« Sponsored post: Business... | Main | 101 Dumbest Business... » How To Become a Better Blogger By Not Reading Blogs Filed in archive weblogs by rob on December 20, 2007 I've finally set up my new home on the web. Coconut Headsets is where I will blog when I leave this site. It won't be daily, and it may not even be weekly, so I encourage you to pick up instead of visiting the site. I am going to shoot for quality over quantity, which will be a nice change. The first major post went up yesterday, How to Become a B... lire la suite
Sponsored post: Business. Main | Dumbest Business. How To Become a Better Blogger By Not Reading Blogs Filed in archive weblogs by rob on December 20, 2007 I've finally set up my new home on the web. Coconut Headsets is where I will blog when I leave this site.
Previous | Next » What Is The Sound of No Bloggers Reading? Posted by tgirsch I have added David Dvorkin’s “insignificant” blog (his description) to our insignificant blogroll. August 13th, 2008 Bloggin |
Over the past year, National Public Radio’s blog and radio series called “My Cancer” has been an amazing portraly of life living, and dying, with cancer. Called NPR: My Cancer, it is frank and open, discussing the daily aspect of life with cancer. A lot of times, I sit at my computer, trying to figure out what to say on the blog.
It’s official. I am the “editor” of the new Edublogs Magazine, an online magazine covering education and the Edublogs Network of free hosted blogs for teachers, students, and education professionals. Trust me, it’s been a busy week. This is the Weekly Digest from Lorelle on WordPress.
The George Polk awards—described by blogger Will Bunch as the "Golden Globes of American journalism"—were announced early this morning. One of them went to a blogger who blogs! Far out!
I've mostly stayed out of the meta-discussion concerning the nature and validity of sports blogs. I do what I do because I want to, and people can choose to read what I write or not. In the particular case of ClipsNation, it would seem that a long tail is in effect - the Clippers do not receive a lot of newspaper coverage, so the (admittedly limited) audience that is interested in Clippers news and analysis is eager to read what I write, in spite of (or is it because of?
One of the most frustrating aspects of reading blogs through feed readers is the process of commenting on blogs. The typical step-by-step process is: Scan through the blog post titles. Find an interesting title and click on the title to open it and read. Want to respond or read more?
Blogger bloggers please don’t make me login with my Google/Blogger account in order to post a comment. I realize that this is spam control, but find some other solution– like, oh, migrate to WordPress : Sincerely, though, you are losing traffic. Why? Every time I want to post on a Blogger blog and I have to login with my Google/Blogger account I have to look up the damned password.
As part of my ongoing series on blog resources, so far I’ve covered Blogging Resources and Sources to Help You Blog, Blog Resources for English Language and Blog Writing, and Blog Resources: Researching the Research, Finding the Facts, and Seeking Supporting Evidence. Today, I’m offering the resources I use for business and professional sources of information to help me blog and write.
Bonjour, Je suis auteur d'un blog blogger gratuit(. blogspot. com) et j'ai décidé de migrer vers un nom de domaine plus professionnel, que j'ai acheté chez OVH. Je suis allé sur mon compte blogger, et j'ai enregistré le nouveau domaine, je suis passé de http: www. maxschleiffer.
Dr. Johnson’s Cat asks “So: Why Blog? , a question that plagues many bloggers, wanna be bloggers, and wish-they-weren’t bloggers. Why do we keep on blogging when the fun drains away. And what keeps bringing us back. Googling the phrase “stop blogging” gets 171,000 hits:
Some months ago, I was asked to take a survey focusing on the habits of medical bloggers. The research was conducted by Ivor Kovic et al. and they published the results in the Journal of Medical Internet Research (JMIR). We approached 197 medical bloggers of English-language medical blogs which provided direct contact information, with posts published within the past month.
One great thing about being a fan of reading blogs and general internet writing is that you flit around from piece to piece, all short attention span theater, and you occasionally have serendipitous justapositions. I liked this one. First I read this: Well, Caitlain, in a patriarchy, the cornerstone of which is a paradigm [.
Blogger is hosed this morning. It's not just Shakesville; I'm having a hard time loading a bunch of Blogger-based blogs. I've got a bunch of stuff ready to post, so I'll keep 'em coming as I am able!
After much promise, and many requests, the web site for the South African BizTalk User Group has now been launched. Please pay us a visit at http: www. biztalkug. co. za/ . Thanks to Ryan Crawcour for taking the initiative on this, and thanks to all those who offered help and services.
Friday, February 8, 2008 Gallery of Blogger’s Past Google bought blogging service Blogger in 2003 by acquiring makers Pyra Labs (Blogger’s Evan Williams then tried to convince Google to start a blog of their own. the convincing took 15 months, Evan says). The first mention of Blogger in a Google press release came in August later that year, when the Google Toolbar integrated a “BlogThis” button, raising among one of the first Google cross-integration concerns.
My friend Carly is holding this one-of-a-kind fundraiser for RAINN (seriously, I've never seen anything like this done before) targeted specifically at bloggers (as in, people with an actual blog -- recently I've seen " bloggers" used to refer to those who comment on blogs and "
Former Gawker editor Emily Gould has a new article in MIT's Technology Review asking everyone to try turning off the internet (basically) and maybe keep it off until their lives are profoundly altered. Her piece suggests, as an experiment, that the reader "cease to log in to your instant messenger for a week.
One of my heroes, Jonathan Bailey of Plagiarism Today, whom I’ve written much about and love his work on the Blog Herald, has simplified the issue of content theft into two brilliant and understandable articles. Content Theft Myths and Why They Are False deals with the myths that often keep us from responding and reporting content theft.
Ellen Lee did a great wrap-up article over at SFGate on Facebook in 2007, she called me up for my opinion on the company over the last year. I suggested that Facebook is very innovative (the first to lead an application platform, and to do social based ads) yet remains very arrogant. twice not including customers to make decisions over their very own privacy of the newspage and beacon).