January 2005 Archives

Oakland District 2 Council seat candidate's night

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A month or so ago my city council representative, Danny Wan, resigned to take a better-paying position with the Port of Oakland.

Justin Horner, the chief of staff for city councilmember Jane Brunner, is one of the candidates for the seat in the special election. He's also a neighbor of mine. He came by knocking on doors a few weeks ago and we talked about the Dean campaign. He had hosted a houseparty as a volunteer for Dean and raised a lot more money than he had expected, which planted the seed in his mind that it might not be far-fetched to run himself.

I'd like to know more about the other candidates running, so this event I read about on the Well looks like something I should try to attend:

Another date to put in your calendar is Monday, February 28. Lakeshore Avenue Baptist Church's sanctuary will be the site of a District 2 Council seat Candidate's Night to be coordinated by the League of Women Voters beginning at 7 PM. If you can't attend that evening, the League is also hosting a debate later in the week at City Hall that will be broadcast on KTOP.

Iran polticizes social network tools

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Hoder, who blogs in English and Persian at Editor: Myself says Orkut and Yahoo Messenger have become political footballs in Iran (Orkut, a hot political issue in Iran):

In no other country but Iran you'll hear politicians use "Orkut" and "Yahoo Messenger" in their sentences.

Nasser Nassiri, a radical MP last week called for a ban on Orkut and Yahoo Messenger, both extremely popular among Iranians, and suggested the parliament will start work on a bill to officially ban them. As always, the reason was to destroy the ethical foundations of the society.

Now another radical but connected MP, Emad Afroogh, who is the chair of the cultural committee of the parliament, has officially denied that they are going to ban Orkut and Yahoo Messenger.

However, people's comments have it that the Iranian Telecom has already filtered Orkut. OpenNet initiative guys have confirmed it in an email to me.

What a lovely dysfunctional and chaotic country Iran has become.

Mapping the sexual / romantic network of a high school

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The diagram that illustrates research into the romantic entanglements of an entire high school look remarkably to my eyes like molecular chains. I realize that some of that is a matter of choices about how to visualize data, but comparing the smalelr groups to the giant daisy chain (the popular kids?) really gets across the idea that these smaller units link up to create the bigger ones.

I'd be interested in seeing a time factor introduced to these shapes. Also, shouldn't there be some free-floating single atoms as well? (It's been a while since I was in high school, but aren't there always some people in any given year without partners?).

Browsing a log of your own thoughts

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In tomorrow's Sunday Times, writer Steven Johnson discusses a program called DEVONthink and the general improvement in personal note-taking and idea-management assistance emerging in today's tools and user-interface advances (Tool for Thought):

But there's a fundamental difference between searching a universe of documents created by strangers and searching your own personal library. When you're freewheeling through ideas that you yourself have collated - particularly when you'd long ago forgotten about them - there's something about the experience that seems uncannily like freewheeling through the corridors of your own memory. It feels like thinking.

(Note: There is no unrotting link available yet for the above article.)

As I've mentioned many times around here, the Mac program Voodoo Pad is currently the state of art for my own ad hoc, mostly text-based note-taking and mind mapping software. Blogs play a part for me as well, and I'm trying to get wiki and civicspace-style community sites going as well to provide similar knowledge accumulation for different sized groups of people (along with other communication and analytical and action-oriented services).

My arms are killing me

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For a few months I've been wondering why my upper arms have been aching. Did I lift something? Is it referred pain? Today, it dawned on me. I've been practicing guitar and ukulele for about an hour or so a day for almost a year. No wonder! Now I don't even mind. It's just like the way you get used to the tips of your fingers burning.

Viewing your sexual history as a social network

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OK, I admit that Who Banged Who is just a slick parody, but is it really all that far-fetched?

Upcoming conferences

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I was syndicating the feed from my Upcoming public event calendar using the same blog plug-in I use to syndicate blog headlines nad descriptions, but my approach wasn't generating proper links for the events. Then I noticed that George Kelly was using a service called RSS Digest to accomplish the same thing with properly functioning links. So I've gone ahead and updated the template.

