"—and my neighbors are renovating. So the construction noises are more than enough as ‘white noise’.
As I mentioned, I write directly on the computer, so I do not use notebooks or anything else.
In my personal case, it is the inspiration of the moment that drives my writing, so the fact that I can immediately put my thoughts into bytes depends only on having a keyboard and an active internet connection available. In short, physical space in the strict sense has never compromised the desire or the possibility to knock out a post.
A question for the techie readers: can you run us through your tech stack?
My domains are all currently registered with the European provider OVH. For a few years now, I’ve been using SupportHost for hosting, after having tried almost all the big names in the industry: BlueHost, SiteGround, GreenGeeks along with a couple of national ISPs… problems arose with all of them sooner or later. Since my friend Lino Sabato told me about this company and I migrated all my content, I’ve become a happy and (above all) listened-to customer, and every time I’ve recommended this provider, those who migrated in turn have only thanked me.
So to recap, I’m on a cPanel-based hosting, and I use WordPress as a CMS. I’m tempted to switch to something static, but so far I haven't found the courage or the time to approach it. Who knows if 2026 will see me make progress on this front.
Given your experience, if you were to start a blog today, would you do anything differently?
One thing I question a lot is the fact that I somehow gave in to splitting my nickname and my name; at many times, keeping a nickname associated with certain concepts would have allowed me to talk about them freely, without potential repercussions in real life. Having created a point of contact between these two parts is perhaps something I regret. Given how today's tech world has developed and is developing, guarding your anonymity with tooth and nail, or at least clearly separating public and private, is an effort that should be made at the expense of convenience.
For me and for the vast majority of early bloggers, this is no longer possible. It serves as a warning, however, to those starting today or about to start (or for my son when he enters the web).
From a practical point of view, however, I think the important thing is to choose any platform to start on and get a "feel" for your desire to tell your story, making sure you can export what you've written to another platform later on.
Financial question since the Web is obsessed with money: how much does it cost to run your blog? Is it just a cost, or does it generate some revenue? And what's your position on people monetising personal blogs?
I chose a hosting solution that allows me to have several domains (as well as sub-domains) within the same plan. I think this year we reached about €200 including taxes. I host 4 blogs for other friends, including a couple belonging to a friend who recently passed away, who contribute to the expense. Then there are the costs of the .it and .net domains, which run between €11 and €16. Could I save money? Probably yes, but currently I sleep soundly and I don't have any malfunctions (especially because for one of the domains I heavily use the email provided with the hosting plan and I have never, and I mean never, encountered a problem).
On monetization, as expressed by almost all the friends already interviewed, I am indifferent to the fact that there are people who make blogging a profession. As long as this is done while respecting the reader and not treating them like a fool or a fruit to be squeezed, I can tolerate even the most aggressive ads or pop-ups. But when everything becomes self-referential and closed in an ecosystem, then I stop following.
Personally, I try to support some authors by buying software, with a donation – either monetary or, occasionally, purchasing hardware or something else I read they are interested in. I support your work Manuel, and another couple of pals, with the 1 dollar a month initiative.
Time for some recommendations: any blog you think is worth checking out? And also, who do you think I should be interviewing next?
I would have certainly pointed you to Luca, but as I mentioned, he passed away in the first days of march 2026. I would like to give visibility to Luigi Mozzillo and Nicola D'Agostino author, among other things, of the Stories of Apple project which in my opinion hasn't received the love it deserved from the public.
Then there are people who don't have a blog but passionately curate newsletters. Is it okay to mention them too? In that case, I’d say the work of Anne-Laure Le Cunff is certainly noteworthy. I also really like the reflections of Tobias van Schneider both on his blog and in his newsletter. Among Italian newsletters, I’d highlight those by Gianvito Fanelli, the Polpette (meatballs) di Vanz, and everything Mafe De Baggis writes. I could probably write a whole post about the newsletters I follow.
Final question: is there anything you want to share with us?
I'm not the type of person to suggest things off the cuff; what I like or inspires me is regularly described in the pages of my blogs.
I would like to share these ‘life tips’ instead.
- Start being honest with yourself as soon as possible.
- Eliminate what you don't like from your life, or confine it to a cage, and don't let it eat up what is important to you. Remember that work is a gas that expands to occupy all the space it is given.
- You must be consistent with the things you say, even if it's often inconvenient.
- I believe you have to be kind regardless. A great luxury in life is being able to afford to trust others, even when they prove they don't deserve it, and thus not be too damaged by it.
- Above all, don't put off until some random tomorrow the things that make you feel good or make you happy; proceed step by step but without hesitating, and allow yourself to experience every single milestone. Tomorrow morning you don't know what will become of you or the world.
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Tags: people-and-blogs · interviews · blogging
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Zachary Kai — he/him | hi@zacharykai.net
Zachary Kai is a space fantasy writer, offbeat queer, traveler, zinester, and avowed generalist. The internet is his livelihood and lifeline.
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