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Get over it. The blogosphere isn’t dead, just different.

November 7th, 2008 | 5 Comments | Posted in Blogging, Editorial by Justin Flood

There has been much kvetching and flapping of lips to the fact that Blogging has become a dead art.  I’ve said it before, and i’ll say it again.  It’s not dead, and it’s not going anywhere.

What has died is the intimate level of conversation that used to be so prevalent in the blogosphere between a writer and a reader.  With millions of blogs on millions of sites, many of the bigger ones run by large corporate entities,  it’s only natural that the intimacy has faded.  There’s simply too much noise.  But blogging as a whole has gotten stronger.

Blogs are democratizing in a way that few things in the past have.  Anyone with a good idea and serviceable writing skills can go out and make an impact on people.  This blog by itself has proven that.  I started writing simply because I wanted a place to jot down cool ideas I’ve had, and comment on the goings on of the tech industry.  Now this has grown into a site with well over 10,000 unique visitors per month and has shown no sign of slowing.

I’m not corporate backed, and the ads only pay for my hosting and domain, but I still write anyway, simply because I can.  If you’re in this for the money and you aren’t bought out by a large corporation,  you’re in for a big shock.   Blogging on it’s own isn’t a terribly good money making endeavour.

That doesn’t mean that your ideas and writings won’t affect other people, or cause you to grow a small but loyal base of fans.  If you’re good, those will come with the territory.   Not to mention the fact that consistent quality writing will likely lead to other opportunities that you could have never seen coming.

Indeed, most bloggers simply can’t cut it in this rough and tumble medium and simply give up.  A great article on Nicholas Carr’s blog shows that very clearly:

It’s no surprise, then, that the vast majority of blogs have been abandoned. Technorati has identified 133 million blogs since it started indexing them in 2002. But at least 94 percent of them have gone dormant, the company reports in its most recent “state of the blogosphere” study. Only 7.4 million blogs had any postings in the last 120 days, and only 1.5 million had any postings in the last seven days. Now, as longtime blogger Tim Bray notes, 7.4 million and 1.5 million are still sizable numbers, but they’re a whole lot lower than we’ve been led to believe. “I find those numbers shockingly low,” writes Bray; “clearly, blogging isn’t as widespread as we thought.” Call it the Long Curtail: For the lion’s share of bloggers, the rewards just aren’t worth the effort.

I’d say those numbers aren’t as bad as one would believe.  What percentage of Myspace pages are abandoned?  Facebook pages?  Twitter accounts?  Flickr accounts?  Photobucket accounts?  E-mail accounts?  AIM screennames?  My point is, that like most things online,   people try them for the hell of it,  and a lot of the time,  give up.  Failure is the natural selection of the Internet.  It weeds out the bad and useless,  leaving more room for the good ideas of those who persevere to float to the top.

Nicholas Carr compares Blogging to Amateur Radio, which I think is a fair, if incomplete comparison:

Back in 2005, I argued that the closest historical precedent for blogging was amateur radio. The example has become, if anything, more salient since then. When “the wireless” was introduced to America around 1900, it set off a surge in amateur broadcasting, as hundreds of thousands of people took to the airwaves. “On every night after dinner,” wrote Francis Collins in the 1912 book Wireless Man, “the entire country becomes a vast whispering gallery.” As amateur broadcasting boomed, utopian rhetoric soared. Popular Science wrote, “The nerves of the whole world are, so to speak, being bound together, so that a touch in one country is transmitted instantly to a far-distant one.” The amateur broadcasters, the historian Susan J. Douglas has written, “claimed to be surrogates for ‘the people.’” The democratic “radiosphere,” as we might have called it today, “held a special place in the American imagination precisely because it married idealism and adventure with science.”

But it didn’t last. Radio soon came to be dominated by a relatively small number of media companies, with the most popular amateur operators being hired on as radio personalities. Social production was absorbed into corporate production. By the 1920s, radio had become “firmly embedded in a corporate grid,” writes Douglas. A lot of amateurs continued to pursue their hobby, quite happily, but they found themselves pushed to the periphery. “In the 1920s there was little mention of world peace or of anyone’s ability to track down a long-lost friend or relative halfway around the world. In fact, there were not many thousands of message senders, only a few … Thus, through radio, Americans would not transcend the present or circumvent corporate networks. In fact they would be more closely tied to both.”