The design of the sidebar box is raw, but at least it's more functional now.

It wasn't Flickr's fault

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OK, my bad. I take it back. The various tools for uploading photos to Flickr seem to be working just fine. It was just a hiccup.

Then again I don't like the random bunch o' photos I get in the sidebar here as much as I'd prefer perhaps the most recent.

In other news, I posted a few images to my Mr. Spontaneous photolog and adopted one of the new photo album canned designs TypePad is offering over there. It didn't re-constitute the original set of photos there and in fact they now display badly, so I may end up re-uploading them or something, but it's a sleek little design.

by popular request

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Mangaxiango, little speed racer, go!

look ma, modigliani me!

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Modixlianishould i post manga xian too?

Call for papers for Stanford conference on 'online deliberation'

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2nd Conference on Online Deliberation: Design, Research, and Practice / DIAC-2005:

May 20 - 22, 2005
The Second Conference on Online Deliberation: Design, Research, and Practice / DIAC 2005, will bring together software developers, social science researchers, and practioners of online deliberation for three days of presentations and workshops on the Stanford University campus in May of 2005. Following up on an earlier conference, "Developing and Using Online Tools for Deliberative Democracy", held at Carnegie Mellon University in June of 2003, we would like at this meeting to discuss the possible creation of a new society for online deliberation with an international membership, to support cross-disciplinary scholarship, principled design, and informed practice in the use of online environments for group deliberation and democratic participation. This conference is also the latest in a series of conferences on Directions and Implications of Advanced Computing (DIAC), presented in association with the Public Sphere Project (a CPSR Initiative).

Google not doing VoIP

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"Face time" no longer a business virtue?

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former FCC chair Reed Hundt has written a mixed editorial/primer on the topics of frequency, spectrum, and licensing. The link is to a copy of the piece on the site of San Francisco radio station KCBS; I stumbled across it while trying to track down a story reported on air this morning, in which several Blackberry users said that it is "better" to e-mail someone in the next office than to get up, walk over, and talk to them.

Blogs get STATUS: Publish

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Newspaper mentions of blogs this weekend:

The "baring souls" article provides a few case studies of how some people prefer to deal with tragedy (from the death of a spouse to the Indonesian tsunami) through impersonal, nonmediated means.

* I guess nobody told them we all stand around the printer these days.

Flickr frustration

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hmmm, the iPhoto plug-in for Flickr seemed pretty cool. Then I hit my upload limit but that's not the fault of the plug-in. So I upgraded my account there. Then when my PayPal payment cleared (or soon thereafter; i.e., today) I tried uploading a batch of photos and it keeps stalling out on the first one, no matter what size the batch.

A problem with the plug-in? A problem with iPhoto? A problem with me? Don't know, but it's annoying.

How would you tag yourself?

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The Blog Blog answers Jeff Jarvis's question ("How would you tag yourself?"):

That's a tough question. So far all I can up with is watches TV, seems sort of high, A Jewish Lexington Steele, hungry, snowflake (I used to teach high school in Brooklyn), and Gina's husband... But in the new world, I guess I had better tag myself before my shrink does it for me.

what's the technorati syntax for tagging this post as related to ? ...also, do i keep using categories and add technorati tags ...and and where do delicious and flickr fit in? ...and ...and ...and finally, note the decay in value as i failed to link to splendora.

Napsterization on real existing folksonomies

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Quoting Tagging at Technorati, Flickr and Del.icio.us

Technorati's new tags page has been getting lots of play in the blogosphere.. since it went live Thursday. It's a brilliant idea, matching tags from Del.icio.us, Flickr and blog post categories as they come through RSS feeds, and then displaying those photos together with posts that match. Of course, tags like general.jpg are big because people have that as a category for their blog posts... as are other categories. David Weinberger noted that blog categories aren't really tags, because they aren't usually granular the way tags often are, and so there are results like this, or or whathaveyou because people want broad general buckets to put posts in, and with a post categorized as "general" on a page on their blog, in that context, there is a kind of meaning that is lost on a page like Tags. But still... the two sets of tags along with broader categories together produce very interesting results. Also, the photos are beautiful and make the pages far more engaging to read than when they just had text. Searching for interesting serendipitous meanings that occur while glancing between the two types of information is really fun.

