Liloia.com: Blogging BloggerCon
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E:M | Brainstorming at Bloggercon -
International bl0gging
E:M | Brainstorming at Bloggercon -
International bl0gging
04/18/2004 04:23 AMEditor: Myself (English) .. # 17 Apr 04 @ 02:06 PM .. Hoder's
comments
hoder.com/weblog/archives/010481.shtml
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[bc] BloggerCon
[bc] BloggerCon
04/17/2004 06:04 PM I'm at the second BloggerCon, Dave Winer's do at Harvard. Dave begins
by sketching the shape of the conference. Then he leads us in a
sing-along of Take Me Out to the Ballgame and the US national anthem.
Really. Now it's on to Jay Rosen's session on blogging and journalism.
He's running it like a 100-person seminar, which is the format of
sessions here. Why is blogging moving towards journalism, Jay begins
by asking. There is, of course, a spread of opinion. Are blogs moving
towards journalism? Are they more like op-eds? Are they muckrakers?
Could blogs move towards...
BloggerCon 3.0
BloggerCon 3.0
08/16/2004 10:29 AMDave and friends are planning a
BloggerCon
conference this fall in Palo Alto. Count me in. Hope I can help.
BloggerCon:
BloggerCon:
04/19/2004 03:01 AMHow to do a BloggerCon
How to do a BloggerCon
04/19/2004 06:58 AM
In the last Fat Man Sings session (in which the fat man didn't
sing) it was suggested that I write a howto that explains how to do a
BloggerCon. At that moment, as I was about to complete the job, the
thought of doing more work for BC seemed pretty horrible. But the idea
stuck and I think it's a worthwhile thing to do, but not something to
do all in one shot, rather to do it over time and hope that someone
investigating this will use a search engine to find all the bits.
Bloggercon ahoy
Bloggercon ahoy
09/22/2004 02:23 PMI spoke at the first Bloggercon last year and enjoyed it. Missed the
second one last spring.
Dave
Winer asked me to moderate a discussion at the
next one, on Nov. 6 at Stanford,
and I was game. The topic is the next phase of the continuing dialogue
on blogging and journalism. The previous discussions led by
Ed Cone and
Jay
Rosen set high standards I'll aim to match.
I've been a pro journalist for 20 years but I've always been on one
fringe or another -- first, as a writer for an alternative weekly;
then, as a theater critic on the "wrong" coast, writing for the
underdog afternoon paper here in San Francisco; then, as a migrant
from the print world to the Web, here at Salon; most recently, as a
pro editor turned blogger. Since I started my publishing career in my
teens cranking out mimeographed Diplomacy and Dungeons & Dragons
magazines in my basement, the new world of self-publishing makes me
feel right at home.
I'll do my best to steer us out of the shallow familiar waters (is
blogging journalism? Of course! Much of the time, anyway) and toward
what I feel are the more challenging questions about journalists' and
bloggers' symbiotic relationship. I've tried to lay some of them out
here. Feel
free to join the discussion over on the Bloggercon site, or at the
event, or right here.
BloggerCon Bloggers
BloggerCon Bloggers
04/17/2004 08:46 AMJeff Jarvis is making
copious notes about the blogging/journalism session. He types faster
than I can.
BloggerCon Links
BloggerCon Links
04/18/2004 09:50 AMTara has an enormous list of
links to folks who wrote about one or more of the BloggerCon sessions.
One way she got it was using Feedster, an RSS search
engine that I find quite useful.
BloggerCon session announcements
BloggerCon session announcements
09/22/2004 08:31 AM
Session description: Bloggers and
Journalists -- Border Crossings.
The next BloggerCon is November 6 at Stanford Law School. Late
last week I started working with the discussion leaders, one-to-one,
talking about how BloggerCon sessions work, and to get started on the
session descriptions.
I like to present the sessions one at a time, on the BloggerCon
site, and here on Scripting News. Starting today we'll be introducing
sessions on a fairly regular basis until the grid is filled in, which
will probably be the day before the conference, if memory serves me.
