The Future of the Blog 144
conq writes "BusinessWeek has an interesting interview with Six Apart, the company behind LiveJournal and Movable Type, about the future of blogging and the role of the blogger. From the article: 'I think blog tools can get easier to use. Putting together a blog should be as easy as sending an e-mail. I foresee the next versions of blog tools as focusing less on features that appeal to early adopters. They'll be easier for people to incorporate more media and maybe mobile capabilities. This will be important, because many more mainstream users will come to blogging. I believe the interest in blogging is just starting.'"
Um, yeah (Score:2, Insightful)
It's called Livejournal, Myspace, and Xanga. Welcome to 2001.
Translation... (Score:1)
Simplicity is good (Score:5, Insightful)
I think Apple understands the noted direction change. iWeb is very simple to use. While it may not be chock full of features, it does allow you to start writing your blog entry almost immediately. I chose a template, and now, much like writing a new email, the blog process is simple: I just alter the title, drop in a picture (if I want one) and write my entry. Publish. Done. With an email, I just choose a recipient, type in a subject, and finally the body of the email. Click send. Done. iWeb matches that sort of simplicity. I think for a good number of users, that direction is a good choice.
Re:Simplicity is good (Score:4, Funny)
Want simpler blogging? You have to go no further than
Just post a typical blog-style long rant on any thread. Sure it might get modded down as irrelevant or flamebait, but your blog's "home page" would be your user history page so it will always be easily reachable.
Plus, the peer-review scoring aspect would help others decide if they should waste time reading your stuff or not. Plenty of times, while searching on Google, I come across blogs that I wished were modded down to "useless crap" so they wouldn't clutter my search results.
Re:Simplicity is good (Score:1)
Re:Simplicity is good (Score:1)
Re:Simplicity is good (Score:2)
-matthew
Blog using a mailing list (Score:2)
It is: just send mail to a mailing list indexed by Gmane [gmane.org] and then view the list with Gmane's blog interface [gmane.org]. 'Course, you do have to create your own mailing list first...
Re:Simplicity is good Insightful (Score:2)
This of course is ignoring the Journal feature provided. The biggest drawback of Slashblogging is that you don't have a copy of your blog you can just download to retain your content, should Slashdot ever
Blogging (Score:2, Insightful)
I also loath it. (Score:2)
"blogger"
"blogging"
"blogosphere"
"Web 2.0"
But then, I also find that the majority of those pages are filled with narcissistic drivel. So I'm probably overly biased.
Re:Blogging (Score:2)
In a word, no.
Re:Blogging (Score:1, Funny)
but call it a 'blog' and watch the girls line up.
Re:Blogging (Score:2)
Well, blog, plog, podcasting,... are just the Internet Fad Du Jour [tm]. Before, blogging was called "making a website with a forum section".
Making a website the scope of most of blogs' was not a lot harder than opening a blog today, but it did require your ISP to allow you to run server-side apps or scripts for the forum, and it required the creator of the website to get involved in some nooks and crannies to get everything looking and going nice. What the blog
Re:Blogging (Score:2)
You must be new here.
Re:Blogging (Score:3, Funny)
My brain crapped its skull.
That night, my friends and I made up our own political blog where we trie
Re:Blogging (Score:4, Funny)
n : something particularly smelly and disgusting that is so difficult to remove from your toilet drain that you must call a professional to extract it.
Yeah, man! (Score:1)
"So today I was feeling kinda tired and like, I went for a walk and stopped at the local McDonalds. I had a hamburger and it was good but not as good as they usually are... Dunno. I guess it's 'cause I was tired. Then I met up with John..."
Yeah, I know they're not all like that. But most of the ones which I've seen were mostly pointless and
Re:Yeah, man! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Blogging (Score:1)
We should get some peace in a year or two.
Re:Blogging (Score:3, Interesting)
Keyboard: lame, a board with keys? original
mouse: just 'cause of a cord? silly
the web (esp. the world wide web): annoying, superfluous poetic grandeur
memory: false cognate for non-computer users, in any sense except the computer usage memory is more like the hard disk and computer memory is more like "active thought"
hard disk: to differentiate from "floppy" di
Re:Blogging (Score:1)
Keyboard: What else would you call it? Manual Input Device?
Email: Remember, this is derived from electronic mail, which is precisely what it is (although I suppose they have more in common with interoffice memos [to, from, subject, etc], so perhaps they should have been called electronic memos.)
Floppy disks: were floppy at one point, so hard disk is a viable term to differentiate the two.
World Wide Web: described as such because the pages were intended to be, through h
Re:Blogging (Score:2)
For example, you say:
Floppy disks: were floppy at one point, so hard disk is a viable term to differentiate the two.
