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About this site

A new section on the emerging blogosphere that's edited by Hylton Jolliffe, the founder, editor and publisher of Corante who believes blogging's more than mere fad and that what will flow from it will have major implications for media, marketing, distributed thinking and perhaps business in general.

Please send any tips, suggestions or reactions to Hylton.


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CORANTE ON BLOGGING: In media res

By Hylton Jolliffe

Thursday, October 31, 2002

Howard Bashman responds to the news that a Fifth Circuit judge who's a regular reader of his blog stopped by his site the other day, read a post in which Bashman pointed out an error in an opinion he'd just delivered, and issued, the very next day, an amended order correcting the mistake: "An astonishing development, or just a small yet positive benefit of the amazing digital age in which we live?"

Denise Howell weighs in on the development: "[Was I] surprised? Naah, I guess I just assume everyone involved in appellate jurisprudence reads Howard's blog at least as assiduously as I do... Isn't this precisely how the Web is supposed to work?"

Rafe Colburn's take on it: "This astounds me."

posted at 5:27 pm

Elizabeth Lane Lawley says that "only twice in my life have I had this sense that a technology was about to become really important." But, she worries, "what's going to be the effect on blogging when/if the exponential curve takes its sharp turn upwards?"

posted at 3:52 pm

Marc Canter responds to Joi Itoi's post about the term "blog": "What I spend most of my waking life on right now is what ELSE is there and what is THAT called - that's circling or surrounding this publishing/communicating/interacting phenomena."

posted at 3:46 pm

Shayne Bowman and Chris Willis on the primary challenge facing traditional media: "Perhaps news media do not see themselves as connectors because they don't understand the network economy they now reside in... [The news media] need to explore not only new models of the newsroom... but also new malleable, flexible organizational structures."

posted at 11:05 am

Wednesday, October 30, 2002

Jeneane Sessum proposes something others have alluded to: the "anti-blogroll": "I would list all the blogs I recommend avoiding because they spew hate and meaningless muck... The sum total of assholes on our combined anti-blogrolls could compete daily for a spot on anti-daypop, or--for more sizzle--'daypoop.'"

posted at 6:18 pm

Dorothea Salo: "I think I was something of a blogger before there were blogs... It’s just writing about stuff. Running off at the keyboard. (B)logorrhea. Nothing new at all. People did write to each other and for each other before there were blogs. Honest."

posted at 5:58 pm

Shelley Powers says that while "weblogging can be cathartic... weblogging as therapy isn't for everyone." She expands on the point: "The cathartic experience of writing our fears and troubles to a weblog can be accompanied by an increased vulnerability as we feel the pressure of such public exposure."

posted at 5:51 pm

Sheila Lennon, in a post in which she reflects on the junkets extended to some bloggers by Microsoft and the ensuing debate about whether it compromised what bloggers wrote about the company's products: "Blogging is bottom-up journalism. When it comes to reviewing, Microsoft shouldn't control this pipe, the bloggers should. This is how we literally turn the system around."

posted at 2:42 pm

Colby Cosh on "InstaPower": "Everybody thinks the amazing thing about Glenn Reynolds is the volume of posting he does, but when you compare it to the amount of reading he must be doing, the actual editing and posting look fairly trivial."
posted at 2:32 pm

John Brockman, in an essay from earlier this year, on the new humanists: "The arts and the sciences are again joining together as one culture, the third culture. Those involved in this effort—scientists, science-based humanities scholars, writers—are at the center of today's intellectual action."

posted at 1:45 pm

Toby Mundy, in an article in Prospect Magazine, on book publishing: "The future, it seems, belongs to writers, readers and entrepreneurs. There will be as many or as few masterpieces published as ever, but they will enter the world through proliferating channels." His cautionary words for the industry: "For publishers, ordinary writers and booksellers, the next few years could be the last great days of publishing as we have known it since the 16th century."

posted at 1:30 pm

Jerry Kindall explains, in an article by Michelle Delio, just what the blog-spammers are up to: "They're trying to jump-start a meme... If you have a nefarious mind and no consideration for how the Web works socially, it is a fairly clever and original, if evil, idea."

posted at 1:24 pm

K. Paul Mallasch offers up a list of various blogger types. The typical post of the "teenie blogger": "So, like today I was in the cafeteria talking about Shelly's stupid blog, ok, and then Josie like totally walked up in my face and said my blog was trash and I was like, noo way, talk to the blog, ya know, cause i'm cool and I don't play that. So anyway, I need to go eat dinner now. I'll blog on it later."
posted at 12:26 pm

Tuesday, October 29, 2002

Christine Boese follows up on One True b!X's criticisms of his article for CNN: "In blogs I saw the thing that was lost in the dot.com feeding frenzy and scammers greed-fest: independent voices outside of corporate journalism. And by golly, the last thing I'd think was needed was for those voices to be noticed by corporate journalism outlets such as I work for now."

Why did he write the original column? "Because I like to get the word out to the folks who get their media from lowest-common-denomonator-land, who are oblivious to the indy voices and undiscovered continent of the REAL Internet..."

 

posted at 5:08 pm

Ed Cone comments on Tara Sue Grubb's candidacy for state representative in North Carolina: "The fact is that for whatever combination of reasons, Tara Grubb's weblog has paid off big as a political tool."
posted at 4:46 pm

Cameron Marlow on the release of Blogdex 2.0: "Now that I have an index of all pages related to a given weblog, it's much easier to generate the popularity contest to end all popularity contests." Which would, he says, "be priority one if the users were in control :)"
posted at 1:02 pm

Kat Bulkele, who says blogging can make the reporter's "pen and pad look a bit antiquated," on blogging and Wi-Fi: "In terms of content, Wi-Fi networks will be an access method rather than a big driver of new forms of content."
posted at 12:58 pm

Denise Howell on blogs and the evolution of law: "What webloggers are doing today, legal researchers may be doing tomorrow... [It] probably won't happen any time soon, but it's not difficult to see how techniques being tested in the weblog arena now may shape the way research is done and laws are made down the road."

posted at 12:13 pm

Monday, October 28, 2002

Evan Williams in the discussion prompted by Anil Dash's comments about the security of blogging tools after Blogger was breached on Friday: "For the uninitiated, keeping a service as complex as Blogger secure is a constant struggle." He continues: "I is the nature of small, underfunded business that sometimes mistakes happen. We fucked up. We got beat. We admit that. But the arrogance of all these people who have very little clue what they're talking about is pathetic."

posted at 12:35 pm

Tom Coates tries to clarify the comments that have prompted some to criticize him: "Essentially all I'm looking for is a way for a community of individuals to have more influence - more, but equal influence - on each other because I think that there have to be campaigning techniques that operate in addition to argument or debate... I'm not trying to present a fait accompli."
posted at 11:47 am

Sunday, October 27, 2002

Steve Himmer on the use of comments in blogs: "[They] are almost a kind of validation, a confirmation—an answering echo to the voice we throw across a dark and quiet chasm. Even bad comments... mean you're reaching someone somehow."