It’s a fairly good statement to say that blogging in general will likely be more and more absorbed into the main-stream media, leaving independant bloggers a bit fewer and farther between.  But unlike amateur radio, which has all but died today due to licensing and equipment costs,  independant blogging will always be around.   All one needs is a modicum of technical and writing knowledge and a website like Blogger or Wordpress.com to host a blog for free.

Even if in these tough economic times, sites like Wordpress.com and Blogger start paid models,  it’s easy enough for one to pay $10 for a domain, and $3 a month for enough webhosting to host all but the biggest of blogs.  This is simply not a medium that will die as easily.

The concept of blogging in one form or another has been around far longer than it’s own name.  Even back in the days of Web 0.5 BBS systems, and Web 1.0 static homepages, people have been using the internet to get out their opinions, and thankfully the open and uncontrollable nature of the internet will allow that to happen for a very long time in the forseeable future.

Like anything else,  the mediums evolve but the message remains.

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Blogging is dead? Hardly.

July 17th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Blogging for fun and profit, Editorial, General News by Justin Flood

It seems it’s been all the rage this week to ring the bell on the death of blogging.  The A-list bloggers are dropping off of TechmemeCalacanis quit blogging and switched to email (what!?), and Scoble is more into Friendfeed.   So yeah, blogging must be dead right?  It’s old fashioned!  Out of style!  It’s going the way of the telegraph!  Right?  Wrong.

I stand by my statement that blogging, like anything else, is just a vessel for delivering CONTENT.    Just like TV, Radio, or even Twitter, or Friendfeed.  It’s a method of getting information from one person to a group of people.  Just because the quote “A-Listers” have gotten bored with the system, doesn’t mean that it’s in any way fundamentally flawed.  The only major problem is simply the level of noise in the ’sphere.  There are tens, if not hundreds, of millions of blogs on the net now, and it’s become harder to break through to the surface to find your readers.

To me though, this “problem” really is a blessing in disguise.  It’s a system that naturally eliminates people who don’t deliver good content.  If you copy and paste crap from one blog to another, and fill your page with nothing but ads,  chances are no one will ever see you!    You’re really forced to do a better JOB than the other guy.   If you want to get and keep readers, you have to consistently be on your game.  This is why more and more of the Techmeme leaderboard is made up of major media outlets.  Like it or not, major media outlets are REALLY GOOD at delivering entertaining content.  It’s what they DO.

So what about the solo blogger?  The honest truth is, most solo bloggers don’t make millions of dollars from their blogs,   and most anyone who did would be snatched up by a major media outlet in a hot second!   Solo bloggers aren’t going anywhere either though.  Most of us do this for fun!  We enjoy writing,  and it doesn’t really hurt our pocketbooks to keep it up.   I’d hardly call spending 8 dollars a year on a domain, and 7 bucks a month on hosting a financial burden.  We aren’t going anywhere.  If you like what we write as solo bloggers, that’s fine!  We love that you guys come to read us.  It’s awesome to get recognition for what we do.   If not, you can go elsewhere.  It’s ok.

The biggest problem I think the A-listers are having, is that they really enjoy conversations more than they enjoy delivering a story in a journalistic sense.  People like Scoble and Calacanis LOVE to talk to people.  They want to have an intimate connection with the people who read their stuff.   With some A-list sites getting hundreds of thousands of unique visitors a month,  conversations just aren’t possible anymore.  Blogging at that scale just isn’t good for having a conversation with your readers.  This is why they’ve all gone on to sites that are more social network than they are content delivery.  This is great too.  They should absolutely do what they feel they should do.  But to call blogging dead is I think taking it a bit too far.

You don’t see sites like Engadget or Techcrunch calling blogging dead.  The numbers of hits they get on a daily basis has elevated them to the position of trusted news sources.  People go to them for updated information on a constant basis, most of the time BEFORE they go to traditional media.   Stripped to the core, though, the sites are nothing but blogs.  You don’t see those sites shutting down and moving to friendfeed.  It’s just silly.  Like I said before,  blogging is just a way of delivering content.  If you’re good at it you’ll have readers, if not, you won’t.