";->"
Scott Rosenberg, managing editor of Salon, will lead a
discussion on journalism and blogging. He's an ideal person to lead
this discussion because he's a skilled reporter, and both a journalist
and a blogger. All three BC's have had sessions about journalism. The
first discussion was led by Ed Cone, the second by Jay Rosen, and now
we turn to Scott Rosenberg.
"just about every single BloggerCon
post"
"just about every single BloggerCon
post"
04/19/2004 03:01 AMPresidential Blogs at BloggerCon
Presidential Blogs at BloggerCon
04/17/2004 08:46 AMI'm leading the discussion later this morning at the BloggerCon
gathering on presidential blogging. Two observations:
John Kerry campaign blog
postings are signed by Dick Bell, official blogger. The George Bush campaign blog postings are
signed in a corporate way, by the campaign.
On the other hand, Bush's blog seems to point outside more often
-- a more Web-like thing to do.
BloggerCon: Presidential Bloggers
BloggerCon: Presidential Bloggers
04/09/2004 04:00 PM
Four years ago, almost no one would have connected the words
"presidential" and "weblog" -- the very notion would have seemed
bizarre. No longer.
At next week's BloggerCon, I
propose to look at presidential weblogs from four perspectives:
Official campaign blogs. Should candidates do their own postings
(do they have time)? Are campaign blogs serving internal needs, or
informing the electorate, or both? What makes a campaign blog work, or
not?
Affiliated blogs. A new generation of political activists is
pushing voters and money toward the campaigns. How closely tied can
(or should) campaigns be to their supporters? Is central control a
given, or will the authority ultimately devolve to the edges as it
supposedly did in the Dean campaign, at least for a while? What are
the opportunities and risks? (Even linking seems to be in play these
days. Jay Rosen analyses the Daily Kos furor here.)
Commentator blogs. Political reporters are derelict if they don't
read, among others, Glenn
Reynolds and Josh
Marshall. What effect is the new-media commentariat having on the
political process?
Missing links. Do we need more bloggers who avoid commentary and
focus on facts? Maybe we need more issue-oriented blogs, going way
beyond the something-for-everyone position papers that candidates post
on websites. How about a health-care blog where someone tracks
everything the candidates say about this issue? In general, how can
the blogosphere improve the political process?
We're expecting several campaign bloggers (official and otherwise) to
join us in Cambridge next Saturday. Remember, the session is not about
what I think. It's about what we can come up with together. You can
help by posting some comments here or on the BloggerCon site, and by
suggesting new questions.
Ideas for Saturday's BloggerCon?
Ideas for Saturday's BloggerCon?
04/15/2004 02:24 PM
Due to the unavailability of a more qualified/desirable moderator I
have been drafted to lead a session at Saturday's BloggerCon.
Supposedly there will be nearly 100 people in a single room at Harvard
Law School from 1:30-2:45 pm and we're supposed to talk about the
concentration of readership among a tiny handful of blogs.
An article by Clay
Shirky is the original source for the session.
This assignment frightens me for a number of reasons. First
the original proposition does not seem sufficiently surprising.
We are all familiar with the fact that NBC has more viewers than the
local public access channel. Second I'm not sure what issue is
amenable to a free-form unanchored discussion among 100 people but
this one doesn't seem like it. That's one of my stock refrains
in the online community world, actually, is that the publisher needs
to frame the discussion with articles or the whole site loses focus
because nobody can figure out what the purpose is.
Anyone have an idea for breaking the participants up into groups of
10, having them do something for 10 minutes, and then report the
results to the whole crowd? I think many people there will have
laptops and Harvard Law School has wireless access (MIT does too but
visitors have to donate a kidney to the I/S department before they are
authorized to use it).