On the other hand, he continues: "I wouldn't want a bunch of yes-bloggers congratulating me on every word, nor would I want my comments to become a haven for opinions and aggressions far removed from my own—a cracker barrel for bigots, if you will."

posted at 10:09 pm

Steven Den Beste on the first wave of bloggers and how the differences some of them are having with the warbloggers: "They think they created this medium (a claim open to severe doubt) and somehow feel as if everyone who followed them had a moral obligation to not only use the form, but also to stay true to the philosophy of content. But it doesn't work that way."

posted at 7:21 pm

Kevin Holtsberry: "It is odd just how involved one's emotions and ego can get in blogging."
posted at 7:16 pm

Jeff Jarvis: "If we are not careful, weblogs will turn into catalogues of 'What I think about...' When people could publish their own web pages, they too quickly became catalogues of "my CD collection."

posted at 7:13 pm

Nick Denton responds to Tom Coates' remarks on warbloggers: "Some people just can't handle the exchange of ideas, and it's beyond me why they're drawn to weblogs, an environment in which they're bound to be bruised."

posted at 4:18 pm

Tom Coates says he's realizing how he can express opinion through linking... or not: "I now believe that as an individual operating responsibly in this sphere, I have to be aware of any and all potential abilities I have to legitimately exert whatsoever influence I might have in order to stop what I perceive to be morally wrong, corrupt politics, cheap argument and potentially warmongering."

posted at 1:50 pm

Friday, October 25, 2002

Tim Erickson of Politalk in an interview about political discourse on the Internet: "US citizens are way ahead of other countries in terms of using the internet to communicate with each other and the government on the issues that concern them the most." The reasons: "the history of grassroots public participation that we have in this country and the higher level of connectivity that we have over most European countries."

posted at 4:48 pm

J.D. Lasica asked a handful of PopTech's attendees last week where they get their news. Their general answer: increasingly it's blogs and alternative media. Lasica: "If the digerati gathered here represent the leading edge of the Internet Age, reflecting where our wired society may be headed a few years hence, then online news publications have their work cut out."

posted at 3:22 pm

Anil Dash says he's putting an end to his tiff with fabs of Little Green Footballs: "I've learned a lot and am quite pleased overall with the end results of what's transpired... I think I've had a chance to talk to people on all sides of this issue, and it's been engaging, illuminating and educational."
posted at 3:15 pm

Andrew Orlowski on the reaction to his parody of Beth Goza's blog last week: "What's strange is when an attack on one blogger is perceived as an attack on blogging in general. That implies that there can't possibly be a quality threshold in blogdom, and confirms John Dvorak's worst fears about groupthink. This is an unnecessarily defensive reaction and quite wrong."

posted at 2:44 pm

Denis Dutton announces that Arts & Letters Daily is back: "A little early in the day here for champagne, but the news seemed to make my coffee taste better than ever."
posted at 2:39 pm

Dave Winer: "Someday, not very long from now, we'll argue over bragging rights for who has the first All-Web-Services-Authored weblog. For the record, that's this site, Scripting News."
posted at 2:24 pm

Anil Dash on the security breach that seems to have occurred at Blogger: "There hasn't been a seriousness about the responsibility of developing [secure] applications as weblogs move to being a critical communication tool for people. This is one of the reasons that weblogs aren't generally taken seriously as business tools."
posted at 2:00 pm

Chris Locke, in thanking a long list of bloggers for keeping him alive: "The tenaciously popular notion that the Internet is somehow located on the other side of the tracks from the purported Real World is the by-product of limp intellects inhabiting substandard physical vehicles they have repossessed via Tantric Tapdancing, Esoteric Echolalia, and the ingestion of one too many Echinacea cheeseballs... Anyone who whines about the Internet undermining intimacy has clearly never blogged."

posted at 1:27 pm

Tom Coates again: "BLOGGER HAS BEEN HACKED... SOMEONE WAKE UP EV?!"
posted at 11:29 am

Tom Coates says "this is a difficult post to write" before laying out his objections to warblogging and what it's wrought: "Warblogging has been shameful, horrific and a stain on us all. The escalation of warblogs is a disaster for development of personal publishing, and a crippling blow to the individual integrity and worth of weblogs and weblogging."
posted at 11:25 am

Thursday, October 24, 2002

Jim McGee, who's teaching blogging in the classroom, on k-logging: "One of the lasting lessons of electronic commerce is that organizational boundaries are best when they are very porous. Too much of systems development and too much of business process reengineering tries to pretend that you can draw a neat line around the edge of the organization.... This reality of connectivity across organizations is even more true for knowledge work than it is for the routine processes of organizations."

posted at 3:21 pm

Rebecca Blood weighs in on the Anil Dash/Little Green Footballs controversy, saying, "I have made it a policy here not to comment on the various weblog controversies that arise in the community from time to time. Mostly they are stupid and unpleasant." Of Anil she says: "I'm proud that he's my friend, and I'm grateful that he's part of the weblog community."

posted at 3:16 pm

Tom Shugart: "When I blog, I do so, among other reasons, with the intent of giving my spirits a boost upward. The mere act of communicating with others—even virtually—often provides a needed lift in and of itself."
posted at 3:13 pm

Wednesday, October 23, 2002

Jeneane Sessum processes Clay Shirky's recent piece on blogging, says it's depressing, and draws a comparison: "I have seen this parallel within the music business... these same passionate... amateurs play for free... They clog up club after club, event after event, venue after venue. Some are good, some are not. Most will remain amateurs."

posted at 7:13 pm

Rebecca Blood, who says she's "somehow entered the food chain" after receiving a copy of Howard Rheingold's new book Smart Mobs, theorizes: "[It is] perhaps the first non-weblog book (though it mentions weblogs) to try to use weblogs to generate word-of-mouth."

posted at 12:23 pm

Anil Dash, in a long response to the Little Green Footballs controversy, comments on intimidation, bigotry and responsiblity in the blogosphere: "It's been a moderate surprise to see that a community that would rally to support various other political causes in esoteric realms ignore false attacks by the worst elements of the weblog world."

