Chapter 10. Blogging Voices
Simplest piece of advice that I was given by a former boss can be
easily applied to ANY blog.
"Re-read before you publish." Electronic text can expose unintended meaning easily and it will also
make what you say a lot
more
focused. If nothing else, it should help you catch spelling mistakes!
— Gordon McLean, http://www.snowgoon.co.uk
As well as
utilizing
the number of links pointing at a page to determine
its overall relevance, Google also places a high emphasis on words
used in title and header tags to determine its PageRank. This can
sometimes have unintended consequences.
Here in the UK, a popular TV show called "Pop
Idol" gripped the nation's
imagination, including mine. Every week we would tune in, and vote
for our favourite "Pop Idol," with
the lowest-polling contestant being eliminated from the next round.
After many, many weeks and a nail-biting final, I posted a (somewhat
embarrassing) entry to my online journal entitled,
"Will Young Wins Pop Idol 2002."
For a couple of weeks, nothing unusual happened. My friends posted a
few sarcastic comments, light banter was exchanged, and everything
(including my critical faculties) slowly returned to normal.
That was to be the lull before the storm. Almost two weeks after the
previous-last comment was posted, came this message:
"We all think Will is gorgeous and Chloe wants to
marry him!! He has a brilliant original voice and we r gona be buying
the single."
This was to be the pebble that began the avalanche. For some reason,
Google had ranked my posting one place higher than the official Will
Young web site, and the screaming hordes descended.
After a month or so of, "will i luv
uuuuuuuuuuu" comments, my page dropped off the first
page of results and (much to my relief) the postings finally came to
an end. But it certainly goes to show that however few people
actually visit your blog on a regular basis, you can end up being
swamped in the most unexpected ways.
— Chris Carline, http://chris.carline.org
My blog's
not all
that special. I'm not an
"A-lister," but my readership is
decent enough a small community of friends and a few people I
don't know personally. However, one of my entries
seemed to really start a fire and draw a crowd: http://www.laze.net/fait/archive/2001_05_01_archive.php#3850765/.
In this entry, I discuss a random charge to my credit card by
"PORNOTHERAPY.NET." When I searched
on the Web for information about this
"company," there was nothing to be
found. However, Google spidered my site shortly after I posted my
experience and hosts of people started flocking to my blog entry,
sharing their experiences, their hypotheses about how our credit card
numbers were stolen, and who they thought was responsible
(http://www.laze.net/fait/comments.php?3850765/).
The domain was traced to an "Alex
Perman," and one visitor even went so far as to post
pictures to his web site of the address that was listed on the
domain's WHOIS record. It amazed me how a simple
entry on my blog, one that wasn't any more or less
notable than any others on my site, managed to draw such a crowd. It
sparked a mini-militia.
While the mystery of Alex Perman and Pornotherapy.net/Sexmedic.org
was never really solved, that one entry showed me the power of
blogging: random communities forming around common experiences to
solve a problem. Pretty impressive, really.
— Ryan A. MacMichael, http://www.laze.net/fait/
Blogging
isn't
just a weblog. It is a way to share your opinions and thoughts to the
rest of the world. If you post interesting things, share links with
other bloggers, and post comments on other blogs. Linking is the way
of the Web, that is the key to successful blogging.
— Greg Hard, http://www.tssaddicts.com
You maintain a weblog because it interests you, not because there is
an audience for it. If you do it because people are watching you,
then what you do is not weblogging. Just playing a musical instrument
where you can play for the enjoyment of it and you can play for
others to listen to, but they are different activities.
That being said if you do have an audience, then treat them well and
they will treat you well.
— Lindsay Marshall, http://catless.ncl.ac.uk/Lindsay/weblog/latest.html
As Dave Winer
says,
it's the two-way-web. Blogging really enables me to
have a conversation with an audience, with feedback via comments and
mail.
In February of 2002, I decided I'd like my blog
audience to be able to contact me more directly. I considered
publishing my instant messaging ID, but I didn't
want to constrain my audience to using the same system as me; I also
didn't want to have to maintain too many persistent
IM buddy relationships.