tags1.jpgThere is also a fourth way to get Technorati's Tag page to pick up information, and that is to use a rel='tag' link. This is done by putting a Technorati link (transparent, so other blog companies could use the links, but still proprietary to Technorati) around some words. The words the tag goes around do not become the tags. Rather, the tags are picked up in the link.. so in this example the bolded word is the tag Technorati's system picks up: < a href="http://technorati.com/tags/tag rel="tag" >words wrapped by tag href link< /a>. (note there are extra spaces in this example.. if you want to cut an paste this, remove the space just after each < so they function correctly). Though I don't think these tags will get used a lot, relatively speaking, because as the blogosphere gets bigger, the bloggers overall become less technical and won't have a clue what this is, and they shouldn't. The answer is probably that Technorati and the other blog companies should cache posts, and let users tag them on their sites as they read them.

What I'm wondering about is how quickly the spammers will figure this all out, and use it to their advantage. Currently, even though I block comment spam across my blogs, and know that Technorati, Feedster, PubSub et al, as well as Google, don't log comments or at least comment links because of the spam problem, the comment spammers try ever increasingly clever tricks. They might leave 500 comments in a hour (like I wouldn't notice) each with a different IP address, a different URL they want linked to for google juice, a different return email address, different products. All in the same blast. Removing them is automatic, but if they are clever, they'll figure out just how to get one or two through.. and if I believe I've gotten them all, they've succeeded with just a couple.

I posed the tag-span question to a friend at technorati via IM on Thursday and they indicated that since they block spam blogs, they'll block spam tags, too. Fair enough. But in this case, there are three systems, not just Technorati, that need to block spam, and with these three, the possiblity exists that partial spam could be cleverly spread out across the three, in order to come together to equal a spam situation. How long til the spammers figure this out and use it to their advantage across these different sites?

I could see a spammer putting up a photo, relatively benign and not at all spammy, but with specific tags that matched a blog post, with links to spam sites, and tags designed to match the photo tags, but not look very spammy on their own. Then, with some coordinated tagging through Del.icio.us, so that those blog posts matching the tags from photos matching the Del.icio.us links, the blog posts and photos would show up together in Technorati Tag page results. Depending on the goals of the spammers, and their cleverness, it might be very hard for individual systems by themselves to see the entries as spam, or to use the community moderation on any one system to realize what is happening. It would be in combination that the information from all three systems would constitute spam.

Part of the problem I think is in the nature of the spamming, which gains exposure through short windows of time, and has value even if a very very small percentage of viewers actually click the links or see the words. Since the Technorati pages would only show posts and photos for a short period, hours maybe, the spammers could succeed with regularly changing information. Recently, I've been getting comment spam (blocked of course from appearing on the front end of my blogs, but I can see it on the back end) for hand cream, and pet food (like we didn't learn anything from the first bubble...) from what appear to otherwise be legitmate companies that are just looking to capitalize on something they perceive as providing value even if it doesn't really. It's not just mortgages and porn. It might be harder to recognize than we think because spam is changing, and spammers are very very clever.

Disclosure: I used to work at Technorati, and I'm friends with many of the folks there.

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Oft-neglected home page / journal / personal blog

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One of my new year's resolutions was well not really but if I did make them would have been to spruce up my personal presence online. I've neglected both the journal site (wake up!) and the all-in-one compendium (my monolog at x-pollen), so i'll be working on those over the next few weeks.

Step one, add flickr photos to xianlandia.

Uncle John's, second arrangement

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I've been working out the intro and basic melody part on the baritone uke and guitar, so in my usual spirit of laying down tracks before I've even got my new parts rehearsed, here's a funky-stoopit little instrumental take with melody part (mostly drowned out after the intro - you'll thank me) on the bari uke and fuzzy chords on the tenor. i'll add bass tones to the arrangement on my guitar once i get these parts played smoothly (which hasn't happened yet).