posted at 11:51 am

Tuesday, October 22, 2002

Adina Levin, who says tech innovation's far from dead: "In the version of the semantic web exemplified by AllConsuming, Daypop and Google News, the nodes of the network are people. The links of the network are relationships among people; who are reading books, selecting stories to publish, selecting sites to link... The semantic web doesn't replace human intelligence, it multiplies it by connecting people."
posted at 11:59 pm

Tom Shugart: "It’s been my experience that blogging sharpens my ability to hear my inner voices. Sometimes those voices are just meaningless noise. At other times, they can be very instructive--like now, when I’m in a slump."
posted at 11:10 pm

Dan Chan: "Daypop will go offline starting Oct. 25 for a couple weeks."
posted at 5:52 pm

John Hiler says he's "starting to get really excited about blogging again," with the "whole blogs-as-media question... becoming increasingly interesting."

posted at 2:28 pm

Dana Blankenhorn, a long-time tech journalist (and a recent addition to Corante's roster of bloggers) who says blogging's "a new form of art in many ways," reflects on the a distinction he's noted between blogging and more traditional writing: "A column can be the perfect chocolate truffle. A blog entry can be an M&M. A column stands on its own [whereas] blogs are absorbed en masse, creating a pattern in the reader's mind."

But he also insists that unless "good bloggers make money... [blogging] willl remain a spelling bee, a stunt that's fun to watch, but ultimately irrelevant to real life."

posted at 11:11 am

Mena Trott in an interview in which she discusses Moveable Type and blogging in general: "On a cultural level, I think the perception of weblogging as hobby will certainly shift as more people realize that weblogging serves as a powerful news and marketing tool... I think that there will be some sort of fork between weblogging and personal publishing."

posted at 2:22 am

Monday, October 21, 2002

Disenchanted in an article on Google, Alexandria's Great Library and "standards of truth": "If facts can be established by having access to enough testimony in one place, then it gives you an idea of what modern search engines—a far faster, accessible, and friendlier resource for the layman than a library—are doing for everyday critical thinking."

From its concluding paragraph: "Google satisfies the current perception of truth by finding authorities, but by doing so it may cause that perception to change. It'll spoil us commoners the same way scholars have been spoiled since ancient Greece, because while we won't totally abandon our respect for authorities, we will at least lose our reservations against questioning them."

posted at 8:56 pm

Phil Windley on transparency: "Part of my belief in blogging stems from a belief that people ought to know what I'm thinking on issues, even when its not popular."

posted at 7:30 pm

Jim McGee, who's teaching MBAs to blog: "There are four hurdles to pass to move from willing volunteer to competent blogger: learning the technology environment, developing an initial view of blogging, plugging into the conversation, and developing a voice. These are not so much discrete phases as they are parallel tracks that can be managed."

posted at 7:10 pm

Kevin Holtsberry on why he's taking a break: "If blogging is a conversation, I feel as if I have been talking to myself too much lately."

posted at 7:05 pm

David Lyttle: "Blogging gives us an opportunity to make jokes, to make pertinent statements of fact, to expose weaknesses, to inform, to say thanks, to make valid points, to tell a story, to aggregate information, to share a verse of poetry, to put forth ideas and certainly to voice opinions but to make money?... I don't think so."
posted at 7:00 pm

Tom Shugart acknowledges he's had a tough time blogging of late: "I’ll dust myself off and try to keep going--even though I don’t have a clue as to what I want to write about next. I guess that’s part of the adventure of being a blogger. Adventure—reason enough, I suppose, to struggle with keeping a blog."
posted at 6:57 pm

Josh Trevino calls it quits: "It has become impossible to reconcile the demands of work and the weblog -- which is not to say that I lack time for both, but that the one may lead to ethical conflicts with the other. And in cases like that, it's the avocation that must bow to the vocation."

posted at 6:11 pm

Dorothea Salo: "What does it say about the blogsphere that I have felt compelled to create an entire freaking category about sexism?" It could, she says, "be a good thing. It could be an indication that there’s a mature, honest, respectful dialogue going on."

posted at 3:44 pm

Glenn Reynolds makes a comparison: "Blogs are good at puncturing pretension. Kind of like Doonesbury used to be."
posted at 2:50 pm

Anil Dash, in announcing a new initiative: "The tendency to take big, important ideas and make them 'graduate' to newspapers or books means that the weblog realm will always have an artificial ceiling, and that's a barrier I'd like to overcome."

posted at 1:33 pm

Mitch Kapor joins the ranks of those blogging: "This is my first foray into blogging; please bear with me as I learn how to add the more sophisticated capabilities bloggers are now using."
posted at 1:11 pm

Rick Klau on his appearance at the Law Firm Executive Director & CFO Forum: "Interesting... Four different people commented on my blog... What's cool is that I hadn't told any of them about it... the concept is getting out there."
posted at 1:00 pm

[Garry Trudeau on blogging.]
posted at 11:59 am

Ken Layne, in an article by Noah Shachtman on the rampant speculation about the DC-area sniper taking place in blogs: "Are blogs adding to the noise? Sure... But when I read a story in The Washington Post about how boring it is for reporters to hang around the police headquarters, I'm thankful to have some intelligent bloggers closely watching the story for me."
posted at 11:40 am

John Hiler relays the agenda for the upcoming discussion of blogs at Yale Law School: "During the third half, the unofficial buzz is that we'll be exploring the relationship between Blogs and Beer.  This may be the most intractable problem of all, so I'm prepared to spend some serious time trying to solve it."

posted at 11:34 am

A.K.M. Adam on the discussion raised by Microsoft's courting of bloggers: "We do no one favors by protecting the moral purity of the poor by denying them the wealth that brings with it the chance of corruption. We don’t uphold integrity when we deny bloggers the opportunity to demonstrate their probity by biting hands that have fed them."

posted at 11:30 am

Dave Weinberger on why he real-time blogs conferences: "Since conferences insist on maintaining a distinction between 'panelist' and 'audience member,' blogging lets me participate. Best of all, I always get the last word." But, he acknowledges, "real-time blogging is better for me but worse for my readers."

posted at 10:40 am

Thursday, October 17, 2002

Pejman Yousefzadeh in an essay on the impact of blogging on the political discourse: "One of the palliative effects of blogging... is that it has fomented greater (and more civil) interaction among conservative bloggers and blog readers, and their libertarian counterparts. Indeed, blogging may very well cause conservatives and libertarians to realize that their mutual interests may outweigh whatever specific policy differences exist between them."