While, I said:
hard disk: to differentiate from "floppy" disk (also lame). certainly highlights sexual frustration
And can you honestly say that the phrase "world wide web" isn't chock full of annoying, superfluous poetic grandeur? Oooh, it's a web of stuff. Like, like
Re:Blogging (Score:2)
Re:Blogging (Score:2)
It's not quite as bad as "Webinar". On the other hand, I just heard the term "webisode", and I rather like that one.
Good gods, no! (Score:1, Funny)
This will be important, because many more mainstream users will come to blogging.
If the existing deluge of boring, pointless, and inane blogs are made up by those who are non-mainstream, I shudder to think of what the web will look like once every other Average Joe is blogging.
"Tuesday, February 21, 2006: bought milk."
"Wednesday, February 22, 2006: Saw a cow on the way to work. It was brown. Moo."
"Thursday, February 23, 2006: Cow still there. Gotta remember to buy steaks tonight."
Re:Good gods, no! (Score:2)
The average joes are blogging now. Average and sub-average. They are the young, hi-tech, uber-cool, early-adopter geek-no-rati who know the difference between CSS and XHTML (and give two sh*ts) and believe that because they suddenly find themselves in possession of a printing press they have somehow magically tr
more blogs, less content (Score:1)
Re:more blogs, less content (Score:1)
Re:more blogs, less content (Score:3, Insightful)
All these mediums have crap, that doesn't invalidate the medium.
Slight difference. (Score:2)
When a site is free, you end up with lots of "my cat is funny" and "people I hate today" junk.
Re:Slight difference. (Score:3, Insightful)
It's not as if you're forced to read any of this stuff.
That isn't in the US. (Score:2)
It certainly isn't the US today. The cost of running off a thousand copies of a pamphlet is less than $100.
Distributing them just takes your time. Yeah? In which world? Unless you consider $100 to be "rich", you're sadly mistaken.
Re:That isn't in the US. (Score:2)
And let's say I did
You said "rich". (Score:2)
What you had said was ...
And I've shown how just about ANYONE can afford it in the US.
That's how it is today. That's how it has been since Franklin was publishing his pamphlets.
You are wrong. Just deal with it.
Re:Slight difference. (Score:2)
Re:more blogs, less content (Score:2)
Since when did the principle of universal readership and the realization of decades' dreams of a participatory universal information database become a bad thing? Wrong side of the bed today, brother?
If you don't like what you're clicking on, then maybe you need to query more carefully. Your wish is your machine's command.
Re:more blogs, less content (Score:2)
Simple answer. Blogging tools have brought regular web page authoring -- something once reserved for 1337 h@x0rz -- to the masses. Therefore, it threatens their status.
Never mind that HTML and FTP skills (and time to mess with the tedium of copying templates, updating links, etc.) are not a prerequisite of writing skill -- or of having something i
OK and (Score:2)
This will be important, because many more mainstream users will come to blogging.
What date will they have done that by?
I'll tell you the future of blogging (Score:5, Insightful)
1 - Blogging tools get a little easier
2 - Multimedia blogging gets a little easier, but won't get heavily adopted for a long time
3 - Many many many more people blog
4 - Mainstream backlash from all the BS out there
5 - Really good tools finally crop up to make finding what you're interested in easier (Technorati but 200 times better)
6 - Many of the worst blogs die away as the good reading tools (and people using them) ignore them
7 - If you're not one of the top 100 blogs of these tools you're basically ignored, disgruntling a LOT of people
8 - A few thousand great blogs stay up for years, many consolidating, and any of the rest come and go quickly
Re:I'll tell you the future of blogging (Score:3, Interesting)
1 - Blogging tools get a little easier
It hasn't been hard for a long time. Anyone can go to blogger.com and get a blog in like (*snap*) that.
2 - Multimedia blogging gets a little easier, but won't get heavily adopted for a long time
There are already various Video Blogging services, some with their own "easy to use" software. The problem is that it's all DULL. I'm mean, mind-numbingly-boring type dull. At least when people write, many try to apply some
Re:I'll tell you the future of blogging (Score:2)
And google's blogsearch is hardly the evolutionary tool we need. The reading tools seriously need to get much much better at filtering out spam and things it can figure out are meaningless to us. For example, instead of seeing a stream of posts all pointing to each other figure out the meat of the issue and truely original source and show us just that.
Re:I'll tell you the future of blogging (Score:2)
but people want to right abuot what there dog did today. The world is not forced to there doorstep, as it were. It does not need to be about entertaining you.
