Blogging

20
Jun
2003

SWISS Lemanic Bloggers Night - in Vevey

Wäre doch eine gute Gelegenheit, die Französischkenntnisse aufzufrischen ... ;-))

Samedi 19 juillet dès 20h00 au Bout du Monde à Vevey, rencontre de webloggueurs lémaniques et romands (on a une définition assez élastique de "webloggueurs", "lémaniques" et "romands", alors venez seulement!)

Informations: http://www.barzi.net/index.php?m=200306#55

Annoncez-vous si vous venez!

[Via: http://spirolattic.net/SwissBlogs ]

13
Jun
2003

Blogging und BlogTalk bei Politik-digital

Lets talk about blogs! wird bei politik-digital.de getitelt.

BlogTalk, die erste europäische Weblog-Konferenz , fragte nach Formen und Perspektiven von Online-Tagebüchern in Politik und Privatleben.
Online-Tagebücher ?!??!?!! *seufz*

Bei Erratika ärgert man sich über falsch geschriebene Namen; der Schockwellenreiter nennt den Artikel ziemlich kompetent.

Hier geht's zum vollständigen Artikel: Lets talk about blogs

....und übrigens besonders spannend der Link: "Kommentieren Sie diesen Artikel,....der einem schnurstracks,...das E-Mail-Programm öffnet. (Naja wenigstens gibt's dazu auch ein Forum *nochmalsseufz*)

[Via http://erratika.de/blog/ und auch Schockwellenreiter]

Weblogs als City-Guides?

Ein interessanter Artikel von Mark Glaser in der Online Journalism Review:

Local Weblogs Gawk, Stalk -- But Balk at Minting $$- Can they succeed where local city guides failed?

There was a time in the not-so-distant past when CitySearch and Microsoft's Sidewalk were going to take urban areas by storm, offering guides to nightlife and tourists spots and crushing online newspapers right where they lived. Nice try. Instead, they've morphed into city listings, no more than glorified Yellow Pages with bare-bones staff.

Game, set and match to newspaper sites, right? In pure traffic and revenues right now, perhaps. But there's a growing, if fractured, trend among Webloggers who'd like to give a grittier take on cities from the mouths of mouthy citizen/writers. The pre-eminent local Weblog is Gawker, launched by serial entrepreneur and blogger Nick Denton, with the sharp-tongued, addictive voice of writer Elizabeth Spiers taking in New York City in all its manic glory. One original feature is Gawker Stalker, where readers give sightings of celebrities in everyday settings.


Zum vollständigen Artikel geht's hier: Local Weblogs Gawk, Stalk -- But Balk at Minting $$.

LinX:
http://www.gawker.com/
http://www.nickdenton.org/

12
Jun
2003

Bloggers Blog Blogging Business Conference

Interessante Einträge bei Martin Röll Hier der Start und ..und der (vorläufig) letzte Eintrag,...man darf auf die Fortsetzung gespannt sein.

Aber auch bei Heath Row gibt's live-Blogging zum Nachlesen. [Via poynter.org]

8
Jun
2003

Wieder mal Plagiate...

Diesmal hat's moe getroffen. Plagiate mehrerer Weblog-Einträge von http://weblog.plasticthinking.org beim Tagebuch eines Internetjunkies von DocX:

Mit "Plagiat" meine ich hier, dass ich die Formulierungen dieser Beiträge eigenhändig verfasst habe, und dass sie in dem betreffenden Weblog wörtlich kopiert sind, ohne dass ich als Quelle genannt bin. Gerade bei dem 2. und 3. Beitrag, die in der Ich-Form geschrieben sind, finde ich das besonders krass., schreibt moe.

Die Entschuldigung fällt alnschliessend auch sehr, sehr dürftig aus:

DocX schrieb:
Sorry Moe, aber jetzt habe ich 5 Beitraege ohne Quellenangabe gemacht und Du machst deswegen so ne Welle? Okay war nicht die feine englische Art, aber ich sehe meinen Bullshit ein.
08.06.2003 12:24:47


Wirklich ärgerlich,.....und wirklich nicht so schwierig korrekt zu zitieren,...oder?

7
Jun
2003

Blogger-Sperrfristen und Live-Bloggen

Gefunden via OnlineJournalism.com:


Blogs leak news on Wall Street Journal conference

Bloggers' spilled the beans on the Wall Street Journal's recent technology conference in Carlsbad, Calif., reports Wired. Bill Gates and Barry Diller were among the many speakers at the D: All Things Digital conference, hosted by Journal reporters Walt Mossberg and Kara Swisher. To encourage luminaries to speak freely the paper instructed journalists to consider anything said onstage as "off the record." Interviews conducted before or after the event were not covered by the "gag order." Two attendees, not aware of the gag order, posted reports of Gates' and Steve Jobs' speeches on their weblogs. Mossberg told Wired he is not upset with the bloggers and doesn't feel they broke any rules. "It's an interesting issue," he said. "You just have to have a better definition next time. Maybe we'll change the rules. We don't know."