Self Documenting Technology

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Just had to pop this link in here, also from Powers' Burning Bird blog, as it goes to the heart of my sense of how we should all be (in general) helping each other and building up our knowledge stores in the moments of realization (Self Documenting Technology):

Danny Ayers points to a Jon Udell article about dynamic documentation managed by the folks who use a product, rather than relying on stuffy old material provided by the organization making the software. In it, Jon writes:
Collectively, we users know a lot more about products than vendors do. We eventually stumble across every undocumented feature or quirk. We like to maintain the health of the products we've bought and we're happy to discuss how to do that with other users.
The problem is that vendors, for the most part, do a lousy job of encouraging and organizing those discussions. Here's an experiment I'd like to see someone try: Start a Wikipedia page for your product. Populate it with basic factual information....

Shelley Powers on digital identity

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Quoting from I, URL:

My first exposure to the concept of a 'federated identity', or a digital identity or ID if you will, was when I had to obtain one of the first Microsoft Passport identities in order to access the material I needed to finish my book, Developing ASP Components. I was pleased with the concept, then, because it would give me a way to sign into all the Microsoft sites I visited and only have to remember the one username and password.

I was quite fond of MS tech at the time, and focused almost exclusively on this vendor in my writing. However, if you had asked me, then, whether I would input credit card information and use Passport to sign on....

Lazyweb: I wants my Podcast Guide

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Dave sez

Dave: "Open the pod bay doors please, Hal."

and it gets me thinking. Where is TV Guide for podcasting?

Lazyweb: please cause there to be an excellent blog or wiki or folksonomically smart taglicious place online I can consult to help me filter which podcasts I might like to hear (so far I've never listened to one).

In theory, in a distributed way, my feed subscriptions are already doing that for me, but podcasting is so fresh that it would benefit from aggressive sifting and ways for people to champion or promote there casts.

Isn't there a huge opening there for something with the focus of Matt Haughey's PVR blog and the beat-coverage of pick-your-favorite Denton franchise?

NPR to podcast 'On the Media'

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Quoting from Big podcasting news

I went to WNYC today to tape an interview with Bob Garfield on vlogging for On The Media and they told me the big news:

This week's On The Media will be the first NPR show - maybe the first major radio show anywhere - that will be podcast.

Cool.

Something wiki this way comes

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OK, so you're down with blogging? Great? What's your wiki strategy? Blogs are great because logging, chronological entry-making, suits the temporal rhythms of the web, a medium more like music than, say, photography. Like a river, the web is always changing.

So a wiki is kind of like a dam that enables you to accumulate "water" in a lake. The collaborative nature of wiki complements the temporal nature of logging. The philosophy of reader-edited pages is in tune with the immediacy of the web. The various wiki syntaxes represent another hack at taking the HTML out of the writing the web.

Bits and pieces of these concepts, judiciously melded, suit different environments. Of course you don't want j. random public editing your company's intranet. Wikis can have authentication and privileged users, etc. The question is how to bring these advantages into your enterprise to maximize the benefits while minimizing the harmful aspects of disruption.

Quoting from Year of the Enterprise Wiki (Ross Mayfield)

Jon Udell calls 2004 The Year of the Enterprise Wiki, or at least when Enterprise Wiki stopped sounding like an oxymoron. I happen to think this year is the big one, but that’s my job. Jon looks to the future:

As the Wiki phenomenon enters its second decade, it’s hard to predict just how the technology will evolve. Two things seem certain: Wiki culture will continue to thrive, and enterprise users will continue to seek lighter, easier collaboration tools.

Jon also discovers the marriage of wikis and folksonomy. Socialtext has been tagging since early 2003, before Flickr and del.icio.us took it in great directions, we just call them categories.

