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Thursday, 6 March 2003 |
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8:58:22 AM |
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Friday, 10 January 2003 |
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Online Advertising Has Lost the Plot . . . Corporates in the Know Blog! Most corporates have lost the plot on the Internet. As Meryl.Net Articles points out:
Some corporates have found a high-content answer that really gets readers and builds relationships -- Blogging. Just look at Ray Ozzie's Weblog from Groove. The Corporate site is necessary and provides informaton about the company. But it is Ray Ozzie's site that build a relationship with customers, uses the FreshBot principle of getting new stuff in Search Engines on a daily basis. Ray Ozzie has more than 2,000 people come to his weblog door a day. Through weblogs, Ray Ozzie is building fresh content daily, building a conversational style with his readers and has real opportunity to talk about his software products and concerns surrounding them. Beats SPAM anyday!! Goodbye flashy advertising, wizbang gadoodles that littler my email box each day. I do not mind if Corporate put wizbang gadoodles on their website -- then we have a choice whether or not to view it. Content, relationships, networks, links and carrying the conversation and knowledge building on is the core of the web. Those who are really up with the develoment of the web know this and are blogging. Those who are less Technate, continue to SPAM us all and cause us all a garbage destruction problem. 5:24:28 AM |
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Thursday, 9 January 2003 |
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Getting Your Way Around the World of Blogs . . . An excellent list of Blog Directories. The Pepys Project is a great worldwide directory of Blogs. Great to have someone build a project and use some historical meaning as a point of jumping into the project. We can learn much from studying the way people who were new to literacy went about to create their world. There are ways we can apply the past to the future. We may gain some greater insights into literacy through applying those concepts to the world of Technacy. You do not know who Pepys is? You can learn more on the site but here is a brief:
4:12:23 PM |
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Wednesday, 8 January 2003 |
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Weblogs: Center of Online Knowledge Building Evidence is pointing towards the fact that weblogs is where key knowledge is being built. Because of the wealth of knowledge contained in "blogs" I now perform searches quite differently. First, I search specifically only in "weblogs" using the Google tool I put on this site. Then, after I have gleaned the wisdom from weblog pages, I use what I have learnt from weblogs to shape a set of words (often up to six or seven words) so that I get highly useful search results from Google. It is also surprising to see how many times the first three to five results in Google are actually weblogs -- often some I did not come across in my earlier and less specific weblogs searches. Usually, by using this method of first going to weblogs to refine my ideas and then to Google with a more specific search, I will get a list of no more than 35 to 40 sites to visit, all of extremely high relevance to what I am needing. Our Google Masters have recognized that weblogs have good quality, fresh material. My site at Google Village gets crawled by GoogleBot every second day. Google indicates that they collect "Google also unveiled several new enhancements that make available the latest news, refreshed daily web content. . ." The emphasis of this Bot is to search weblogs that are updated on a daily basis. GoogleBot that comes around every second day or so, collects specifically from weblogs. [See what the forums where the Google Tech Guys hand around are saying about this. Specifically FreshBot comes almost exclusively to weblogs.] Even publishers are recognizing the value of many thousands of people journaling or blogging each day. Publishers are now scanning weblogs to see what they can find to publish. [See: Blog Novelist Gets Contract]. I have had publishers discussing various matters with me, including seeking as to whether I would expand on a particular article I wrote. There is a danger of, what I call, falling into a hole. If a blogger simply focuses on what other people are saying and simply point to other links, eventually there is little to link to as it has been all linked into itself. Rather, as the novelist does above who wrote original material and serialized it online, I like to think of blogging being a cross between my editorial and saying something useful beyond what other people have said -- essentially carrying the conversation on to another point or another level. Now if everyone carries the conversation on from where the other person left it off, and/or if there are genuine linkages between ideas that did not really exist before, or we are now making existing links stronger, there is a genuine development of real knowledge in this setting. Learning how to carry a conversation, in my weblogs, and refer to other, so that the conversation carries on from where it is now, and from where I am now, is part of what I call the Skills of Technacy. 12:54:45 AM |
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Wednesday, 1 January 2003 |
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Weblogging and Personal Publishing How useful are weblogs for sharing knowledge? "BlogStreet is hosting Sébastien Paquet's survey on the usefulness of weblogs and wikis for sharing knowledge. Please go here to fill in the short multiple-choice questionnaires." [The FuzzyBlog!] I for one would be interested in the outcome of this survey. Tutorial on using Radio Userland to build weblogs. For those who are new to weblogging and want to know how it is done, this is a great introduction.
Personal Knowledge Publishing. If you have done Sébastien Paquet's survey, you might also want to read about his article "Personal Knowledge Publishing and its uses in research." In his conclusion, Seb echoes some of my own thoughts regarding the use of weblogs for Personal Publishing. For me, weblogs is about personal publishing -- which is used to:
See my other note on this I wrote earlier today.
7:26:05 AM |
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Thursday, 26 December 2002 |
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The World of Microcontent Now that is a useful word 'microcontent'. This word refers to the management systems of personal contents online including: weblogs, webzines, email digests, and personal publishing. A great site outlining the concept is found at Microcontent News. The importance of Microcontent is that it provides a voting system for Macrocontent. Thousands of pointers stemming from Micrcontent on the web provides a system for elevating the stories that are on larger sites. While I may point to Microcontent news here, and several other people do the same in combination because we provided a pointer there we are voting the importance of the site. Mention the same site in an email that is then posted onto a mail digest site, and then we also have small websites that point there as well, we are providing a way for crawlers from Google or other Directory site to find and then index that site.
2:51:12 PM |