He finishes: "Blogging will not achieve any sort of monopoly on public opinion... But if blogging continues to grow as an activity, and if conservative and libertarian blogs continue to see their already considerable prominence and popularity increase, the prospect of a reborn conservative/libertarian alliance - fostered by members of Blogosphere and congealing around new issues in a post Cold War world - may not be so easy to dismiss."

posted at 7:40 pm

David Galbraith: "I find it depressing that there is an overwhelming bias to the right amongst bloggers. People like wit and levity and left wing writing has a tendency to appear whiny and over sincere."
posted at 7:32 pm

Dorothea Salo with more on the blogging for money debate: "It’s not impossible to create a dishonest prize, just a lot harder than making a backroom deal for dishonestly laudatory press. Is that, then, a more appropriate way to fund blogging, if fund blogging we must? I think so... I’d rather see compensation predicated on a blogger’s past than on his/her future."

posted at 7:22 pm

T.D. Wilson, in a long essay on the folly of knowledge management within companies: "[It] is predicated upon a Utopian idea of organizational culture in which the benefits of information exchange are shared by all, where individuals are given autonomy in the development of their expertise, and where 'communities' within the organization can determine how that expertise will be used. Sadly, we are a long way removed from that Utopia."

posted at 6:50 pm

Jonathan Delacour on how blogging redeemed him: "Day by day, writing post after post to this weblog, I discovered my own voice. Or, to be more accurate, I gained a clearer sense of how it might develop—given time, commitment, and practice..."

posted at 6:27 pm

A.K.M. Adam on blog ethics and potential conflicts of interest: "Lack of sponsorship doesn’t constitute a warrant for greater credibility. We’re thrown back on the uncomfortable challenge of discerning on whom we can rely in any case. Personal interest — whether it be sponsorship, or employment, or stock interest, or ownership... — enters into our assay of how reliable a blog might be, but it’s not, can’t be, a binary criterion."

posted at 6:11 pm

Dorothea Salo weighs in on blogging for money: "I mean, it’s nice to think about getting paid to blog. Unexamined in that daydream, however, lies the assumption '…and I wouldn’t have to change a thing.' Do I really need to point out how dangerously unlikely that assumption is?"
posted at 6:06 pm

Henry Copeland on the economics of blogging and the threat it poses to Big Media: "Thin media's competitive advantages -- low overheads, deep commitment to the beat and personal rapport with readers -- are finally being unleashed by fissioning weblog networks. The distribution dam has broken; news can flood anywhere gravity takes it."

posted at 6:01 pm

Doc Searls on the work in progress that is blogging: "This is a social place, a public market, full of gossip and noise and the sounds of vendors selling, customers arguing and the various breeds of Socrates and Pythagoras, teaching."
posted at 3:05 pm

Bryan Field-Elliot with some proverbs for bloggers: "Blog today what you will forget tomorrow... Blogs of a feather link together... Googliness is next to Godliness." And: "You get what you pay for."

posted at 3:01 pm

Doc Searls' "unpaid, unsolicited advice to Bill, Steve and the rest of the company," i.e. Microsoft: "encourage everybody in the whole place to blog all they want... It'll be the best PR the company ever had."
posted at 2:57 pm

Wednesday, October 16, 2002

John Hiler reveals why he's been quiet of late: "On June 13th, I got attacked while walking home... It's been, a frustrating summer: I've had so many projects and articles that I've had to put on hold because of this attack."

But now, he says, "I think I'm finally at the point where I can write again... Each blog takes a lot more out of me than before, but then again I get a lot more out of them now: blogging is part of my cognitive rehab."

posted at 10:55 pm

John Palfrey of Harvard's Berkman Center on the aftermath of Eldred v. Ashcroft: "The campaign to bring Eldred to the Supreme Court--and to some corners of the global consciousness--demonstrated that those so inclined can get broadcast and then amplify and re-amplify a message. The blogs... for instance, that tell the Eldred story have exploded over the past few days... [and] the mainstream media have picked up the scent of the fight."

He continues: "In another sense, a growing subset of the Net community at large is making the Eldred case plain--and plainer by the day... The promise of the Internet makes that voice more urgent, and makes the voice easier to amplify... It is exactly this civic energy - potentially global in scope - that the early Net promised to unleash."

posted at 10:14 pm

Matt Welch on "fashioning blog-finance models out of partisan bitch-slaps": "I think the time is ripe for Targeted Blogger Fundraising (TBF). Create a hyper-specific project that the kids want to see, for a set price, and I think you can fund a new kind of something-or-other."

posted at 9:40 pm

Larry Lessig, in The Feature, on the vast distribution of content that he thinks is in our future: "Emerging wireless technologies are giving us an extraordinary opportunity to shift power away from the core, back to the edge." Or, as the article puts it: "Citizens [will] have a chance to watch the watchmen... with camera-phones and their descendent technologies, we can transmit images of social unrest, balancing professionally marketed broadcasts with hand-crafted peer-to-peer news."

posted at 6:02 pm

Glenn Reynolds shares the comments of a reader of his recent article on blogging: "Bloggers serve as a negative feedback loop for the bias, incompetence and dishonesty of an agenda driven mainstream news media. The monopoly of punditry by the mainstream media has been broken by first talk radio and second by the Internet and bloggers in particular."

posted at 5:11 pm

Shelley Powers comments, in a post about a blog that's keeping people up to date on a friend injured in the terrorist attack in Bali, on another aspect of blogs - the proximity they afford: "[He] becomes someone we know. He's isn't faceless. There is no insulation from the pain and the horror... through emotionless news broadcasts, and political speeches."

posted at 5:00 pm

Glenn Reynolds on big media: "The don't-offend mindset that always goes along with corporate life, doesn't make for interesting commentary. Amateurs, under no such constraints, can do better and already often do."

