The Scoop on Bloggercon III 74
Trizor writes "Bloggercon III commenced today with the opening session ending in a singalong of 'This land is your land'. The sessions ranged from introductions on blogging to a comparison of bloggers and journalists. The developers at O'Reilly have provided notes, coverage, and commentary on the event."
Is Slashdot a "blog"? (Score:4, Interesting)
For starters, it's been around long before the term "blog" was coined.
Just wondering if others here think it's weird when Slashdot is called a blog.
Re:Is Slashdot a "blog"? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Is Slashdot a "blog"? (Score:2)
So, I'd call it a group blog, similar to http://www.metafilter.com/ [metafilter.com]metafilter.
Re:Is Slashdot a "blog"? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Is Slashdot a "blog"? (Score:3, Informative)
More seriously, I think the thing about calling
Re:Is Slashdot a "blog"? (Score:2)
You need to get plugged into the FK circle [slashdot.org] - there are easily 150 active accounts that journal regularly.
Re:Is Slashdot a "blog"? (Score:1)
Re:Is Slashdot a "blog"? (Score:3, Funny)
There is nothing new about blogs (Score:2)
Re:Is Slashdot a "blog"? (Score:3, Informative)
I don't claim any authoritative research on this topic but -- my recollection is that when the word "weblog" emerged to describe a site with continuously updated front page content, Slashdot was one of the protypical examples given. As the word evolved to "blog", it became associated with narcissists jabbering about their cats or linking to links to links about wildly partisan political content, which I think is the way you interpret the
Re:Is Slashdot a "blog"? (Score:1)
Re:Is Slashdot a "blog"? (Score:2)
Yes, I think it is weird as well. Though,
CC.
Re:Is Slashdot a "blog"? (Score:2)
I've seen other sites refer to Slashdot as a "blog" but I don't really think of it that way.
For starters, it's been around long before the term "blog" was coined.
Just wondering if others here think it's weird when Slashdot is called a blog.
Strictly speaking, yes it is a blog. However, I think slashdot is a lot different primarily because Slashdot is less about the news stories and more about the comments.
In true blogs the reverse is true.
Simon.
Ach my eyes (Score:1, Redundant)
As opposed to... (Score:2)
Re:As opposed to... (Score:1)
I enjoy reading good professional writing and good amateur writing. Please consider that editors have a real, actual, useful purpose the next time you see "Bush is a moran!!!! Click hear to see an funnie flash video! Comments (0) TrackBack (0) [google.com]"
Summary (Score:5, Funny)
Politicians should have a blog, housewives should have a blog, my boss should blog, dogs should blog, blogs should blog, blogblogblog.
A con for blogs, who knew? (Score:4, Interesting)
Sure, there are exceptions [boingboing.net] that prove the rule; the rapid punditry of certain election blogs were interesting, too.
What would be most interesting to me is to find if there's a business strategy in exploiting blogs. I recall just a few years ago Micro$oft finding some business use for instant messaging (and not just as a communications enhancement, but for things like EDI); I'm sure there are some plans already to deploy Business Visual Blog Server or some such product, to what end I can't fathom. I'm sure another company will say they've patented blogs and/or blog technology, and then we'll know that blogs have really arrived.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:A con for blogs, who knew? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:A con for blogs, who knew? (Score:1)
And in the search engine spammer communities, who use autoposting tools to pollute search engines with trillions of inbound links with specific anchor text.
Check out blogger.com's "Recently updated" link - you'll see a *lot* of spamblogs consisting of nothing but automated postings of links to high-money keywords.
New bLog, from BLAMO! (Score:5, Funny)
Alone or in pairs...
Rolls over your neighbor's dog?
What's great for a snack
And fits on your back?
It's bLog! bLog! bLog!
It's bLo-og, it's bLo-og
It's big, it's heavy
It's wood!
It's bLo-og, bLo-og
It's better than bad
It's good!!!
As Phil Connors once said... (Score:4, Insightful)
Although Phil snorted this in response to a woman's claim of having studied 19th century French poetry, I think I can hear the collective snort of many people in reponse to a story about the blog of a convention for bloggers.
Blog me with a spoon.
Dangerously self-referrential technology (Score:4, Insightful)
Better be careful with those little orange XML lozenges; just one in the wrong place could kill.
Re:Dangerously self-referrential technology (Score:1, Funny)
"I can't believe (blank) would (believe/do)(blank), I mean, all of my friends and blogs I read are totally against it!"
Slashdot is the end all be all (Score:2)
When speaking to a newbie group I provide an overview of what blogs are, along with concepts/sites built around participatory journalism.
As a previous poster said a blog is basically CMS for the common person. The blog has added comments and trackbacks (most corporate sites I see built with CMS don't allow any user to just comment).
However more corporations are using blo
Re:Slashdot is the end all be all (Score:1)
In much the same way, but on a much smaller scale, the "blogosphere" is a bunch of individuals posting articles and TrackBacking to each other in a futile struggle to gain influence.
Furthermore, the community of people who call themselves the "blogosphere" are absolutely infuriating with all the manifestos and rants and such about how blogging will transf
Re:Slashdot is the end all be all (Score:2)
"people so deluded as to think that a couple of web applications will transform peoples psyches"
That sounds a little like....take your pick
- traditional advertising firms before in 1997
- TV executives when Tivo launched
- anybody who said...why use ICQ, I have e-mail
I am not saying that blogs or the blogosphere will change the world but it can influence things. Take Rathergate and the forged CBS memos. 5-10 years and CBS might have gotten away with it.