The BloggerCon 2003 Webl0g: Home Page
The BloggerCon 2003 Webl0g: Home Page
04/17/2004 08:53 AM
News in Blogging:This weekend's Blogger Con .. Harvard Blog Conference
.. The BloggerCon 2003 .. BloggerCon2003 ..
BloggerConblogs.law.harvard.edu/bloggerCon
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BloggerCon: Discussion Notes for, "What
is Journalism? And What Can Webl0gs Do
About It?"
BloggerCon: Discussion Notes for, "What
is Journalism? And What Can Webl0gs Do
About It?"
04/09/2004 04:12 PM
The background essay, "No One Owns Journalism," and an initial list of
questions for the BloggerCon session I will be leading April 17 at
Harvard Law School. Expect this post to change as comments come in
and I re-think it. Plus, I need ten more questions for my final list
of twenty. Got an idea?
"six apart (makers of movable type
bl0gging software and typepad bl0gging
service) are going to buy live journal"
"six apart (makers of movable type
bl0gging software and typepad bl0gging
service) are going to buy live journal"
01/05/2005 04:20 AM
Brain Food for BloggerCon: Journalism
and Webl0gging in Their Corrected
Fullness
Brain Food for BloggerCon: Journalism
and Webl0gging in Their Corrected
Fullness
04/16/2004 10:22 AM
Here's my Introduction, take two, for the Saturday morning session at
BloggerCon. Let's start by separating two things. Blogging is not
journalism. But if each imagined itself as the other, some good might
come of that.
PressThink: Brain Food for BloggerCon:
Journalism and Webl0gging in Their
Corrected Fullness
PressThink: Brain Food for BloggerCon:
Journalism and Webl0gging in Their
Corrected Fullness
04/16/2004 10:22 PM
Brain Food for BloggerCon: Journalism and Weblogging in Their
Corrected Fullness .. takes on a question ..
Rosenjournalism.nyu.edu/pubzone/weblogs/pressthink/2004/04/16/con_p
relude.html
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Blogging for Profits- Triple Your Google
Adsense or Searchfeed Profits With This
Powerful New Blogging Tool From Blog
Burner
Blogging for Profits- Triple Your Google
Adsense or Searchfeed Profits With This
Powerful New Blogging Tool From Blog
Burner
02/01/2005 09:17 PM
Powerful new blogging tool helps any web site no matter how small or
large get search engine listed and indexed within days automatically.
Turn any blog into a profitable niche that you can duplicate over and
over again while tripling your Google Adsense or Searchfeed ad sharing
profits. [PRWEB Jan 31, 2005]
Gates Endorses Blogging; Blogging Now
Old-Hat
Gates Endorses Blogging; Blogging Now
Old-Hat
05/22/2004 02:01 PM
Bill Gates' employees were way ahead of the boss when it came to
blogging, but it's good to see Gates' endorsement
a> (BBC) nonetheless. If he gets it -- and he obviously does -- then a
lot of other folks are sure to follow.
I wonder how soon blogging will become a natural, integral part of the
operating system. RSS would be a good start.
bl0gging the DNC convention bl0gging
bl0gging the DNC convention bl0gging
07/27/2004 02:42 PM
While much of the blogging world has been ga-ga over getting into the Democratic National Convention, it's
tough to find anything interesting going on among the convention bloggers
(to their credit, go turn on CSPAN today and see for yourself how
boring it is). While our own Jessamyn is there (here are profiles of everyone going), I've found the
strange CNN/Technorati
partnership to be the most useful thing. Technorati founder David Sifry
is basically doing a metafilter of all convention blogs over on CNN as
the
daily blog roundup, highlighting the posts worth reading among the
participants.
bl0gging.la
bl0gging.la
04/08/2005 07:52 PM
Star Wars dorks are staying in line at Grauman's even tho SW III is
playing at Arclight .. in line for the friggin’ Star Wars movie
.. weirderblogging.la/archives/2005/04/star_wars_line.phtml
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Beyond Blogging
Beyond Blogging
11/05/2003 09:49 AM
Elizabeth Lane Lawley: Beyond Blogging
An excellent look at the entire ecosystem of blogging as opposed
to the rampant explorations of specific microcosms. [Via
The
Shifted Librarian]
One thing that is missing from the discussion is referrer
logs.