The economic upshot of that: "Big publications like the New York Times will feel competitive pressure to do more of what they do best: reporting actual news from around the world. Meanwhile the buzzing, humming, done-for-love-and-not-for-money Blogosphere will provide an increasing share of the analysis and criticism."

posted at 4:55 pm

Jeneane Sessum exhorts Dave Weinberger, Halley Suitt and Chris Locke to add comments to their sites: "Threaded discussions and the like are essential for this blogging exercise we're involved in to work... New friends, new twists in the conversation, new wrinkles, new ideas, spark to flame, pop pop pop, the loosely joined become tighter and more loose all at once."

posted at 4:43 pm

Adam Felber on Robert Corr's Bias in the blogosphere piece: "Basically, it looks to me that much of the 'bias' that's being identified here is a function of the historical moment rather than some immutable Chomsky-posited principle."

posted at 4:39 pm

Dave Weinberger's turn to weigh in on his blog ethics: "I will not anticipate and reply to every objection: Punctilliousness in pursuit of the appearance of propriety kills voice."
posted at 4:36 pm

Silflay Hraka in his introduction to this week's Carnival of the Vanities: "I think one of the hardest things to do in the blogosphere is to learn the equivalent of hitting singles day after day, especially when it seems like everyone else in the blogosphere is knocking them over the fence." The best you can do, he concedes: "make contact, keep the ball in play, advance the runner, keep on keeping on."

posted at 4:31 pm

Mike Golby, again, on why he's changed his mind and now accepts that blogging is journalism, just in a different form: "It's simply a matter of what one does and is not influenced by our preconceived notions of what constitutes writing or journalism or journaling or scribbling or whatever."
posted at 1:45 pm

[Check out WBUR show The Connection today for an hour long program on online political discourse in which blogs merit significant mention.]
posted at 1:31 pm

Jack Shafer of Slate, in a panel discussion on the future of online journalism that's reported on by Helen Vera in the Yale Daily News: "I think [Web-based publications do] decide in some form what goes into The New York Times."

posted at 1:26 pm

A.K.M. Adam weighs in on Mitch Ratcliffe's comments with a sentiment on how bloggers earn trust and the corrective nature of the blogosphere: "My confidence in Doc [Searls'] integrity comes largely from the online persona he has written into existence... Now, he (or Microsoft) could be taking advantage of that circumstance, but it would be both highly unethical and a grossly misguided short-term strategy... Doc’s name would be Mud."

Among the measures he advocates: "If we keep in touch with one another, if we cultivate trust among disinterested correspondents, we may just build the resources to resist, if never finally to escape, the risks of which Mitch warns us."

posted at 12:23 pm

Mike Golby: "We bring others to our blogs. And when we leave our blogs, we run into the walls of their perceptions of what we have written and who we are. Rather than bang my head to mush against such walls, perhaps it would be better if I kept quiet, walked around them, and found another form of expression..."

Later in the same post: "While polished essays make for profound statement, blogging is communication. People who do not blog cannot understand that this does not constitute interaction with others in a meat-world sense."

posted at 12:03 pm

Gretchen Pirillo defends her husband Chris against charges that his blog-writing has been compromised: "He's not a "blogger" in the wide-eyed, bumpkin, "Hey maw, I gots to go see dat Microsoft place!" sense that Mr. Ratcliffe seems to be implying with his terminology.... yeah... he happens to have a blog. But... he's not simply a blogger."

posted at 11:49 am

Jenny Berger on the ongoing discussion about how bloggers are ever going to make any money at it: "I guess I'm the odd man out because I'm getting progressively sicker every time I see another Big Blog Dog worrying the 'will-blog-for-green' bone."

posted at 11:46 am

Andrew Sullivan laments, but not really, his experience blogging over the past two years: "Whatever else it is, this isn't much of a business model... In fact, I wonder if there's ever been a technological innovation that has combined such extraordinary new power with such dramatically poor financial rewards."

But, he insists, "I have to say I've never enjoyed myself as much as a journalist, had as much impact with my writing, or had as much sheer fun as a commentator on things large and small." And: "The joy of it is that we still don't know where it's headed; but we're absolutely intent on enjoying the ride."

posted at 7:52 am

Dan Gillmor, in a post about how journalists attending Agenda 2003 were banned from direct reporting of the conference while attendees, i.e. potential bloggers, in this case John Patrick, were not: "Again, the lines are blurring between the journalists and the 'former audience' -- and this time the journalists are at a disadvantage."

(Among J. Bradford Delong's qualifying attributes listed in Agenda's agenda: "formerly of the President's Council of Economic Advisors, now of UC Berkeley, acknowledged expert on productivity and growth - and a prolific blogger to boot.")

posted at 7:27 am

Tuesday, October 15, 2002

[A brief Corante plug: We've launched a new section on creativity I hope you'll check out. It's called IdeaFlow and is authored by Renee Hopkins, who previously edited our now-quiet Vital Stats section. In it she'll be exploring the "discipline" of innovation and how individuals and companies can aggressively pursue the development of groundbreaking new products, technologies and applications. She'll be ranging far in her discussion - into business, organizational, and academic theory - and would greatly appreciate any feedback. Please do check it out and alert friends or colleagues who'd find it interesting to its existence. Thanks, Hylton.]

posted at 11:04 pm

Krishna Bharat, the project manager for Google's news portal, comments on his company's approach: "We like to say that we have thousands of editors. We look at their collected wisdom and how much time and space they invest in a certain topic."

posted at 7:59 pm

Chris Pirillo responds to Mitch Ratcliffe's post about Microsoft's blog junket: "I have no problem telling you that I saw cool stuff this weekend... I have no problem telling you that I told Microsoft where they were messing up... More companies should treat their enthusiasts / evangelists the way Beth Goza treated us... Markets are still conversations... Nobody pays me to say anything I don't want to say."
posted at 6:31 pm

Tom Matrullo on the topic of the day: "Right now, blogs might be open to various criticisms, but most of them aren't designed to be making any money for their authors. And it's worth pausing before discarding that little halo."
posted at 6:18 pm

Dave Winer on the mea culpa into which he helped prod Doc Searls about revealing what readers might perceive as a conflict of interest: "Doc acted for the benefit of the jungle, paid a small price (not really) and gained a deeper respect from his readers."

posted at 4:45 pm

Mitch Ratcliffe follows up on the discussion on blog ethics he kicked off yesterday with a comparison of old and new media practices: "Don't hold up the old fish, tell me it stinks and then offer me a fish that stinks just as much. I want fresh, good fish."

posted at 4:41 pm

Doc Searls follows up on his earlier thoughts about the integrity of bloggers: "We use each other's blogs — as we also use trusted print and broadcast journals — to help scaffold and build our understanding of the world." He concludes: "The best we can do, when we know many others trust us to help build their own structures in the world, is reveal those inner cracks and faults, even when they don't compromise our competence."

posted at 1:54 pm

John Patrick on the role blogs will play in the mediasphere: "[They] will encroach on the time we spend on newspapers and trade journals -- especially the latter. Important developments will show up in a lot of places and many of us will turn to the blog of a respected blogger to get a point of view."
posted at 1:32 pm

Kevin Werbach: "Blogs are hitting the mainstream in the way the Web did in 1994-95.  It's a different economic environment, so we're not going to see a rush a blog vendor IPOs.  But don't ignore what's going on because of that."