More to Wikipedia than meets the eye

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Quoting Simon Willison's Some notes on Wikipedia:

I've been driving myself crazy with coursework over the past couple of weeks, and since it's always good to have something to take your mind off things I've also been spending a fair amount of time lurking around the beautifulWikipedia. Here are a few things about Wikipedia you may have missed:

  • It's not just Wikipedia any more; there's also Wiktionary (a multi-lingual dictionary), Wikibooks (developing open content books on various topics), Wikiquote (quotations), Wikisource (a repository of public domain source texts), Wikispecies (a biological species database), Wikicommons (free images and other media) and Wikinews (a new Wikipedia-style news site). Not to mention the huge numbers of projects in other languages.
  • You can view live stat graphs of the Wikipedia squid cache servers and see an overview of the status of all Wikipedia servers.
  • Last year's drive for donations was mostly spent on new hardware, and a detailed list of hardware orders is available.
  • Wikipedia's awesome TeX engine for presenting mathematical formulae may soon be expanded to support rendering of musical scores, SVG graphics, chemical formulae and more, thanks to the brilliant Wikitex module for MediaWiki.
  • Wikisource has a bunch of stories by H. P. Lovecraft!
  • Wikipedia's Periodic table links to detailed descriptions of every single element.
  • Live recent changes feed is a page that shows edits to Wikipedia in real time. It works by keeping the HTTP connection to your browser open and sending updates packaged as JavaScript calls (I think this is the same trick used by CGI:IRC).
  • The channel #enrc.wikipedia on irc.freenode.net carries a bot-produced live feed of recent changes to Wikipedia. Edits occur so frequently that the bot had to be split in to five to avoid being flooded off the channel!
  • Wikipedia has a huge vandalism problem, but malicious edits are cleared up so fast that you'd be hard pressed to spot it.
  • The Wikimedia foundation has an attractive quarterly newsletter, the Wikimedia Quarto. September's issue includes an interview with Ward Cunningham.
  • Wikipedia provides a great way to sharpen your language skills; not only does Wikibooks have guides to teaching yourself French and German (among others) but the multi-lingual versions of Wikipedia provide excellent practise in reading comprehension. Compare the English and French entries on Bath, for example.
  • The Wikimedia foundation recently received a small grant to develop a series of children's books.

The deeper I dig in to Wikipedia, the more amazed I become. I see it as more than just a collaborative encyclopaedia; it's a testament to humanity's ability to work together for the greater good. I guess you could say I'm in WikiLove :)

Update: Fixed links, thanks to corrections posted in the comments. If this entry had been a wiki page, people could have fixed them themselves...

More to Wikipedia than meets the eye

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Quoting Simon Willison's Some notes on Wikipedia:

I've been driving myself crazy with coursework over the past couple of weeks, and since it's always good to have something to take your mind off things I've also been spending a fair amount of time lurking around the beautifulWikipedia. Here are a few things about Wikipedia you may have missed:

  • It's not just Wikipedia any more; there's also Wiktionary (a multi-lingual dictionary), Wikibooks (developing open content books on various topics), Wikiquote (quotations), Wikisource (a repository of public domain source texts), Wikispecies (a biological species database), Wikicommons (free images and other media) and Wikinews (a new Wikipedia-style news site). Not to mention the huge numbers of projects in other languages.
  • You can view live stat graphs of the Wikipedia squid cache servers and see an overview of the status of all Wikipedia servers.
  • Last year's drive for donations was mostly spent on new hardware, and a detailed list of hardware orders is available.
  • Wikipedia's awesome TeX engine for presenting mathematical formulae may soon be expanded to support rendering of musical scores, SVG graphics, chemical formulae and more, thanks to the brilliant Wikitex module for MediaWiki.
  • Wikisource has a bunch of stories by H. P. Lovecraft!
  • Wikipedia's Periodic table links to detailed descriptions of every single element.
  • Live recent changes feed is a page that shows edits to Wikipedia in real time. It works by keeping the HTTP connection to your browser open and sending updates packaged as JavaScript calls (I think this is the same trick used by CGI:IRC).
  • The channel #enrc.wikipedia on irc.freenode.net carries a bot-produced live feed of recent changes to Wikipedia. Edits occur so frequently that the bot had to be split in to five to avoid being flooded off the channel!
  • Wikipedia has a huge vandalism problem, but malicious edits are cleared up so fast that you'd be hard pressed to spot it.
  • The Wikimedia foundation has an attractive quarterly newsletter, the Wikimedia Quarto. September's issue includes an interview with Ward Cunningham.
  • Wikipedia provides a great way to sharpen your language skills; not only does Wikibooks have guides to teaching yourself French and German (among others) but the multi-lingual versions of Wikipedia provide excellent practise in reading comprehension. Compare the English and French entries on Bath, for example.
  • The Wikimedia foundation recently received a small grant to develop a series of children's books.

