Archive for June, 2006

The aggregator is my friend…

What did I ever do before RSS?? There is so much stuff out there and it’s now so easy to keep track of whatever I’m interested in. So much so that this morning I got quite carried away reading things in my RSS aggregator, it’s almost time to get ready for work, and I haven’t written anything!

This morning I have been reading:
From the Librarian in Black, OCLC’s look at Web 2.0 and what it means for libraries.

At Terra Nova, how online text communication is affecting other communication.

Feel-good Librarian’s post about keeping one’s eyes open, to see the opportunities that are there.

Jiwa Rasa’s post on finding book gems in the most unexpected places (in Malay).

I have given up on my futile quest to keep my subscriptions down to 300. Setting Bloglines to just display new items gives me the illusion that everything is under control. The Mark All Read feature is also good to use from time to time.

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Why I like blogging, #389

One thing I really like about blogs is how it is so easy for a relative nobody newbie like me to read, and maybe even directly communicate with, established bloggers like Rebecca Blood and Jessamyn West. I would never have considered emailing people just to say hi, I love your work because I would have thought I was being too intrusive and fanboi. (I have to have a reason to email people; emailing someone I have never met, just to gush, feels unseemly.) If they have a blog, on the other hand, I can comment, agree/disagree… discuss, converse. (Uh oh, you’re thinking: yet another CW Hearts Blogs post… but I’m sure you worked this out a few posts back.)

Recently I started playing on a new Six Apart blogging site, Vox. (Thanks again for the invite, Morgan!). It’s an interesting concept, allowing a blogger to tag some posts as viewable by friends only, some family only, or friends and family only or viewable by the world (public). I’ve noticed that many of the cool kids seem to be playing there at the moment. You can tag people as being in your neighbourhood - it allows you to see when they’ve updated their Vox blogs - and I’ve now got famous (to me) people (Jessamyn, Rebecca) in my neighbourhood!

[I also get a thrill when I find blogs by published writers whose work I’ve enjoyed - recently found Glenda Larke’s blog, and I have been reading Justine Larbalestier’s and Robert J Sawyer’s blogs for some time now. I wonder which other authors blog. (Writers’ blogs I’d love to read: Ursula LeGuin, Vernor Vinge, Iain M Banks, Peter Temple, Carol Berg, Henning Mankell - although he would probably blog in Swedish - A. Samad Said, Khadijah Hashim…) ]

The only thing that is a bit of a pain on Vox is that you need to have a Vox account to be able to comment (but I suppose this will stymie spammers). If you’d like a Vox account please leave a comment here. At this stage I can only give you a so-called starter account, which allows you to set a profile and write comments. (Standard accounts allow you to blog as well; I don’t have any invites for standard accounts yet.)

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Current reading

I’m trying to build up the collection of books on blogs and blogging at the library where I work. Just arrived is Blog! How the newest media revolution is changing politics, business and culture by David Kline and Dan Burstein.

I’ve only just started reading it. Divided into three sections: Politics and Society, Business and Economics, and Media and Culture, with an essay introducing each section, it’s a collection of interviews with a range of bloggers, including Markos Moulitsas Zuniga (DailyKos), Ana Marie Cox (founder of Wonkette), Robert Scoble (Scobleizer), Wil Wheaton (Go Wes!), Arianna Huffington (Huffington Post), and Andrew Sullivan.

My first impulse was that it was a little strange to have a book about bloggers and blogging, but I think I’ll revise that judgement because I think it is important to have a book like this for those unfamiliar with blogging to read and digest. Also nothing beats a book for portability and ease of use, in my humble opinion.

I’m looking forward to reading this book a bit more closely. Over lunch yesterday, skimmed an interview with Paul Saffo (technology forecaster who predicted, “more than a dozen years ago… that within a very few years a PC without an Internet connection would be ‘as useful as a paperweight.’ ” (p.335) He predicts that blogging as we know it today “will evolve into something more”, and that the word “blog”, a “most uneuphonious term”, as he describes it, will disappear. Whatever form blogging eventually takes, Saffo believes it will “continue to serve as some sort of new intellectual agora, a new common ground, in response to the failures of traditional Big Media organisations”. (p.341)

Saffo also questioned the notion of blogging being easy - he believes it has to be “as easy as jotting down some notes on a piece of paper” before “everyday people” decide to use the medium. “Remember that most people don’t really know how to write”, he says, and points to people who can’t even put a sentence together - and people who can write but hate to, or are afraid of writing. Saffo points out that “many more people read blogs than have one of their own.” He asks if “print” blogging is going to morph into multimedia blogging instead… (pp.338 - 339)

I suppose this is true enough, but I don’t know if the perceived (in)ability to write stops people from blogging (didn’t stop me! ;) ). Around here many still don’t know what the term even means, and many still find the technology daunting. Also, many people, if they think about blogging themselves, don’t think they have anything to say! The lack of time or energy to commit to blogging is another factor.

Other books I’ve bought for our library lately: Naked Conversations: How Blogs are Changing the Way Businesses Talk with Customers by Shel Israel and Robert Scoble (bought a copy for myself!), and Blogs, Wikis, Podcasts and Other Powerful Web Tools for Classrooms by Will Richardson. Also need to order Fans, Bloggers and Gamers by Henry Jenkins (thanks Tama for the pointer!). There’s a couple of others whose titles escape me right now.

Other things I’m reading right now: The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver (avoided it when Oprah was hyping it but am glad I got over my aversion), and Behind the Scenes in the Blogosphere: Advice from Established Bloggers by Nora Ganim Barnes (pdf - thanks to Micropersuasion for the link). Am girding my loins to start À la recherche du temps perdu (Remembrance of Things Past by Marcel Proust), as inspired by Orange Crate Art.

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