I solved the issue by building a small browser based chat window and
embedding it right in my blog. People can come and visit my blog, and
if I'm online, chat directly with me. I like to say
that where my web site used to be a brochure about me,
it's now a tradeshow booth. You can come through and
browse the articles, and if I'm there, talk to me
directly.
During the development process, I met a ton of people who came to
chat with me and help to guide the development itself. Since then,
I've met hundreds of bloggers and browsers, and
it's done wonders to get me closer in touch with the
community.
— Brent Ashley, http://brentashley.blogchat.com
To the new
blogger
wanting to gather a general audience: be mindful of your readers. By
mindful, I mean that the visual display of text
shouldn't scare anyone off. Don't
tyP3 L1K3 th15!! Keep the text readable with contrasting (but not
distracting) colors, use adequate sized fonts, make sure lines
don't scrunch together, and try to exercise proper
punctuation practices. You don't want to
annoy/confuse newcomers. Or if you do, that's fine:
just remember that visitors will usually scramble to find a nicer
looking page immediately without ever looking back.
Writing style is another matter. Anything goes, but it never hurts to
be somewhat engaging. Try to treat each new entry as an improvement
in clarifying your voice: the more individuality you put
in — avoid lumping detail after detail in endless lists, rants,
outpourings, etc. — the greater the chance that readers will get
to know you and wait on the edge of their seats for your next story
or bit of wisdom.
Even after all is said and done, your readership may never grow big.
No worries. You have to do this for yourself first. All that other
junk is for if you want to put on a good show for the little window
you're opening into your life.
Myself, I put up an online journal to record and share my thoughts.
It's interesting (and embarrassing) to see my
mentality just a few months before, the stretches of days of whining,
moping, etc. Aside from the memories, I think it's
helped to improve my writing a bit. A handful of folks have also
taken interest in what I have to say; to their credit, I think
they're just bored.
— Kaiser Shahid, http://www.phrogger.com/kaiser/
My genealogy
blog
has provided some neat experiences. I've found a
number of cousins I wouldn't have normally found
through the blog. By publishing the names of my ancestors and the
villages they came from, I've made contact with
relatives all over America and in Poland as well. One woman in
Poznan, Poland, searched the Web for the name of the small village
she came from, found it on my blog, realized that she knew my
grandmother's late sister who had moved to the
village after World War II, and contacted me with a note from that
sister's daughters, my mother's
first cousins, who the family had lost contact with some years ago.
The blog makes fantastic search engine fodder.
— Ralph Brandi, http://www.thereisnocat.com/
After reading — and
reading — about
weblogs for a number of months, I decided the best way to learn about
this fascinating subset of the Internet was simply to start a blog
myself. One of the first things I realized was how a handful of
companies — people, really — had developed amazingly
sophisticated yet simple tools to enable personal publishing for so
many. The second thing I realized was that the blogging community
truly is a community in all the best senses of the word. When I
needed help, it was there. When I had questions, they were answered.
Not to mention encouragement, virtual pats on the back, advice...and
meaningful, challenging interaction.
Blogging also has helped me to rediscover my voice again, both
personally and professionally. Putting yourself (your opinions,
thoughts, ideas, etc.) out there every day will do that to you. And
learning the technologies (CSS, template-driven web sites, RSS, XML,
various APIs, third-party tool integration, etc.)
couldn't have come at a more opportune time. I had
been feeling ho-hum about most things Internet, but the world of
weblogs has reinvigorated my sense of enthusiasm for the medium.
— Ed Murray, http://www.edmurray.org
Shortly after the
Sept 11 attack in
NY, I blogged about how angry I was with the
"Islamic militants," and how I
would give support to USA, regardless of its stand. And all of a
sudden, my blog was invaded by Muslims who were angry with me for
supporting the US. Such an experience was more of a chiller than
neat. It made me realize that the Web is not as decentralized nor
empty as it seemed. While I seldom let my online persona interfere
with my person offline, the type of response I got from people
who'd read my blog actually strengthened my support
for the US, to the extent that I started wearing a US flag bandana
and carried a bag similarly decorated to school. At the end of the
day, I learnt that a certain extent of self-censorship is inevitable.
