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Thursday, September 5, 2002

Blogging and Writing ELO Chat
Blogging and Writing September 15 featuring Doug Lawson, Mark Bernstein, and Adrian Miles. [artsflow]

categories: memewatch metablog x-syndicate

12:19:09 PM    say what []


Rough Survey of Greater Blogistan
I am a johnny-come-lately when it comes to using "Blogistan" as part of a web site's monicker so I feel guilty and glad when people like dave winer and dylan tweney add me to their blogrolls as just Blogistan, but it does appear that Google now thinks this site is the second most likely place people are looking for when they search for blogistan.

Number one is still Insolvent Republic of Blogistan. What a great name! We are broadcasting Voice of the Internet into your insolvent republic, brethren and sistren! (Last updated July 19.)

Then after RFB comes another predecessor, a. beam of light in blogistan. Great new entry today.

Page two, after some prominent discussions of the term or conceptual space, comes moose and squirrel in Blogistan.

This one also sounds early, by the domain name at least: Distributed Republic of Blogistan.

bonus browser's reward for doing a search: Richard Bennett's Omphalos: Blogtopia v. Blogistan

categories: memewatch metablog x-syndicate

11:52:47 AM    say what []


Heady Company (Navelgazing)
From blo.gs: related blogs:
#1 Scripting News
#2Boing Boing Blog
Blogroots
megnut
evhead
kottke.org
rebecca's pocket
CamWorld
Theory. It's all reflected glory from that number one association. (Dave is the only one among this A list who has linked to me...)

categories: memewatch metablog

11:43:57 AM    say what []


My TSS Segment to Air September 16
Found out today from the producer that my bit with Leo on blog templates will air September 16. The tutorial should go up at their site within a week before the show. I'll link to it then. This is sort of the big push, since we have time to plan for it, the book is available, etc.

On the fireweaver tip, some good new stuff just came in from the Macromedia Resource Feed (xml):

categories: fireweaver metablog

11:14:19 AM    say what []


Times Daily Blogwatch
As a memewatch project I'd love to see stats on the appearance of the word "blog" in the New York Times. It seems that there is an article with a blog angle just about every day.

Today's is about LiveJournal:

All kinds of people maintain pages on LiveJournal, but the site's own statistics show that its users tend to be 15 to 21 and predominantly female. Many people who have pages at LiveJournal or similar sites like DiaryLand maintain that the form is distinct from Weblogs, or blogs. The journals tend to be more inwardly focused and offer fewer links than blogs, although the categories overlap.

Here's what was eay to find, just dates of articles:

categories: memewatch metablog

10:45:21 AM    say what []


When to Stop Editing a Blog Post
My brother the painter told me once about a guy who used to sneak into museums with a teeny brush and palette to touch up his own paintings. It's hard to let go. I fixed a few typos in my entry yesterday that was getting a lot of flow from Scott Rosenberg and Dave Winer, but finally drew the line.

Still bugging me was my repetition of the phrase "trots out" twice in successive sentences. By the time I noticed it I did not want to trigger a trivial repost to my RSS feed (workaround? could the RSS spec contain a flag for reprint corrections vs. newly posted entries?) The line is in a different place for this medium from where it is when printinng on smashed trees.

I used to say that the greatest thing about publishing on the web was that you could make changes and corrections long after publishing something, but that this was also the most terrible thing about the web. A blessing and a curse, until you draw the line somewhere.

I know I could always preview before publishing, the way Matt Haughey's deceptively brilliant interface makes commenters do, but somehow this goes against the path-of-least-resistance model that unleashes all this writing.

That thing about repeating phrases in slightly different contexts is so familiar, the way the forebrain seems to buffer recently touched or used words recalled from some deeper store of memory, proffering them repeatedly. Just as cliches and idioms suggest themselves and require pruning, this slightly autonomic repetition of a phrase is one of the easiest things to fix when proofreading or doing a light copyedit.

My brother the artist reminds me sometimes about all the little drawing "tricks" I taught him when we were children: the little symbols and culturally agreed-upon simplifications that say to the eye and mind: this is a real face, this is a real nose, this ear looks real, etc.

In some ways the traditions of print publishing are another set of traditions with a little voodoo mixed in. I always felt that when I was hired for my first editorial job (as an editorial assistant at a publishing house in the east bay in 1988) part of what landed me the job was my east-coast college education, often no big deal here in California but in this one type of job, there was an intangible preference for familiarity with old-fashioned, traditional, formal rules of writing. The same kinds of markers that in other contexts indicate fashion-sense, taste, style, and social class.

So polishing a weblog may bring a little old-school classiness to your image, but you have to draw the line somewhere. For some, what makes blogging work is that quality of being "in the moment." For others, I'm sure, perfecting an image is paramount. I guess for me it's somewhere in between.

categories: salonika metablog

10:27:05 AM    say what []


Two Links from the Virtual Chase
From explodedlibrarian.info (via Research News: The Virtual Chase) come two good blog-related links:
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