On Blogging
The On Blogging category of Ross Mayfield's Weblog






Subscribe to "On Blogging" in Radio UserLand.

Click to see the XML version of this web page.

Click here to send an email to the editor of this weblog.
 

 

Sunday, July 06, 2003
 

Blogs in the Workplace

An NY Times article on weblogs in business that somehow missed Socialtext ;-(

..."People are starting to use Web logs to archive data that would have otherwise been lost," Mr. Tang said. He noted that much of the company's internal communications had been via instant messaging — and was lost as soon as the correspondents closed their chat windows. Now, though, employees are starting to post transcripts of relevant discussions on the Web logs, he said.

"It's not just making life more convenient," Mr. Tang said, "but actually giving us something new we didn't have before."

[via Scripting News]


6:55:17 PM    comment []

Quote of the Day

From the heckler's page:

You can often rate a conference by the quality of the offsite participation. -- JoiIto


3:54:34 PM    comment []

Sonylogging

Joi cooks up a little Moblogging magic with Sony...

Sony Image Station with MetaWeblog API.  It's a moblog gateway. It receives email from a cell phone with a photo attached. The Sony team made an XML RPC metaWeblog API interface to Sony Image Station. We take the picture, talk to Sony Image Station using metaWeblog API and post the picture in a photo album. Then the gateway talks to Movable Type using the metaWeblog API to create an entry with the thumbnail from Image Station that clicks thru to the full picture on the Image Station site. The text and the title get entered into Movable Type and the category is pre-set. We are using the metaWeblog.newMediaObject (which Movable Type current supports) to send the images. Please support this standard so photo sites can use the API.


2:41:46 PM    comment []

About Blogs

About.com empowered their 400 Guides with blogs last week.  Blogger and former SVP of Content Howard Sherman makes a case for significance:

  • It's probably the single largest addition of content to the blogosphere to date.
  • All of these sites are advertiser supported so it should help give credence to blogs as a viable business model.
  • The sites are using Moveable Type software which is a vote of confidence in Moveable Type's technology.
  • Another large media company -- in this case Primedia which owns About.com -- has adopted blogs as a publishing and communications tool.

The quasi-independence of Guides and structure of their site made this move easier than other traditional media outlets could do with editors.  You have to hand it to them for doing it right, selecting a best-in-class tool and turning their people loose.  How clueful.

The question is if Primedia will learn from this experience as the relevancy of their core business, trade magazines, is under the greatest threat from blogging.


2:19:56 PM    comment []

Second Coming of AOL

So now we know that the September that Never Ended is coming to the blogosphere.  AOL Journals enters Beta this summer and launches in the Fall. I blogged before on the business opportunity this presents for AOL.

Thursday, AOL invited Meg Hourihan, Nick Denton, Anil Dash, Jeff Jarvis, and Clay Shirky to critique its upcoming weblog product, AOL Journals. 

Jeff: AOL blogs!

Clay: AOL, Weblogs, and Community.

 

Clay frames the big questions for AOL.  Will AOL Journals be a set of blogging tools or a community platform?  Walled garden or open?  

AOL Journals will let users blog from IM, a leverage on par with Google's Toolbar push-button publishing and a further reduction in the transaction cost-to-post.  IM is more than messaging however, its a base of strong social clusters.  When you think of what AOL has to leverage, its more than 40 million users, its existing groups -- which if measured by Reed's Law is of greater value.  When buddy lists become blogrolls adoption will be driven by existing strong ties.

They are smart enough to speak RSS, our language and foundation for openness.  Jeff also makes a strong case for opening up AOL/T-W content assets.  But the backend is where new forms fourish.   Blogspace is more than individuals contributing content, we contribute code (and for the most part, get along doing so)

Jeff frames the big question for us.  Will blogspace be inclusive or attempt to redicule and reject new entrants?  We have a history of doing so.  Heck, Jeff did with AO.  LiveJournal is its own world because blogspace didn't build bridges and derides it as kiddy blogging.  If we do not embrace new entrants, the culture that makes blogging work will die.

The very fact that AOL held an A-list focus group is strong sign that they are listening.  Openness on the front-end and back-end, coupled with access to AOL assets, will provide AOL access to a wider market of opportunities.


2:04:20 PM    comment []


Click here to visit the Radio UserLand website. © Copyright 2003 Ross Mayfield.
Last update: 8/4/2003; 11:38:46 PM.
This theme is based on the SoundWaves (blue) Manila theme.
July 2003
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
    1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31    
Jun   Aug