Unless, your blog is like totally anonymous, it'd be
wiser to practice some sort of self-censorship, especially when the
blogging community in your state is small.
Blogging advice: Don't tell your boyfriend/girlfriend about your
blog, unless you keep absolutely nothing from each other.
I've gotten into trouble countless times when my
boyfriend reads about something
"off-limit" in my blog, like the
time I commented that I was picked to do a project with the cutest
guy in class, he went off his rockers.
— Lyndy, http://lyndy.org
I consume, digest,
and
excrete information for a living. Whether I'm
writing science fiction, editorials, columns, or tech books, whether
I'm speaking from a podium or yammering down the
phone at some poor reporter, my success depends on my ability to cite
and connect disparate factoids at just the right moment.
As a committed infovore, I need to eat roughly six times my weight in
information every day or my brain starts to starve and atrophy. I
gather information from many sources: print, radio, television,
conversation, the Web, RSS feeds, email, chance, and serendipity. I
used to bookmark this stuff, but I just ended up with a million
bookmarks that I never revisited and could never find anything in.
Theoretically, you can annotate your bookmarks, entering free-form
reminders to yourself so that you can remember why you bookmarked
this page or that one. I don't know about you, but I
never actually got around to doing this — it's
one of those get-to-it-later eat-your-vegetables best-practice
housekeeping tasks like defragging your hard drive or squeegeeing
your windshield that you know you should do but never get around to.
Until I started blogging. Blogging gave my knowledge-grazing
direction and reward. Writing a blog entry about a useful and/or
interesting subject forces me to extract the salient features of the
link into a two- or three-sentence elevator pitch to my readers,
whose decision to follow a link is predicated on my ability to convey
its interestingness to them. This exercise fixes the subjects in my
head the same way that taking notes at a lecture does, putting them
in reliable and easily-accessible mental registers.
Blogging also provides an incentive to keep blogging. As Boing
Boing's hit-counter rises steadily, growing 10-30
percent every month, I get a continuous, low-grade stream of
brain-rewards; rewards that are reinforced by admiring email,
cross-links from other blogs that show up in my referrer logs,
stories that I broke climbing the ranks on Daypop and Blogdex (and
getting picked up by major news outlets). The more I blog, the more
reward I generate. Strangers approach me at conferences and tell me
how much they liked some particular entry; people whose sites
I've pointed to send me grateful email thanking me
for bringing their pet projects to the attention of so many people.
Blogging begets blogging. I blog because I'm in the
business of locating and connecting interesting things. Operating a
popular blog gives people an incentive to approach me with
interesting things of their own devising or discovery, for inclusion
on Boing Boing. The more I blog, the more of these things I get, as
other infovores toss choice morsels over my transom. The feedback
loop continues on Boing Boing's message boards,
where experts and amateurs debate and discuss the stories
I've posted, providing depth and context for free,
fixing the most interesting aspects of the most interesting subjects
even more prominently in my foremind.
The upshot is that operating Boing Boing has not only given me a
central repository of all of the fruits of my labors in the
information fields, but it also has increased the volume and quality
of the yield. I know more, find more, and understand better than I
ever have, all because of Boing Boing.
The nuggets I've mined are at my instant disposal. I
can use Blogger's search interface to retrieve the
stories I've posted with just a few keywords. While
prepping a speech, writing a column, or working on a story, I will
usually work with a browser window open to Blogger's
Edit Your Blog screen, cursor tabbed into the search field. I flip
back and forth between my browser and my editor, entering a few
keywords and instantly retrieving the details of some salient
point — it's my personal knowledge management
system, annotated and augmented by my readers.
Being deprived of my blog right now would be akin to suffering
extensive brain-damage. Huge swaths of acquired knowledge would
simply vanish. Just as my TiVo frees me from having to watch boring
television by watching it for me, my blog frees me up from having to
remember the minutae of my life, storing it for me in handy and
contextual form.
