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Blogging 2.0
Notes from a roundtable discussion for Microsoft on the future of blogging.
Notes from a roundtable discussion for Microsoft on
the future of blogging. Ian Delaney's speaker notes for the
session, crossposted from his personal blog. Apologies for
their sketchiness.
The future of blogging must be connected to why
people blog now
- It's about our current nature [I am a socialist, not
an essentialist]. There is currently a human urge to
communicate, share and to connect. Most of us [at the event]
are professional writers in some sense and feel that more
keenly than most perhaps and do it every day anyway, but
it's not just us.
- Equal current human urge to make a mark or be recorded.
Symptomatic of our sense of anonymity and alienation in
post-industrial world?, though diaries are hardly a new
thing.
- As a convenient tool for knowledge management. Search on
my blog is faster and better than search on my computer.
[shame on you, MS]. Easier to use than a wiki.
- Self-promotion or business promotion. [let's be
honest, eh]
- Public spaces that serve a community function (the local
pub, the playground, the park, the village square) no longer
exist, are thought unsafe or are no longer fulfilling that
function. So we seek alternatives. I have found many RL
friends through my blog - that wouldn't happen if I stood
in the park: I'd get arrested or something.
And also why they don't blog
- Too technical/geeky - not so for very long - every 16 yr
old leaving school now has always had the
Internet. They've had wikipedia since they were old enough
to use it - '99. I think it will lead to increased usage
of solutions like drupal, joomla and b2evolution, if
anything.
- Too much effort - well, it is. It's not like any of us
are getting paid unless it gets us a new job or new clients.
Adsense not working e.g. Guy Kawasaki
- Nothing to say - my mum, very english, very humble woman
wouldn't want to make her views public in the same way
she'd never write a letter to a paper - but it doesn't
have to be a publishing platform, it can also
be a communication platform - nearly all east
asian blogs, for example, are for friends and family.
- No time/No interest - I think there may be passive
solutions.
Paid-for blogging services?
Models:
- Straightforward hosting - I pay something like $6 per
month for hosting and $10 a year for domain name.
- But DIY requires intent. Ppl don't pay for things or
put effort into things they can get for free.
- Typepad.com - £5 a month for a hosted service - has been
v.popular with pro bloggers but now allegedly haemorrhaging
users moving to free services like wordpress.com,
blogger.com.
- Wordpress.com - pro accounts for more traffic; more
control over design. Not going to do it unless funded somehow,
though.
- eTribes.com - bolt-ons for extra space and mobile apps; no
one I know uses it.
What other alternatives exist/could work?
Some recent trends and ideas that may show the way
forward
Microblogging
- Rise of Twitter, Jaiku, Facebook status messages as an
alternative to blogging.
- These things are even more intimate than most blogs -
trend towards 'self surveillance', putting all your
activity on show.
- They are about maintaining presence and relationships more
than anything else
- Rise of the tumblelog - tumblr.com - more scrapbook than
anything else - useful and easy to maintain
- Bloggers often run out of steam - 100x more abandoned
blogs than active ones - something easier and less
stress-inducing required?
Atomisation
- Thanks to the magic of RSS, the basic atom of the blog is
the post. These can be remixed and re-assembled by
readers/users anyway they like.
This has led to:
- Rise of the Feed Reader and consequent decline of the page
view. Subscribers are a more important index than impressions,
if you offer full RSS. And if you don't, then you've
lost the attention of the bloggerati. Why should you care?
They're linkers.
- Rise of the widget - it's RSS for ppl who don't
know what RSS stands for. MySpace, Netvibes, Pageflakes - roll
your own internet and never leave your homepage. Facebook apps
doing the same for that platform. UK gone facebook mad, it
seems, in last month or so.
Collaboration
- Blogging platforms are currently poor on this, hence the
rise [in some ways] of wikis, which are a nightmare in terms
of user experience. Yet I think the collaborative blog has
legs. Forums remain a very strong vehicle and are a product of
community. How can we bring that community feeling into the
blogging platform?
- Current 'half-way houses' are weak for this - Vox,
Live Spaces, MU Wordpress remains an under-resourced, niche
platform.
Passive Activity
- Tim O'Reilly - "the best web 2.0 services are
passive" - e.g. Google search, Last.fm.
- We might be able to passively blog - sites that collect
all our activities e.g. iStalkr, tumblr, Facebook apps
Dangers/Counter-Forces
- Spam - spam has already eaten email, usenet and many
forums - one reason for rise of web 2.0 services is that email
has become so very inefficient for so many purposes. Akismet
and Captchas do a sterling job, but the spammers are clever
bastards.
- Identity/Privacy Crisis Looming - your next phone will
have a facebook interface, a colleague suggested to me other
day, and I can believe it - BUT we're used to our
identities being linked to contexts e.g. with mates, with the
boss, with colleagues, with family, with lovers. Now,
intentionally or not, people are mashing all that up.
That's good in a way, but very odd for most of
Comments
delaney said:
Just testing the new comment interface.
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