But instead with bl
And you're exactly the same way... (Score:2)
And you're different?
While stupid people are a constant, I don't think that web logs are evil. And I've read some interesting thoughts on peoples' web logs.
Just because YOU and YOUR group whine about web logs all day, doesn't mean they are bad, and what would you rather happen? Everyone just stay silent all the time to make you happy?
An interesting seminar (Score:4, Funny)
OT:This land is your land, this land is my land... (Score:1)
blogging is so 2001... (Score:5, Insightful)
The thing about blogs is that I think it was a really obvious idea. There were loads and loads of people doing webpages, updated daily, when the blogging concept took hold. For instance, when I relaunched my website around 2000, I had my designer build a custom database so that I could easily post content from a webpage. Then blogs started getting big, and even though I didn't call my site a blog, it had a huge amount of characteristics in common with blogs.
I think the most important story about blogs is the emergence of back-end software like movabletype and wordpress. No longer were the developers of content stuck with the obvious kludge of using Frontpage or some other mediocre web site creator to post daily content. Wordpress and its ilk lets you post content, and incorporate a bunch of useful blog-related features, without reinventing the wheel.
But, as I said, I just don't find the "blog" concept that interesting. It's an obvious concept that was being practiced by thousands of websites long before somebody tacked the repulsive-sounding name "blog" on what they were doing.
In my eyes, far more interesting than blogs is the emerging iPodder concept. Here, people are adopting the very same tools used in blogs (wordpress, movabletype, etc), and using them to attach mp3 files of radio shows to the Internet. Internet radio has been around for a while, but the iPodder concept that taps into RSS sites is incredibly interesting.
To put it another way, blogs made me yawn and say, "I've already been doing this for months." Whereas podcasts made me say, "This is truly revolutionary. We finally have a way for individual content creators to break the Clear Channel hegemony."
Two months ago there were fewer than fifty podcasted radio shows. Now there are well over 200. I've been having a great time doing mine, which I post to a RSS feed for users of ipodder [vegan.com], and post to my website [vegan.com] for people who visit it regularly.
One last comment on podcasting. There is a huge but limited number of people who want to surf the web or fire up their RSS feeder to read a variety of blogs. That circle of people draws from a very different population than those who want to listen to radio shows. And shows like mine can offer compelling content that there's a big demand for, but that traditional advertisers [mcdonalds.com] would boycott. The real news about the democratization of media isn't happening at a third annual blogging conference; it's happening right now with the emergence of ipodder radio shows.
Re:blogging is so 2001... (Score:2)
How, exactly? I see blogs as nothing but an earlier poster described... a bunch of dull people writing (poorly) about the minutae of their lives, with links to web sites they find interesting. How has this had an "enormous impact"?
Re:blogging is so 2001... (Score:1)
Lets take for instance the Drudge Report. Despite what you think of Matt Drudge or his writing more people know his name than the name of many of the talking head pundits that inhabit more traditional means of communication.
Further than just simple name recognition blogs are a great way to share informa
Re:blogging is so 2001... (Score:1)
News blogs aren't going to destroy CNN, and webcasted radio shows aren't going to break anyone's hegemony. What's amazing is that people hold annual conferences to make assloads of money off of people deluded enough to believe that blogs will do any more for the Internet than, say, Geocities ever did.
Geez... (Score:3)
Did they sing Kumbaya, too?
Re:Geez... (Score:1)
blogger con = circle jerk (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:blogger con = circle jerk (Score:4, Insightful)
I admire their ambition and writing skills (Score:1)
But I wonder: where do these people get the time and ambition to write these weblogs? And if they are spending so much time writing, plus have a job, where do they get the time to actually have a life?
Some of these comments seem misplaced. (Score:2, Insightful)
As for the conference its the most open and accessible I know of with live audio, active IRC rooms, a wiki, audio available afterwords
Why "blogs" are not all bad... (Score:3, Interesting)
Blogging software is just simplified CMS software, a more accessible form of what's been around since the start of dynamic web content and database backed web sites. That's it. Nothing more or less. Let's not ascribe any gradiose proclamations to it. I don't think "blogging" is a fad that will ever go away, I just think a lot of boring people with nothing interesting to say will eventually lose interest in blogging.
Easy-to-use content management software has just made it more reasonable for people to keep well-updated, more relevant sites without having to laboriously manage static HTML pages. The plethora of good (or at least decent) blog software out there has also done a lot to increase the importance and use of web standards like CSS and XHTML, and actually finally pushed forward useful metadata on the web in the form of RSS/Atom. These are all good things.
As for the rantings or ramblings posted by people you disagree with, and generally stupid or sucky content that just don't interest you, you certainly don't have to read it. Slashdot has plenty of this too. While quite imperfect, moderation helps separate the wheat from the chaff. Given the development of standards like Trackback by the "blogging" community (god I hate that word, it really kills me to use it), I wouldn't be surprised to eventually see distributed moderation systems or communities and webs of trust factor more heavily into the culture of blogs too (hmm, maybe we can call it the "culture of distributed content" - I refuse to use the word 'blogosphere').
I just wish that somebody would get rid of the damned word blog, negative connotations, hokey sound and all. And get rid of the meaningless catchphrase "social software" while you're at it.
Re:Why "blogs" are not all bad... (Score:2)
I must need sleep (Score:1)
Am I the only one that read it as BuggerCon III?
yeah, I thought so.