— Cory Doctorow, http://www.boingboing.net/
Check around to
see if
your city has a blogging community. Some cities have such communities
and arrange happy hours or other fun events in the city. One example:
dfwblogs.com (we rule!).
Since blogging, I've meet and shared a room with a
fellow bloggette at SXSW [South by South-West]; got hooked on
Googlewhacking, sent and received a gift from the Secret Santa
Exchange; met the DFWblogs.com crowd at SXSW; gotten help on a
personal level from a bloggette — help that I otherwise might not
have gotten if I had not met her; I edited a book because someone
found me through my weblog; a fellow bloggette who works for a web
design shop received an RFP with a chance to bid from a major drink
distributor through her blog; shared pain with fellow bloggers after
9/11; and gotten to know many cool people who have made me laugh,
cry, smile, freak out, or just celebrate life.
— Meryl K. Evans, http://www.meryl.net/blog
In March of 2000,
my husband
and I decided to divorce, after nearly 10 years (and one daughter) of
being together. While the decision was relieving to me, it seemed to
unleash this flood of intellectual activity that I'd
held in during my marriage, issues I wasn't even
aware existed until then. It seemed the time had come to get it all
out so I could make some sense of what I was going through and start
completely anew. I had always written in blank journals, but during
my marriage I stopped. So, I figured since I wasn't
going to be married anymore, I could start back up again. The only
thing was, I wasn't entirely convinced I could write
about anything that wasn't business-like or
technically-useful in nature (I'm a technical writer
by trade). I hadn't written anything personal in
years — I wasn't sure I ever could again.
So, to re-start my un-technical writing engine, I signed up for a
free account on Xanga.com and began practicing, writing reviews of
things I liked or found useful. It was great practice, and I got some
cool feedback from the other members there and it gave me some hope
that perhaps I could write my way out of a paper bag if necessary.
Shortly afterward, as I started getting more comfortable, I decided
to use my existing web site (malleron.com) for something other than
an extended hard drive. In looking around for diary scripts, I
happened upon Blogger and immediately signed up. Of course, I
wasn't exactly sure what I wanted to say and
procrastinated for weeks before I wrote anything. I worried for days
about the consequences of putting my personal thoughts online: what
if a co-worker reads it? What if my ex-husband reads it? What if I
get fired because of it? What if anyone reads it and gets the wrong
idea about me? What if someone reads it, looks up my domain record,
and stalks me? What are the risks to my daughter if I do this?
Finally, after what seemed like forever, I posted something to my
site. It took me several hours and felt rather painful, but when I
saw it published I felt strangely better. For the first year or so, I
didn't post very often or regularly. After my
divorce was final, however, my posts picked up in both frequency and
intensity. I even started getting visitor feedback on my writing,
which was at once gratifying and frightening.
When I started a blog, I didn't even know what it
was or how it was "supposed" to be
used. It just looked like an efficient way to keep a journal online,
and I needed something that would challenge me to be truthful with
myself about my life so far and where I wanted to go. Having it
online seemed the natural thing to do since I was afraid the
insulation of an offline journal (which no one else would ever see)
would encourage me to avoid the issues I was looking to explore.
Plus, I figured if you're going to be your own
therapist and bare your soul in public, you may as well be as
truthful as you can. Indeed, I had avoided so many issues, lied to
myself so often throughout my marriage. I couldn't
afford to any longer now that it was just me and my 2-year-old
daughter. I needed the public space to force me to examine myself and
my life, even when I didn't want to because of all
the fear and guilt I carried.
Now that I've been keeping a blog for a couple
years, I can't imagine not writing in it or not
writing at all, period. Keeping a blog has helped me through a lot in
my life — most of which I wish had never happened — as has
the positive feedback. I've even made some new
friends because of my blog, people I wouldn't have
known if I kept all my thoughts in a book in my desk drawer. People
who have expanded my awareness and made my roughest times much more
bearable.
