Can you share some examples of what you're describing. I enjoy blogs, have one of my own that I haven't added to in quite a while. I don't feel under any pressure, for many of the reasons stated in TFA, to update it regularly. But I'm now interested in exploring this alternative you describe.
Any personal homepage of the pre-blog era is a good example.
See here the personal homepage of the late Sheldown Brown, famous for his technical articles on bicycle maintenance, that is still maintained by his spouse Harriett Fell[1] who still add content regularly. I still visit once in a while: https://www.sheldonbrown.com/org/personal-pages.html
It may look like a big mess and it is ugly by modern standards[2] but it is a real pleasure to visit with tons of articles classed by topics. I find it more interesting to visit than a blog.
Here some humor pages Harriett Fell added in recent year to make fun of Zwift or OpenAI:
https://www.sheldonbrown.com/time-travel.html
https://www.sheldonbrown.com/openai.html
[1] which also happen to have her own personal page: https://www.khoury.northeastern.edu/home/fell/
[2] it doesn't have to be, this one simply was built in the late 90's
I think https://gwern.net/ is a pretty good example of a "personal site" that in another universe could be a regular blog. https://gwern.net/changelog is the only log part of it.