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"Conversation. What is it? A Mystery! It's the art of never seeming bored, of touching everything with interest, of pleasing with trifles, of being fascinating with nothing at all. How do we define this lively darting about with words, of hitting them back and forth, this sort of brief smile of ideas which should be conversation?" ~ Guy de Maupassant ~

 Tuesday, January 13, 2004
Blogging going mainstream ?

I wish i could start a link blog in Radio.  Then i will be moving my blog to Movable Type soon - am working on setting it up there  - and it should be running smoothly (hopefully!) soon.

So many really neat articles that suggest blogging's going mainstream, that i've been reading - sometimes you find there's very little you want to add - yet you want to share your delight at reading them.  Thats where i think the link blog would be such a super idea.

I've also noticed that many other bloggers have picked up some of these articles too - and i observed that most merely linked them with a short introduction suggesting - "must read".  Haven't seen too much of the usual analysis around on them - yet.  Perhaps a reflection of how well researched and well-written these articles are.

So here's the list  :

  • Blogging The Market (or 1.4mb .pdf) - How corporates are turning markets into real conversations - by George Dafermos - as close to a book in format as any i have read.  And is optimistic about corporate blogging.  Even the bibiography alone is a tremendous resource for anyone interested in this area.

  • 'My So-Called Blog' by Emily Nussbaum - a well researched article focussing on teen blogging in the New York Times.  Full of youth voices, youth speak, anecdotes, stories.  Its almost like an ethnographic study on youth and blogs.  Still, read between the lines and you will find nuggets that reveal so much about youth culture, their relationships, their own unique communication needs and preoccupations in general as well.

Has some interesting stats too :

"According to figures released last October by Perseus Development Corporation, a company that designs software for online surveys, there are expected to be 10 million blogs by the end of 2004. In the news media, the blog explosion has been portrayed as a transformation of the industry, a thousand minipundits blooming. But the vast majority of bloggers are teens and young adults. Ninety percent of those with blogs are between 13 and 29 years old; a full 51 percent are between 13 and 19, according to Perseus"

 


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