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Blogging, 3 years later

How blogs and bloggers have changed since an earlier discussion.

         

antsaint

8:05 pm on Jan 26, 2004 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



As I've trekked about the discussions, getting familiar with the boards, I found an old discussion (from Dec. 2001) on blogging [webmasterworld.com]:

Search on 'greymatter' here, we've made two or three swipes at it. Noah Grey's blogger is the best script I've come across

Noah's no longer supporting GM, if I remember correctly. Moveable Type seems the dominant player - and of course Google's buy of Blogger called in a ton of attention to blogging, and hence new bloggers.

I've looked at LOTS of blog sites lately. In most cases I haven't seen that a 'blog' is anything other than an ego gone rampant, lacking content, class, or anything close to style. It's all about "me, me, me!" What's on my mind! What I think! Look at me!

Well... this hasn't changed. But then again, you could find and replace "blog" with "webpage", set this comment in the mid-late 90s, and say the same thing about all those geocities tilde pages.

Here's a more recent discussion [webmasterworld.com], but I wonder about the overall growing use for pros and businesses. Beyond that though, it's been 3 years that have seen blogs do, well, something, as well as attract more users both layman and professional. What are you doing with blogs nowadays? I've used them as a travelogue, and I've seen non-web-savvy clients have their sites based on MT - usual content and info, but now they can self-update content instead of going through a third-party.

News has become more of a trend too, with reporters having blogs to just headline-savvy joes and janes putting up their own part-fact part-opinion takes on events.

Businesses are taking more note too. This loopy content format suddenly looks more and more like a great way to interface with customers.

Or maybe everyone's still just putting up digital snaps of their dog.

rogerd

8:31 pm on Jan 26, 2004 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member



Welcome to WebmasterWorld, antsaint!

I think you are right on all counts - blogs are seeing application in a very wide variety of business and personal uses.

Today's better blogs are sort of like swiss army knives - by enabling and disabling various options, you can get very different tools. The reason for their popularity is exactly what you cite - non-techies can change and add content easily. Most significantly, they can transparently create new pages that will be properly linked and integrated into the site.

A few of the non-traditional blog apps we've implemented:
- an "advice column" in which experts reply to questions submitted by visitors
- a new products section that allows the site owner to write about the newest products being offered
- a press release compilation in an online press room.

None of these looks particularly bloglike, and none allow the traditional feedback from visitors; they are functioning purely in CMS mode.