Emerging Alternatives: BlogworldEmerging Alternatives: Blogworld: "But there still exists a publishing format that manages to embody all these lost qualities, and more — the Weblog. The average blog, needless to say, pales in comparison to a 1957 issue of the Voice, or a 1964 Los Angeles Free Press, or a 2003 Lexington, Kentucky, ACE Weekly, for that matter. But that's missing the point. Blogging technology has, for the first time in history, given the average Jane the ability to write, edit, design, and publish her own editorial product — to be read and responded to by millions of people, potentially — for around $0 to $200 a year. It has begun to deliver on some of the wild promises about the Internet that were heard in the 1990s. Never before have so many passionate outsiders — hundreds of thousands, at minimum — stormed the ramparts of professional journalism. "
¶ 5:59 PM
What, when, where, how, and why. Get a blog. Y not? Mozno bude zaujmavi. (Maybe it will be interesting [in Slovak] - but diacritics in description fail, ž č š ť)
Comments by enetation.
This weblog is my own exploration of cool tools, how to write a weblog, WHY to
write a weblog, etc. I'll try to publish it, but will be writing it first.
Here. ... goes.
A weblog is, blogs can be, anything, any site on the web. But Blogs are cool.
Because they're Personal. And they Link to each other. And they are
Updated frequently. Usually every day, with
the most recent blog post/ journal entry on top. So folks keep coming to visit
their favorites, and follow some links to their favorites' favorites. Or not.
PLU; nope. PUL? Personal, updating, linking; editing? Pule; it could catch on.