Liz Goes Beyond Blogging
Liz Goes Beyond Blogging
11/04/2003 08:17 PM
I haven't been blogging much because I just found a wireless hot
spot (albeit for $8.95 a day), but now Liz Lawley is speaking and I'm
happy to say that she is just as interesting in person as she is on
her blog. Her topic now is "Beyond Blogging: Where Next
with Blogs and Blogging."
Liz is on a campaign to stop using the word "blog" because she
thinks it's an ugly word, so she's gone back to using the term
"weblog." This, of course, contrasts with Terry Huwe's comment
in the
current issue of Computers in Libraries that anything
called "blogging" has to be a little fun (sorry it's not available
online). At this morning's keynote, the panel referred to F. Scott
Fitzgerald's quote about being able to keep two contradictory thoughts
at the same time, so now I feel like I've come full circle for the
day.
"How many of you with you could Google your office? I can Google my
brain (via her blog)."
"Bloggers are not a unified community, nor are blogs a unified
commodity."
"The term "weblog" will become meaningless because the software can
be used so differently and for different purposes. Just because
something is called a "book" doesn't mean it's like every other book.
We need to start thinking of this as a medium."
"Blogs aren't really on a topic anymore than people are. In the
long term, categorization isn't going to get us what I want because
you can't categorize blogs, but microcontent (like the Internet Topic Exchange)
will."
Liz doesn't use an aggregator for reading blogs because she likes
the visual interface of blogs. She likes the binding and feel of
books, she likes the native view of blogs.
Liz showed All
Consuming and noted that can buy the book or find who's been
writing about it. It's too bad she couldn't say you could see if your
library owns the book.
Liz is highlighting the community aspect of blogs, especially via
comments. Personally, I think it's too bad that libraries don't
understand this and always turn off comments. She's also bravely
explaining trackback. I say "bravely" because it's already been a long
day with four other programs about blogging (yay - a blogging track at
a librarian conference!), so I know a lot of those folks are already
on overload. I'm still glad she's mentioning it, though, and hey, she
is discussing the risks.
Oooh - she said "wiki!" Oooh - and it's the Atom wiki!
Daring, daring, brave Miss Liz! You'll be answering all dem questions
about wikis now. :-) "Ego can be a real barrier to collaborative
development." Liz says, "Wikis scare librarians. A lot." Heh.
Ha - she just created a page on the Atom wiki called "GuidetoSite
and she's building a page. "This is both terrifying and exhilerating
to people who deal with information. I'm still not sure which side I
come down on."
How do we generate content collectively at the same time? Liz
started her blog last year after she read Dan
Gillmor's site as he was posting them to his blog. He included
notes and links that made her re-think her interpretation of the
sessions.
The first question after Liz's presentation is about security and
password-protecting blogs. I feel very confident in saying that this
is the first question asked after every blog presentation at a library
conference. We are sooooo paranoid. The second question is about
building community, especially as noted in Liz's class. Now we're
getting somewhere.
On not bl0gging
On not bl0gging
01/07/2004 06:02 PM
I guess the beginning of a new year is when you're supposed to look
back and be reflective. Looking at...
Gone bl0gging
Gone bl0gging
02/10/2004 02:51 AM
First, sorry my site was down for much of the day. This one apparently
wasn't my fault...something went wrong with my most excellent host. It
happens. Also, I seem to have lost maybe 500 emails during the outage.
If you sent me some, the chances are very strong you are a spammer, in
which case, go to hell. But, for the other 2 of you, if you don't hear
from me within a couple of hours, could you please resend? Thx. I
spent most of the day traveling to San Diego for the Digital Democracy
Teach-In and then Emerging Technology....