— Jenny, http://www.malleron.com
While working for
my previous
employer, AGENCY.COM, we launched a weblog (http://lab.agency.com) using Movable Type. We
were all interested in weblogging and how it made publishing and
communicating thoughts, insight, and knowledge easier. Interested in
how far the tool and the concept could be taken, we endeavored to be
a bit different. We wanted something that featured posts that were
more refined and in-depth than the multiple short off the cuff posts
that were common in the blogsphere. The lab.agency.com site would also feature
contribution from multiple authors as opposed to a single individual.
I would guess that some would argue this approach
isn't blogging at all. I even question it myself.
At the time we started, it was (I think) pretty unique in that it was
run by a commercial entity who is paid for its thinking.
I think it was a success, but marginally so. You're always a little bit better for trying
something, even if it doesn't succeed as you have
planned because you always have the knowledge of why it
didn't work to avoid issues next time. Here is some
of the wisdom I gained on weblogging that I can impart from my
experience with this project:
Frequency of updates is important to effectively communicating
through a weblog. In choosing to exclusively publish in-depth and,
therefore, long-format entries, the communal dialogue of the medium
is diminished as less attractive and less interesting. I liken this
type of posting to a conference presentation rather then a
birds-of-a-feather (BOF). Another effect of our focus on in-depth
pieces is that the time and effort required to compose an entry put
quite a burden on contributors particularly given other
responsibilites. I personally found myself looking at a backlog of
posts I wanted to do. Sometimes by the time I got around to finishing
or even starting a post it wasn't relevant. In
retrospect, I think brief and rapid posts in which our views would
take shape and change over time would have been more effective.
A group weblog requires coordination and focus. When it came to topic
matter the site had loose requirements. Being a diverse group of
individuals from quite different backgrounds and different belief
systems, the site seemed a bit scattershot and struggled to have an
identity in my opinion. The freedom of one author with free reign to
the weblog's content work because the personality
and interests of that author are defined. Combining a group of
personalities with a loose (or no) focus is a different matter. It
becomes too difficult for one person to filter and follow along.
Coupled with our low frequency of posts, no real personality or focus
emerged.
Weblogging must come from personal motivation and passion — not
just another line item on a typically too long list of
responsibilities. There were some less than inspired posts made
because someone was getting poked and prodded to make one. Others
simply didn't make any despite being prime
candidates to participate. This is why I believe that while the
concept of a knowledge weblog (or k-log) is a good and valid
assertion, a mangerial dictate will not derive much value out of the
effort to use use weblogs on knowledge or project management. The
reality is they are unlikely to be successful anytime soon without a
cultural shift that will take years to achieve at best. While the
difficult situation of the company contributed to the loss of
motivation, in retrospect, contributors should have been completely
voluntary and given their own personal weblogs to operate.
The site got off to a good start when "soft
launched" but slowly began to loose interest for the
reasons I stated above. By the time it was officially (hard) launched
(http://biz.yahoo.com/prnews/020424/nyw046_1.html),
it was struggling under its own weight and the pall of impending
reductions and reorganization in the company tempered much of the
enthusiasm.
I'm not discouraged at all in my first experience
with participating in weblogging. I believe in it perhaps maybe even
more so than before. In fact I'm setting up my own
to continue publishing my thoughts and insights while I look for new
employment. It's a great way to stay sharp.
I've also found it to be a good way to get
prospective employers to get a better sense of my abilities and
knowledge of the space. Perhaps it will help me land a new job and
that would be a really interesting story worth publishing. ;)
— Timothy Appnel, http://tima.mplode.com
Keeping a blog updated
daily is
taking on quite a bit. It sounds simple, just type out a few lines
about your day, your thoughts of the day or what you found on the Web
that day. Doesn't sound complicated. But it can be.
I don't feel like writing every day. Some days I
don't feel like even turning on the computer except
for a quick game or nine. So, my blog quickly gets stale. Still, I
haven't totally abandoned it.