The deeper I dig in to Wikipedia, the more amazed I become. I see it as more than just a collaborative encyclopaedia; it's a testament to humanity's ability to work together for the greater good. I guess you could say I'm in WikiLove :)

Update: Fixed links, thanks to corrections posted in the comments. If this entry had been a wiki page, people could have fixed them themselves...

Shirky's response to Danah Boyd on the recent Wikipedia debate

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Andy Baio says (in Shirky's response to Danah Boyd on the recent Wikipedia debate):

Clay on Danah on Clay on Sanger; a great debate

Definitely an interesting discussion but I wonder if we are making a category error here. Talking about wikipedia in terms of its authoritativeness seems a bit like mistaking the NCSA What's New page circa 1994 for the Internet as a whole.

I expect a proliferation of collaboratively created sites, some more some less like wikipedia. Niche communities will probably build their own resources.

Wikiness in general is setting a new standards for fluidity of online documentation and the negotiation of consensus realities.

Nothing wrong with trying to build the Tower of Babel, mind you, but each one of us contains multitudes and there are branches and forks down every path.

Here come the reputation brokers

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Quoting from Are You Reputable? by Jed Miller (blogging at Personal Democracy Forum):

Media research company Bacon's Information says it will be watching "the most reputable online news blogs" in order to help their subscribers "determine the possible impact on business decisions and company reputations."

The Bizwire announcement doesn't specify quite how they'll decide who's reputable. But clearly this is a sign that the race is on--not to decide who's reputable, but to decide who will decide, and how.

Can the blogosphere withstand reputation brokers, or are decentralized, emergent systems of trust the only ones truly safe from Blairs, Murdochs and more innocent forms of group-think and false report?

Om Malik's Live Journal scoop

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It ain't April Fools, so I'm assuming Om is correct with his web excloo at Om Malik on Broadband: Six Apart to buy Live Journal:

The deal is a mix of stock and cash, and could be announced sometime later this month, according to those close to the two companies. If the deal goes through, then Six Apart will become one of the largest weblog companies in the world, with nearly 6.5 million users. It also gives the company a very fighting chance against Google's Blogger and Microsoft's MSN Spaces.

Business blogging gaining mindshare

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Quoting from Electronic Business - Blogs for business? - 1/1/2005 - Electronic Business - CA489801:

The hullabaloo surrounding the blog has obscured what it is. It's not complex—it's simply a Web site that lets its owner (and anyone to whom that owner gives permission) post comments, links to other Web sites and documents, all without being proficient in HTML. Imagine opening a browser window and being able to access e-mail, presentations and spreadsheets relating to a project, all in one place. Like any other Web site, it can be password-protected.

(via Micro Persuasion)

Meanwhile, New Communications Forums has two "blog university" conferences coming up to promote the same ideas and applications of skills to the workplace.

(via the Future of Work mailing list)

Pew says blogs growing

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According to the Pew Internet & American Life Project, blog readership went way up in 2004. A January report using November data says:

  • 27% of adult U.S. Internet users read blogs (up from 17% in February). The number of blog readers is increasing faster than the number of blog creators.
  • 12% have posted or commented on a blog.
  • 7% have created a blog.
  • 5% use RSS aggregators or XML readers.
  • However, more than 62% of Internet users said they don't know what a blog is.

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