Re:I'll tell you the future of blogging (Score:2)
And if they publish it in a book, it'll become a best seller! [yahoo.com]
Re:I'll tell you the future of blogging (Score:2)
So it's not interesting to the vast majority of people out there. What about the 10 people to whom it *is* interesting? The web isn't like TV where you have a finite amount of air time, and every show that makes it on the air does so at the expense of another. The Int
multimedia blogging easier than text-only blogging (Score:2)
After years of failing to keep my extended family updated on what I've been doing, I'm finally succeeding. And this with two kids and a third on the way.
You're right, though
Re:I'll tell you the future of blogging (Score:1)
9. Profit!
Re:I'll tell you the future of blogging (Score:2)
6 - Many of the worst blogs die away as the good reading tools (and people using them) ignore them
And who decides what is crap? Some snobby elite with a political axe to grind? We have that today and call it the main stream media.
Here is the latest post from Michael J. Totten in Iraq.
http://www.michaeltotten.com/archives/001064.html [michaeltotten.com]
Reading it, you see it gives lie to the "all quagmi
Re:I'll tell you the future of blogging (Score:2)
Re:I'll tell you the future of blogging (Score:2)
There is no such thing as the "mainstream." The first search engine rendered the mass market instantly obsolete. There is no mass market.
as the good reading tools (and people using them) ignore them
Oh good. The free market. Let's write tools that deprive authors of an audience. Why, that's exactly the same as the "free" market now! Want proof? Twelve publishers passed on Harry Potter. ($54E803 in sales) Disney passed on the Lord of the Rings trilogy. ($6 billion box office, 1
Re:I'll tell you the future of blogging (Score:2)
doh.. (Score:1)
Re:doh.. (Score:1)
Remember Alf? He's back!!! In POG form!!!
Do we really want easier Blogging? (Score:1)
even EASIER to make. This would just increase the deluge of low quality, worthless blogs.
If you thought livejournal was self-indulgent and obnoxious already...
Yes we want easier blogging (Score:2)
Re:Do we really want easier Blogging? (Score:2)
I'm sure throughout history there were tons and tons of crap paintings that no one likes.. and thus never heard of again, but we're left with the truly best that are breathtaking..
Similarly, that's like saying we shouldn't give people easy access to education or the sciences so that they won't become scientists researching crap..
Hey, sometimes it only takes a few, but it's surely a lot easier finding a few when you have tons and tons more.. just
old news (Score:2)
Blog hosting test... (Score:2)
Mena and Ben went on to found Six Apart, the San Francisco-based company behind the blog-hosting service TypePad.
TypePad is about to get a workout.
Longevity (Score:2)
FTA
How do we design blogs that will archive and present 20 years worth of content?
Start by using open standards for your implementations. They'll last and interoperate heterogenously without fear or favor.
Yay! (Score:1)
Great! We can expect more of this: (Score:2)
Blogging has become a powerful medium (Score:2, Insightful)
Now a days blogging has become as simple as writing a document in a wordprocessor.
And the power of the blogger to shake down the established news sites is something to be taken note of. For example, I first came to know about the Sony DRM fiasco through a blog on the net where the blogger had detail
Re:Blogging has become a powerful medium (Score:2)
Ever heard of html editors?
Future? (Score:1, Troll)
The future of blogging... the future... blogging... hehehe... hahaha... hehehe... hohoho... oh wait, you were being serious, weren't you?
"Blogging" has no future, because at some point someone, somewhere will write a program that will take any piece of information newly published to the Web, embellish it with stock comments, and post it to your blog. Eventually copies of this program will spread all over the globe, and unbeknowst to their hosts, will link together in a great sentient botnet, which will co
Re:Future? (Score:2)
Quickly (Score:2)
Re:Quickly (Score:2)
Just what we need... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Just what we need... (Score:2)
I think maddox said it best when he wrote this [xmission.com]...
Making Blogs Specialized (Score:1)
Blogging = Geocities. (Score:2, Interesting)
Like homepages in the 90s, there are some good blogs, but most are crap. For example:
myspace not a good example (Score:2)
Re:Blogging = Geocities. (Score:2, Insightful)
The point is that I learned how to write HTML using Geocities...when I was 13. And no one was forced to read it; it wasn't delivered to peoples' inboxes or anything like that.
Perhaps we can look at blogs under the same light. Blogs can be used as a tool for people to learn how to write more clearly. They can be u
The death knell (Score:3, Interesting)
The point of the blog is hidden cleverly in the word "blog" itself. It's short for "web log", of course, but the "log" comes from the Greek logos: word, talk, knowledge. It's about the written word.