posted at 1:30 pm

Nick Denton responds to Mitch Ratcliffe's comments on the conflicts of interest that may arise as companies look to bloggers to build buzz for their products: "The notion that weblogs are any less upright than established media: that's a joke, and betrays a lack of knowledge of the corruption endemic in mainstream business and consumer media."

posted at 12:35 pm

Doc Searls, in a post in which he says he'll reveal any potential conflicts of interest in the future: "One of the things I've liked about blogging is that I've never felt the need to qualify and disclaim the shit out of everything... But it's clear to me now that we need to keep applying the principles and practices of the old Journalistic form while we figure out what the new form is all about."

posted at 12:25 pm

Monday, October 14, 2002

Meg Hourihan, from an interview in Shift, on one of her frustrations with the blogosphere: "There seems to be an obsession within parts of the community for taking credit for weblogs -- from who coined the terms we use to who had the first one and invented the first tools to do it."
posted at 9:55 pm

Mickey Kaus with some blog gossip: "Tapped, the much admired blog [from The American Prospect], is [rumored to be] slated for extinction, the victim of editor Robert Kuttner's instinctive urge to squash anything interesting."

Glenn Reynolds on the news: "I think that TAPPED's crew should start a blog of their own. My guess is that it'll outdraw -- and outlast -- the magazine."

posted at 6:52 pm

Nick Denton on a coup for Gizmodo, the "experiment in commercial blogging" he launched in August: "Within three weeks, Microsoft had Gizmodo down on their list of online influencers, pinged Pete, and invited him over to Redmond."

posted at 6:48 pm

Halley Suitt sounds a sentiment shared by many these days: "There has to be a way for bloggers to have sponsors, make money, share a percentage of that money with the people who build the blogging platforms, fully disclose who's paying whom AND keep their editorial integrity."

posted at 6:38 pm

John Schwartz profiles Slashdot in the New York Times, asking "Could it be that this is the 21st-century model for Internet publishing?"
posted at 6:35 pm

Larry Lessig in a call to the blogosphere in the wake of Eldred v. Ashcroft: "Please, in the spirit of the best of this sphere, carry these arguments along, and correct the many mistakes I have made."

posted at 6:22 pm

Mitch Ratcliffe worries about the news that Microsoft is treating bloggers to junkets: "Are bloggers ready for and aware of the potential influence of the gift of a trip, the thrill of hanging with the inventors of the technology they care about, the recurring calls they'll receive after the trip to reinforce the marketing messaging they were exposed to in Redmond?"

posted at 5:59 pm

Mary Brown Malouf, in an explanation of what blogging is in the Salt Lake Tribune: "Blogs are the latest manifestation of the Internet's irrepressibility, the exhilarating feeling that the Internet is the great equalizer, that it belongs to everyone."

posted at 4:16 pm

Friday, October 11, 2002

Sarah Lohnes shares some text from an article proposal she and her colleagues at Middlebury College put together about the use of blogs in education that's been accepted for publication: "Members of weblog communities enter into apprenticeships with one another that constantly enhance intelligence in knowledge spaces because the guiding principle is that we don'­t know everything so we are looking to 'the other' to complete us, and therefore complete the community."

posted at 4:36 pm

Donna Wentworth on the news that a domain name registry is bundling free blogging software into its service: "[It's]sorta like when you sign up for a checking account at Fleet bank, and they give you a foam-insulated travel mug."

posted at 1:05 pm

John Hiler on a panel discussion he and several other prominent bloggers spoke at that was attended by media execs: "[It] was a bit like having a bunch of hippies drive straight from Woodstock to Armonk - to address a bunch of executives at IBM.  It was a pretty big culture clash... and us hippies didn't have a lot of useful case studies of how our peace-and-love blogging could help the Big Media Cos make money (while avoiding the much-dreaded libel lawsuits)."

posted at 6:27 am

Thursday, October 10, 2002

Peter Shoemaker on the future of business: "20th century business was about mass; 21st century business will be about micros... Some industries like entertainment, publishing, and financial services will be hit first, but eventually nearly every consumer-oriented business will have a clear and unwavering focus on the micros."

He concludes: "The micros are not optional, and can not be legislated into submission or ignored. The good news is they are derivatives of our history and our economy, and as such can be identified, channeled, and ultimately exploited."

posted at 8:39 pm

Donna Wentworth on the frisson over Larry Lessig's appearance yesterday in front of the Supremes: "The Berkman Center crew... is excited about all of the blog commentary flowing from the Eldred hearing."

She continues: "Charlie Nesson just walked into my office and we spoke for a bit about blogs and the Eldred case... Charlie suggested that one way of demonstrating to the Justices that the nature of publishing has changed is to engage in a debate of the big questions of this case within the online environment itself... [He] also thinks that blogs are key to keeping the copyfight conversation/debate alive beyond the hearing--beyond this single 'coalescing event.'"

posted at 8:17 pm

Glenn Reynolds on an important aspect of blogs: "I get the occasional complaint from old-line journalists about my 'bias' in the way I characterize something I link to." But there's a material difference, he notes: "Unlike old media, I link to it. Readers don't have to take my word. They can make up their own minds."

posted at 12:34 pm

Robert Corr analyzes, in a long essay, the issue of bias in the blogosphere, concluding that in spite of its seeming samizdat roots, it still manages to marginalize dissenting voices: "Blogging requires relatively little capital and is therefore not owned by a powerful few. Nonetheless, capital requirements exist and marginalise many groups. Furthermore, because blogging is almost entirely unprofitable, bloggers rely on power from other sources to support their activities. The result is a similar concentration of control."

Later, in concluding that it's no surprise that the general politics of the blogosphere skew to the right: "This new medium is the domain of white, middle-class American men, and severe structural barriers restrict access by other groups. Those that adhere to the dominant ideology of the warbloggers are rewarded with larger audiences and higher rankings in search engines. Those that challenge the mainstream must face substantial flak."

posted at 11:50 am

James Lileks, who works for a newspaper and likens the blogosphere to "a coffeeshop stocked with every periodical in the world," comments on a realization he had recently after access to the Web went down at his office: "I’ve come to depend on the krill-filtering mechanisms of blogs and news sites, because they’re far more interesting than the wire feeds... a wire story consists of one voice pitched low and calm and full of institutional gravitas, blissfully unaware of its own biases or the gaping lacunae in its knowledge."