Jason Calacanis likened himself to Bob Dylan at Newport in 1965, bringing out an electric guitar at a folk revival.  Unfortunately I don’t think that holds up.   I wouldn’t exactly call the acoustic guitar dead.

Like any instrument, blogging has it’s place.  It’s just a matter of people playing it the right way.

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Twitter buys Summize, renames it Twitter Search

July 15th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Tech News by Justin Flood

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As you all may know, I freakin’ love the microblogging service Twitter. Sure there are quite a few of the older users who have migrated to services like Friendfeed, but there’s something about Twitter that I just love. Lately one of those somethings has been Summize. A real time search engine for Twitter.

Lets say you want to find people on Twitter that are talking about the new iPhone. All you had to do was to go to www.summize.com and type in “iPhone”. Simple as that. Then all of the most recent tweets containing “iPhone” show up, and an AJAX notification lets you know how many new tweets containing the phrase or word have been made since you refreshed the page.

So, as of a few weeks ago, it was announced that Twitter and Summize were in talks for aquisition. Today was the big day. The deal went through, and all of a sudden Summize.com was now redirecting to a new page called http://search.twitter.com . Here’s a screenshot of the (sort of) new interface:

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The official combination of Twitter and Summize creates an even more ridiculously powerful tool for keeping up with what people are talking about. And could actually serve as the beginnings of a good business model for Twitter as well. I totally agree with Silicon Alley Insider’s view that while ads wouldn’t be very welcome on the main page of Twitter, a great deal of ads could very easily be served on the search pages. Which in turn could actually make this service some MONEY.

Though I’m glad to see the heads of the company focus more on the stability of the service, which has been MUCH better of late. Of course you won’t hear that much because positive stories aren’t very often worth typing, and more people would rather rag on the service that’s down instead.

Basically, if you haven’t tried it yet, you should get on board. Twitter by itself was fantastic, but Twitter WITH search makes it a killer app.

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Blogging for fun and profit: Brainstorming Ideas.

April 11th, 2008 | No Comments | Posted in Blogging for fun and profit by Justin Flood

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Note: This will become an ongoing series of articles on how to blog as a serious hobby. Covering topics such as building readership, monetizing, etc. To read the series in its entirety when it’s completed, click the Blogging for fun and profit category to the right. Thanks!

Part 1: Brainstorming Ideas.

So as the typical 1950’s PSA would go, “So, you’ve decided to start blogging?” Well as someone who’s been in the internet scene for a years, but only a blogger for the past year or two, I have a bit of advice to give you. This series of articles is designed to help people avoid the pitfalls of blogging that I’ve encountered over the years, so that hopefully you can thrive.

The first thing you need to do is to pick a topic. This may seem like common sense, but the number of people who don’t follow it shocks me, so listen up. Make absolutely sure that you write about something that you’re actually interested in. You may see a niche that you can exploit in the riding mowers area, but if you don’t like or know anything about riding mowers, you’ll soon find your blog without readers, and without you writing on it.

Also, try to focus on one general topic. I know I shouldn’t talk considering all the things I cover here, but I consider this more of a personal blog than a business venture.

Once you have your topic and tone down, you should pick out your domain name.

This is where you say, “Wait! Domain name? Does this mean I have to… spend money?”

And I’m going to answer yes. Sure there are places like blogger and wordpress.com where you can host a blog for free, but eventually if your blog starts to take off, you’re going to want to move your blog to it’s own domain with it’s own special design, and its own hosting. If you decide to move from one of these free services, the chances of you retaining your old readers is almost nil. You will have old links going to one site and new links going to another, and it will be very difficult for your readers to find you again.

You’re better off spending the money ahead of time if you’re serious and setting up with your own domain, hosting, and installing your blog platform on your own server. Don’t worry it’s not as hard as it sounds.

I’d recommend DomainDiscover.com to buy your domain from, and Hostgator.com to purchase your hosting from. Hostgator has a great feature where you can do a 1-click Wordpress install automatically. The domain should cost you around $10, and the hosting around $10/month or so after that.

For your domain, pick something that fits with your topic of conversation, something catchy and interesting that people will remember. Try your best to keep it short. People are lazy, they don’t like to type in long URLs.

Ok, so you’ve got your idea, your tone, your domain, and your hosting. Come back next time for part 2: Why Wordpress?

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