Maybe,...maybe *lol*

Artikel in Wired: Gag Rules? Bloggers Report Anyway

3
Jun
2003

Nicht verzagen, Blogger fragen

Dies die aktuelle Kolumne des Networke, John Naughton beim Observer:

If you really want to know, ask a blogger

Assiduous students of the print media will have noticed its practitioners becoming increasingly exercised about 'blogging' - the practice of publishing web-logs or online journals.

On 18 May, for example, one Geoffrey Nunberg fulminated in the New York Times about the fact that whenever one does a Google search on any topical issue, the top page rankings often go to blogs rather than established media sources (such as the New York Times ).

This was, according to Nunberg, A Bad Thing. After all, most bloggers are not professional journalists, but rank amateurs! He was not the first hack to articulate this whinge. In fact, he seems to have picked up the idea from an earlier piece in the Register, an online publication. But the mindset he represents is widespread in Big Media, so it is worth devoting a few moments to unpacking the prejudices behind it.

First, there is the contempt for 'amateur' writers, endemic in professional journalism. Hacks are always astonished by anyone who writes for no pay, so upwards of half a million such amateurs now publishing blogs leaves the pros speechless. It also leads them to deride blogs as an epidemic of vanity publishing rather than the glorious outbreak of free expression it actually represents.

Second is the assumption that anything written by an amateur is, by definition, worthless. Yet journalism has always been, as Northcliffe observed, 'the art of explaining to others that which one does not oneself understand'.

In fact, when it comes to many topics in which I have a professional interest, I would sooner pay attention to particular blogs than to anything published in Big Media - including the venerable New York Times. This is not necessarily because journalists are idiots; it's just that serious subjects are complicated and hacks have neither the training nor the time to reach a sophisticated understanding of them - which is why much journalistic coverage is inevitably superficial and often misleading, and why so many blogs are thoughtful and accurate by comparison.

Third, there is the problem - not often touched upon in the New York Times, by the way - that many controversial public issues are ignored by Big Media for the simple reason that the ideological and commercial interests of their proprietors preclude it.

This is why the US mainstream media has wound up misleading its audience about Iraq and the 'war' on terrorism. The fact that most US citizens believe a majority of the 9/11 hijackers were Iraqis rather than Saudis is a case in point.

Then there is economics. One reason blogs show up so prominently in Google searches is because weblogs are available on the web while Big Media sources increasingly are not. Instead they are locked behind pay-for firewalls. (As with Nunberg's little rant, which I have just tried to re-read - and been invited to pay $2.95 for the privilege.)

Since the whole point of the web is full and comprehensive linking, and Google ranks pages by the numbers of other pages that link to them, it is hardly surprising that blogs are winning over established media. Nobody in his right mind would link to a mere abstract.

A few Big Media outlets understand this elementary fact. The Guardian and The Observer sites are exemplary in this regard - which is why they are beginning to outrank their competitors (for example, the London Times and the New York Times ) in web searches.

The moral is: if you want to score with Google, be on the web. Otherwise, go whistle.

http://www.briefhistory.com

Salam Pax der Bagdad-Blogger wird Journalist ...ähem Kolumnist

Vom Blogger zum Kolumnisten ...

Die britische Zeitung «The Guardian» hat den «Bagdad-Blogger» als Kolumnisten engagiert. Der Verfasser eines Internet-Tagebuchs aus Irak soll alle zwei Wochen einen Beitrag für das Blatt schreiben. Ein «Guardian»-Reporter habe mit dem Autor, der sich im Internet nur Salam Pax nennt, in einem Vorort von Bagdad Kontakt aufgenommen, berichtete die Zeitung.

Während des Krieges wurde sein Blog (Web-Log, Web-Tagebuch) nicht mehr aktualisiert, weil er keine Verbindung mehr erhielt. Erst jetzt können die Beiträge online gelesen werden. Auf seiner Web-Site berichtet er weiter über das alltägliche Chaos in der irakischen Hauptstadt.

So weit bekannt, soll es sich bei Salam Pax um einen 29-jährigen irakischen Architekten handeln. Laut «Guardian» lebte er einige Jahre in Wien.

Hier gibt's den Artikel dazu im Guardian.

http://dear_raed.blogspot.com/

26
Mai
2003

SWISS-weblogs Wiki

Apropos Swiss-Ring und ähnliches: Für die einten sicherlich schon "ein alter Hut" ,... und doch immer wieder interessant: http://spirolattic.net/SwissBlogs

3
Mai
2003

Blogger.com testet neue Features ...

.... Blogger II - Dano und freut sich auf Feedback: http://new.blogger.com/home.pyra

Und hier gibt's die DANO-FAQs und natürlich auch die Dokumentation zu den Änderungen.

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