There are lots and lots of tools available for dealing with the content of a file of text, but semanticising and analyzing other media, such as audio and video is much more difficult, and perhaps impossible. The problems range from creation (making sure that the content is what the author really wants to express) all the way through search, bandwidth, and archival. What is important about a particular video clip or other cruft in some blog? But the practicalities are just one problem.
There appears to be a need in humans to communicate using words. With words we can entertain, inform, and convey precisely the meaning we wish to convey, given our skill level.
Perhaps there is room for multimedia blogs. Perhaps their presence won't ruin the experience of reading someone else's take on things and giving our own. Perhaps it won't devolve into mere entertainment. Maybe people would rather speak and see their way around an argument.
But I suspect that when people start using the old campfire for putting on their plays and bullfights, we'll search out some new one around which to argue the great events of the day. Like Usenet before it and the pamphleteer's press before that, we won't be able to stop ourselves.
Re:The death knell (Score:1)
More Blogs=More Crap (Score:2)
Re:More Blogs=More Crap (Score:1)
Yes, more mainstream media are now turning to constantly-updating blogs and other pages to attract the Internet audience. However, the "private soap boxes" will have as much, if not more, appeal than they do today.
The reason is that people go to the outside blogs for perspective they aren't getting elsewhere. For example, I would not have gotten to see the Mohammed cartoons if blog
Re:More Blogs=More Crap (Score:2)
There is no such thing as "the mainstream." It is a myth. Like the "permanent job" and the "free market." It doesn't exist.
Future of blogging is channel independance. (Score:2)
http://www.zonageek.com/software/files/mt/mtmail-0
Anyone can blog from anywhere.
There are RSS->blog gateways, and SMTP->RSS gateways.
At some point someone's going to get clever and collapse all these concepts into "message atoms". Descriptive text, along with tagged URLs and attachments that are treated as a unit with an author, publish date, keywords, "parent atom" for replies, etc.
Weblog, forum, RSS feed, email, XMPP (Jabber, Google Talk)... these are all just retrieva
Big fear (Score:2)
With a blog, the fear is that nobody will...
Mena Trott is right when she says... (Score:2)
Blogs have always been primarily a personal tool. The avalanche of blogs, ironically, even out the playing field. The so-called "famous bloggers" may have their clicks, but for the millions of faceless bloggers
Back to basics (Score:2)
Blogs with multiple pages, rich databases of content, media, software...
I call it a "website circa 1997". It'll be revolutionary!
Re:Back to basics (Score:1)
Television for the Internet (Score:1)
The future of the blog is secure (Score:2)
Blog helps to build community (Score:2)
So far, our experience is great. We can publish our thoughts online, interact with people and build community.
Why all the negativity? (Score:2, Insightful)
Why would more people having blogs "muddy up the internet"? I agree, the vast majority of the MySpace/Livejournal group, etc. probably have no business writin
Individual blogs don't matter... (Score:2)
Re:Individual blogs don't matter... (Score:1)
Re:Individual blogs don't matter... (Score:2)
Re:Individual blogs don't matter... (Score:2)
I sound brainwashed? Ok, dude. Next time I'll use monosyllabic words and hand-waving to get my point across, rather than the appropriate words to describe what I'm trying to say.
When something cool happens on the internet, lots of blogs cover it but they usually just say one thing, "Check this out, it's so cool! Yeah, hmm, ok.. Lots of these people don't have any original thought of their own.
No shit. Lots of people in
Re:Individual blogs don't matter... (Score:2)
Buzzwords can be overused, yes. That doesn't invalidate their legitimate uses. And yes, I'm embracing blogging very passionately, because for the first time in the history of mankind, everybody (well, not everybody, but an enormous segment of the population) can easily communicate with anybody else. That's a big deal.
Your second paragr
Multimedia capabilities (Score:1)
The more immediate future of blogging is the making the multimedia aspects of blogging easier and more accessible, and incorporating that into blogs. It brings blogs into a more personal space.
Gabcast ( http://www.gabcast.com/ [gabcast.com] ) does a brilliant job at making audio posts easy, and can automagically insert episodes directly into most blog sites. It's too easy.
Not sure if there's anything similar for video yet, but I'm sure it's coming!
Why not? (Score:3, Insightful)
Might as well remove the only remaining difference between blogs and spam.
TWW
Old Hat (Score:2)
Comment Spam and Blog-soft Security (Score:2)
As it is now, WP is as hard to use as Microsoft Word. Followin
The first rule of blogging (Score:1)
Hmmm (Score:2, Insightful)
Easier and more mainstreem? (Score:1)
same blog entry for different audiences (Score:2, Informative)