A blog is fun too. You can do so much with them. You only have to
please yourself really so design away. Add those fantasy graphics you
wouldn't want to use on your personal site. Add that
font you love even though no one else has it downloaded. Go wild,
find a jungle cat skin background and make that the focus of your
blog.
— ThatGrrl, http://www.thatgrrl.com/
Some essential blogging tips: In order to keep your
blogs really
fresh, invite a group of your friends/colleagues and give them
blogging access. That way, you'll have several
reporters blogging information, and you won't end up
killing yourself, trying to keep your blog populated with good
information.
If you use Blogger, upgrade to Blogger Pro. You can have your team
post to the blog from email, create and syndicate your blog as an RSS
feed, and a whole lot more!
Adding the ability to post comments on your blog extends
interactivity and usefulness to the blog itself. Blogs are about
community and information, and commenting is a real way to gauge your
viewer's blogging efforts.
Blogging is one of the quickest ways to update your site. Syndicating
others' blogs into your own site is another. There
is a wealth of information out there — tap into it!
— Eric E, Dolecki, http://www.ericd.net
While I rode into the bloggiing community on the coattails of
my son (www.theonetruebix.com), who was blogging before there were
official blogs, I have come into my own among some major bloggers,
and the process is keeping me sane. I retired from my job more than a
year ago to care for my 86 year old mother (something I swore I would
never do, but, well, connections are connections after all). Making
that decision, however, disconnected me from the creatively and
intellectually active life that I've always had.
Blogging re-wired my personal connections and resurrected my identity
as a writer and a catalyst for ideological exploration.
It's not that blogging has enabled me to find my
voice; as a published poet who used to also give reading,
I've always had a very strong voice. Blogging has
given my voice an even larger world to reach. While
I'm tempted to say that it's
unfortunate that I haven't encountered many other
bloggers bear my age (62) with similar interests, the truth is that I
am energized, excited, and inspired by the amazing young minds I
continue to meld with. In a truly magical way, they have given me my
dream: Cronedom. "Wise Woman"
status. And I say that with only a partial
"smirk." (I have done some
"virtual rituals" that have been as
much fun as the old 1960s happenings — and ultimately more
productive to boot.) Through the magic on the blognet,
I've been able to tough the lives of people I never
would have met otherwise, and in many ways, I know some of them
better than I know people who have been in my
"real" life for years. And at some
point, when life frees me up to do so, I will go "on
the road" and get a hug in person some of those
bloggers whose virtual touches have transformed my unexpected and
isolating situations into an extended family party. I am still on a
quest for "older-wiser" bloggers.
If you know of any, send them my way.
— Elaine Frankonis
I have met people because
of my weblog,
even I got my present job because of it! I try to use it as an
"alternative communication media."
I don't write every day. I usually write something
about a subject I think will be interesting, maybe from the news,
maybe one thought about life, and then let people comment about it or
share different opinions and use the blog as a little
"debate space." Them when the
comments slow down, I write again, another subject, and the process
starts again. Sometimes I also write about myself or a movie too.
— Javi Loureiro (Barcelona, Spain), http://www.sieyin.com
First, if you are using
a
blog because it's important to you (whether
that's in a metaphysical sense or a business sense)
you should make sure that you have more than one way to post.
I'm a Blogger Pro member, but I also keep a
bare-bones API site in my bookmarks (www.teknik.net/misfit)for times when
I'm on the road with my PDA (which
doesn't support the right IE functions) or when the
Pro publishing engine is out of whack.
Second, realize that your blog doesn't have to be
your whole site. In my case, I have the blog with my images
"tucked away" so that someone
visiting for the first time isn't immediately hit
with a five minute wait.
Finally, remember that your blog should be about your voice and your
thoughts. Many blogs seem to be more about "Me
too" than "About
me."
— Ewan Grantham, http://www.a1161.com/blog.html
I have been interested
for
some time in becoming more of a producer than a consumer: I want to
give back in some way. I find mailing lists and newsgroups are OK for
some interchanges and seach engines can help locate stuff, but
sometimes it helps to find a site that gives the information you seek
some context. You can find related informationat the fog density you
feel comfortable , or ask the author a question.