His conclusion: "I'm serious. I was sitting at a terminal at a major American daily, and I thought: I feel so uninformed!"

posted at 11:26 am

Denise Howell: "One of the things I love about weblogs is the way they let people share relevant information quickly yet unobtrusively."
posted at 10:54 am

Wednesday, October 9, 2002

J.D. Lasica on the new technologies and devices that are enabling the proliferation of personal storytelling: "People from all walks of life are now picking up the tools and telling their own stories." The simple premise of the Center for Digital Storytelling he profiles: "We all have a powerful story to tell."

posted at 11:11 pm

Bryan Alexander, of the Smart Mobs team, on those blogging Eldred v. Ashcroft: "Although Court tradition prohibits live notetaking, this is as close as we can get to the experience itself."

posted at 11:07 pm

Peter Drayton, in commenting on an experiment involving blogs and Groove: "While tools such as weblogs are OK for simple collaborations, they aren't as great for more focused, interactive discussions. In fact their permanence can even be a disadvantage."
posted at 12:42 pm

Phil Wolff on the developments in Google's new news service that will likely come: "Google News is crawling only 4000 news sources. No reason not to crawl 4 million. With scale comes the ability to narrowcast." So, he advises, "Stake out your niche now, learn to cover it, and blog on. Google is waiting."
posted at 11:55 am

Matt Cutz, a Google engineer, on its tweaking of its search algorithms: "[We love] the weblogging community, because it creates useful content and helps us categorize the web. Webloggers produce great content." Another comment worth noting: "We're always looking to find a better trust metric."

posted at 11:26 am

Evan Williams on news aggregators: "I'm starting to get interested in this category of software again... we have something in the works that should address that need."
posted at 11:24 am

Phil Wolff in advocating k-logs: "Blogging as you learn reinforces what you know, builds a record for later reference, and shares the wealth."
posted at 11:04 am

Sgt. Stryker in a post about why bloggers are laregely preaching to the choir and unlikely to sway opinion: "Basically, I'm that guy at the end of the bar who keeps going on and on about shit and who you wish would just shut the fuck up, already. Unsurprisingly, that's a true description of most of the blogosphere."
posted at 1:13 am

Tuesday, October 8, 2002

Shayne Bowman and Chris Willis: "It is too easy for media folk to dismiss something called a 'blog.' Can you blame them? Many of today's discussions around blogging and journalism chase the red herring of the form rather than the function."

posted at 7:13 pm

Chuq Von Rospach on the death of the newspaper: "When you combine [the ease of publishing afforded by blogs] with things like RSS aggregators and Google News, what you're really doing is not putting editors out of business, but breaking down the hegemony of the copy desk." 

What blogging does, he continues, is "start to break down the barriers that prevent valuable material from being found. It re-enables, in a big way, word of mouth. it democratizes the way quality is discovered, taking it out of the hands of the few in power (the record exec, the acquisition editor, the copy desk editor, the radio station program director) and brings that process back towards the people."

posted at 3:20 pm

Richard Poe on why blog-politics may skew to the right: "Talk radio, webzines, list servers, message boards, and now blog sites have one thing in common.  They are interactive." Meaning, he continues, "it is physically impossible for new media to do what old media did--that is, to shove unpopular ideas down peoples' throats..."

posted at 12:22 am

Rickard Linde, in an essay on the evolution of "transparent commerce": "A couple of years ago the Cluetrain Manifesto outlined a strategy of openness and a vision for business in the twentyfirst century... The authors got it right but implementation has been slow, so very slow... except for one growing corner of the web, the blogosphere."

posted at 12:06 am

Arnold Kling agrees with Clay Shirky: ""In the world of mass media, Britney Spears or Paul Krugman can achieve market shares and compensation relative to amateurs that far exceed the differences, if any, in talent and ability.  As the Internet takes over, the huge concentration of rewards relative to abilities probably will disappear."

posted at 12:02 am

Monday, October 7, 2002

Shelley Powers on her nostalgia for the earlier days of blogging: "Too many weblogs I've visited recently haven't updated in days, weeks, even months. Perhaps we're going through a maturation process -- posting less frequently, but with more care. Or perhaps, we're all burning out."
posted at 11:17 pm

Mike Golby on a sentiment others are sharing about their blog-fatigue: "We work [for that is what it is] from within a rigid framework. Blogging is subject to perhaps more devices, conventions, artifices, and rules than I at first imagined. It is an enormously restrictive medium."
posted at 10:41 pm

Tom Shugart: "I'm constantly reassessing my relationship with blogging. It's kind of like being a lovesick teenager. One day it's exhilarating. The next I'm nearly bent over with the pain of doubt, insufficiency, and abandonment."
posted at 10:07 pm

Jack Shafer in commentary in Slate on the value of journalism schools: "What say the professors to my observation that the very best, most ethical, most philosophically and historically minded journalists I know have no formal training in these subjects?" His answer: "You become a journalist the same way you become a surgeon—you probe, you extemporize, you cut, and you paste."
posted at 6:19 pm

Aaron Swartz, who's been invited by Larry Lessig to sit in on his argument of the Eldred case in front of the Supreme Court, on the fact that he's not allowed to take the notes he'd hoped to post to his blog: "I think this is outrageous, but hopefully I will be able to remember enough to provide an interesting account."

posted at 6:02 pm

Ken Sands, via Steve Outing, on his avoidance of the term "blog": "I have now begun to talk about 'interactive column writing' as a potentially great journalistic practice. That's not very catchy, but at least it doesn't carry the blog baggage."

posted at 5:37 pm

Kirk Job-Sluder on Clay Shirky's essay and amateurism in general: "To be quite honest, the author completely misses historical context... Basically over last century, the print periodical industry was transformed from a market in which most people who wanted to be published, could get published in a neighborhood or community periodical, to a market dominated by a few key players that are considerably less interested in printing amateur work for the sake of building community."

posted at 11:33 am

Arts & Letters Daily, oft-cited as a proto-blog, shuts down: "Arts & Letters Daily has been kept afloat by the goodwill of its editors, Tran Huu Dung and Denis Dutton... it is now time for them to move on."
posted at 11:21 am

Andrew Sullivan on Clay Shirky's piece on blogging: "[It] struck me as extremely persuasive - in fact, so persuasive I wish I hadn't read it."

posted at 11:19 am

Matt Haughey on Google's readjustment of its search algorithms, one that appears to have downgraded the impact bloggers were having on search results: "...weblogs were getting an unfair advantage for a long while. When they readjusted, the unfair advantage was gone, and I'm completely fine with that..."