Blogging again
Blogging again
10/30/2003 10:25 PM
I'm blogging again. If you ever need to move MT to a new server and
accidentally lock yourself out of your old installation, check out MT
Medic. It's a cgi script you FTP into your MT directory, and it
lets...
Blogging and the Law
Blogging and the Law
12/19/2004 03:34 PM
EBIG’s December Blogging SIG will host a discussi
on on Dec 7 about the legal ramifications of corporate blogging,
led by Charles Smith, COO and chief counsel of Pheedo. The meeting is
at the Concord University of Phoenix campus.
If you’re in the Bay Area and have the slightest interest in
the intersection of blogs and business, you should come to this event.
I’ll be there along with he rest of the Pheedo management team,
so stop by and say hello.
Why I Haven't Been Blogging Much
Why I Haven't Been Blogging Much
04/07/2005 05:14 PM
'Nuff said. Best.
Game. Ever.
"bl0gging.la"
"bl0gging.la"
12/03/2003 03:46 PM
Low bl0gging day
Low bl0gging day
01/05/2005 11:48 AM
I have very limited Web access today, so I won't be doing much (=
any?) blogging. Try to carry on without me. I did, however, give blood
this morning, the first time in several years. I used to give a few
times a year when it was convenient, e.g., when a bloodmobile would
drive up to the doors of the building where I worked. Now that I have
to get off my fat ass to drive 10 minutes to the blood clinic, I don't
do it. If only I could give blood over the Web......
"I am bl0gging."
"I am bl0gging."
12/16/2003 08:58 AM
Blogging bl0gging bl0gging...
Blogging bl0gging bl0gging...
01/22/2004 03:02 AM

Hugh just sent me another
one... ;-)
Yossi
was making fun of me for sitting here blogging blogging
blogging...
This is not bl0gging
This is not bl0gging
03/30/2005 08:46 PM
I don't have the time to blog, so here's just some things I would blog
about if I did have the time: RCDefaultApp from Rubicode:
"RCDefaultApp is a Mac OS X 10.2 or higher preference pane that allows
a user...
Yet more on bl0gging - me on tv
Yet more on bl0gging - me on tv
08/01/2004 02:54 PM
On Monday I'm taping a 6-minute segment for Greater Boston, a local
PBS show, on blogging the convention. I don't know what they'll ask
me, but if you - worthy denizens of the blogosphere - learn anything
new from it you ought to be ashamed of yourself. (I'm guessing, "So,
what is a blog?" will come up in the first 15 seconds.) I assume it'll
air on Monday night at 7pm, on Channel 2 in Boston. Now it's off to
the gym to lose 40 pounds. Also, does anyone have a spare toupee, or a
dead squirrel, or something? Thx....
NPR on bl0gging
NPR on bl0gging
07/27/2004 11:13 AM
Listen to an NPR piece on blogging the convention here....
Blogging Art
Blogging Art
10/28/2003 11:08 PM
I'm thrilled to finally be able to point to a blog by Ar
t Rhyno, Library Systems
Stuff!
"Does the world need another blog? I am sure several have appeared
while I typed this. This is probably more of a thought experiment than
anything else but it provides an opportunity to describe library
systems work that I am involved in, and some open source projects that
I participate in."
One to watch, made ever so much easier by the fact that there
is an RSS
feed!
Changes to bl0gging
Changes to bl0gging
12/17/2002 02:45 PM
I changed the way email 2 blog works on geekfishing. You now need to
click
on the check mail button to get mail stored up. There were some bugs
I've
not had a chance to fix. Also there is junk mail appearing so it willt
ake
me some to rewrite the blog2mail and ...
MMS Blogging
MMS Blogging
12/17/2002 01:44 PM
Emmanuel has made his first MMS post to Movable Type using a prototype
P800. He has developed a Rube Goldberg...
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Liloia.com: Blogging BloggerCon