So I have a place to collect my random musings and HOWTOs, and like a
snowball, it gets larger and larger with each entry. A couple of
hundred visits a day after just a couple of months makes me think
some of this is useful. Rather than bother people with email, I can
let them find stuff via Google and still feel like
I'm being useful.
As for MT, a friend showed me his site and told me how easy it was to
setup: took me less than an hour and it's been easy.
Like all good tools, it lets you focus on what
you're doing, not how to use the tool. I have done
very little in terms of customization (Mena made all that
unnecessary: thanks!), and it looks great.
— Paul Beard http://paulbeard.no-ip.org/movabletype
Blog for fun. If it stops being
fun,
you're doing it wrong.
Don't worry about what everyone else does on their
blog. Do what you want. It's your blog, it should
reflect you.
Keep the front page down to 7 days or 50 KB, whichever is smaller. Don't bother writing your own blogging tool unless
you're in it for the long haul. After writing my own
tool and using it for a few months, I still had a long list of
features to implement. Instead of taking another month to implement
all of them, I got then in about 15 minutes by installing Movable
Type.
— Dan Hersam, http://dan.hersam.com
Since Movable Type lets
you
set up multiple blogs from the same installation, I set up a second
one in a password protected part of my web site. Combined with the
"Post to MT" bookmarklet,
it's a very convenient way for me to record and
organize personal bookmarks and notes as I'm surfing
along on one of the 4 different computers I use daily. I can go back
later to review and format the information for my public site.
— Laura Blalock, http://www.imaginaryworld.net
Do not blog unless you
are ready
for your details to be unleashed to the world! Remember that your
readers are other bloggers, who link, quote, forward, gossip, and
more about every word you write it, generally but hours after you
have published it yourself. Also, Google catches stuff for quite a
while, so once it's published, it's
difficult to get rid of.
Blogging enables you to easily publish and release your stream of
consciousness thoughts, essentially giving you instant gratification.
However, it is helpful for yourself and readers to start with a
quote, bulletpoints that summarize your day, etc. This helps to
ground them and also is a great way to make yourself think of what
the net of it was. It is also cool to quote someone else, because it
downgradesthe blog from being 100% self-absorbed to 90%.
— Joyce Guan, http://www.clownagama.com
Use a content managment
system
(Blogger, Movable Type, or the like) if you're new
to blogging or web design. It will let you focus on quality content.
Layout is not THAT important. People read blogs to learn about the
blogger, not to see their cool design skills (although
they're definitely nice to see :)).
Don't make a post just because you
haven't made one on a specific day.
That's no way to develop quality content, and
it's almost always obvious.
Blogging for yourself can be liberating — use your blog as an
online diary of your thoughts. Keep the URL secret if you want, but
blogging is a great outlet for stress and other problems of the
everyday world.
Don't be scared of blogging/bloggers. Jump in and
have fun!
Don't worry about posting about every single thing
that happens in your life. Strike a balance between enough detail to
get the interesting things and too much detail to separate the
good stuff from the bad.
— Greg Leffler, http://greg.louisville.ky.us
When we talk about weblogs, we're talking about a
way of organizing information, independent of its topic. What we
write about does not define us as bloggers; it's how
we write about it (frequently, ad nauseaum, peppered with links).
Weblogs simply provide the framework, as haiku imposes order on
words. The structure of the documents we're creating
enable us to build our social networks on top of it — the
distributed conversations, the blogrolling lists, and the friendships
that begin online and are solidified over a
"bloggers dinner" in the real
world.
As bloggers, we're in the middle of, and enjoying,
an evolution of communication. The traits of weblogs mentioned above
will likely change and advance as our tools improve and our
technology matures. What's important is that
we've embraced a medium free of the physical
limitations of pages, intrusions of editors, and delays of tedious
publishing systems. As with free speech itself, what we say
isn't as important as the system that enables us to
say it.
— Meg Hourihan, http://www.megnut.com
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