Oliver Willis' opinion on the matter: "I'm still the #1 Oliver on Google. Bigger than Stone, Sacks, North and Wendell Holmes. That is all that matters. All."

posted at 11:10 am

Nick Denton comments on Clay Shirky's thoughts on blogging: "I disagree, completely." He concludes: "In any environment in which weblog authors are rewarded financially, the stars will take a disproportionate share, just as hot actors do in Hollywood movies. And that is because, even if bandwidth and publishing systems are free, talent and marketing critical mass will always be in short supply."

posted at 10:26 am

Friday, October 4, 2002

Kevin Barbieux, the "homeless blogger," comments in USA Today on some of the feedback he's getting: "Online, the only thing that can be judged by others is your communication, your voice, your opinion... It's a level of equality so pure it creates a tension that's hard to deal with."

On his virtual tip jar: "(Tippers) are not paying me to be homeless; they are paying me for making this blog. If I could get paid to be homeless, I'd just go outside."

posted at 12:34 pm

Mark Pilgrim, who says the "weblogging community was hit hard" by the apparent move by Google to defuse the practice of Google-bombing, asks: "Is this the beginning of the end of Google’s reign?"
posted at 11:47 am

Noah Shactman on the U.S. Army's latest marketing gimmick - a "syrupy" blog from an Afghanistan-posted solider: "Unlike many blogs -- free-wheeling, motor-mouthed and powered by stream-of-consciousness -- this one is carefully vetted by public affairs officers, both in Afghanistan and at the Pentagon."
posted at 11:43 am

Thursday, October 3, 2002

Tom Coates responds to a point Clay Shirky makes: "There's only one line I don't agree with - 'the people who have profited most from weblogs are the people who've written books about weblogging.' In fact I suspect these people have made almost no money at all, unless they've been added to University book-lists. More likely, the people who've made money are freelance web-savvy journalists publishing for mainstream press."
posted at 2:45 pm

Dave Weinberger with some blog humor: "In response to NBC's decision to extend Friends two minutes in order to hold viewers past the start of other networks' 8:30 shows, JOHO the Blog today announced that it is moving to a 23.6 hour publishing schedule."

posted at 2:37 pm

Clay Shirky, in a new essay on the "mass amateurization of publishing," blogs and the economic impact he thinks they'll have on media: "This destruction of value is what makes weblogs so important... Weblogs make writing as abundant as air, with the same effect on price... By removing both costs and the barriers, weblogs have drained publishing of its financial value."

He concludes: "Rather than spawning a million micro-publishing empires, weblogs are becoming a vast and diffuse cocktail party, where most address not 'the masses' but a small circle of readers, usually friends and colleagues. This is mass amateurization, and it points to a world where participating in the conversation is its own reward."

posted at 2:31 pm

Wednesday, October 2, 2002

James Crabtree says, in the New Statesman, that political bloggers are "like raptors, they hunt in packs, gain momentum, pick enemies, vent spleen, and never, ever, hold back."
posted at 2:58 pm

Nick Denton on a New Statesman article calling on left-leaning bloggers to unite: "How appropriate. The right blogs out of amusement and rage; the earnest left urges its members to blog more to demonstrate political commitment."

posted at 2:55 pm

Sherman Young, a lecturer on media studies in Australia, on the appeal of blogging: "I think that as communications technologies [and] media technologies have progressed over the last 50 years, we more and more have resented the 'gate-keeping' role [of traditional media]," as well, he continues, as the "homogenisation and conglomeration of the mainstream media."

posted at 2:49 pm

Tuesday, October 1, 2002

Evan Williams on a comparison Meg Hourihan made between Kazaa and Blogger after she took exception to something he'd previously written: "Give me a break." His postscript: "I don't get the chance to argue with Meg nearly as often as I used to. Fun!"

Meg's point: "Is Blogger designed to steal because people can publish copyrighted (not their copyright) material to the Web? No, of course not... Blaming software leads down the slippery slope to controls on technology, controls that limit our digital rights and legitimate uses of software and hardware."

posted at 9:27 pm

Dave Weinberger joins Dave Winer, Gary Turner and others noting that Google's love affair with blogs may be on the wane: "I am crushed... In months, perhaps weeks, I shall have the courage to venture out again."

posted at 6:46 pm

Jim Carroll advises marketers to get up to speed on blogging :"It would be a mistake to dismiss the blogging phenomenon... we are witnessing the emergence of a significant new customer relationship tool."
posted at 5:39 pm

Jenny Berger on Dave Winer and karma: "Google's pretty much been the arbiter of what's relevant when it comes to weblogs and who's talking about what when. Little wonder, to me anyway, that Scripting News is dropping rank, however incrementally."
posted at 5:14 pm

John Scalzi on one of the five reasons he writes - his ego: "Because I write, more people know of me than I know personally. You may think this is a stupid reason to write, and I wouldn't deny that. On the other hand, I dare you to be sitting somewhere and have someone you don't know come up and say 'I just wanted to let you know I like what you write,' and not crack a little smile."

Will Leitch on why he writes: "The only trade I have in this world is writing... This is just the only skill that has ever inspired a girl to tell me I'm good at it. Shoot, why wouldn't I devote my life to that?"

posted at 1:39 pm

[To the right you'll see a new rotating recommended book feature with various blog-related books as well as a few other books that might appeal. If you've got any suggested books that might be added to the mix please send them my way to hylton@corante.com. Thanks.]
posted at 1:16 pm

Mark Pilgrim again, on the occasion of his old boss first finding out about his blog, and subsequently asking him to discontinue it: "Without writing, there is no weblog. Without writing, there is no conversation online, anywhere. Chat rooms, usenet posts, instant messenger, weblogs, every aspect of the global conversation: they’re all just words... And my boss wants me to stop writing."
posted at 1:10 pm

Howard Rheingold says, in an interview in The Feature about his upcoming book Smart Mobs, of the intellectual property debate: "[The] battle has really begun to emerge, with a lot more heat, if not a lot more public prominence, in recent months, thanks to the EFF and the Creative Commons and the bloggers."
posted at 1:01 pm

Anil Dash on two blogs whose technology he compliments - holovaty.com and Ftrain: "With apologies to all the good folks doing work around RSS and all the other XML techie shit, I think these guys doing more to push the state of personal publishing than anybody except the Trotts. Most importantly, both use their technology in the service of very, very good writing."
posted at 12:34 pm

Dave Winer says of Google's shifting algorithms that it's ridiculous that he comes before the Dave Matthews Band in a search for "Dave" but that he's "irked that Scripting News isn't on the top page when you search for "weblog."
posted at 12:30 pm

Donna Wentworth, in recommending a post at Yale's LawMeme: "[This] is precisely why blogs (and blawgs) exist: to demystify that which is extraordinarily powerful in large part through its mystery."

posted at 11:45 am









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