Blogging

On blogging....

Harvard Business Review has a case study in their September 2003 issue about blogging and it's interrelationship with companies. Combustible Boy has a good analysis of the issue which raises an interesting question. His solution is to be both anonymous and not write about work. My solution is to not write about work while not being anonymous.

Editor and Publisher meanwhile has an article about the weblog of the Andrews Murder trial being kept by KFOR reporters. The disorganization of the KFOR site points to the challenges they are having in adopting the new format. One of the very first such postings was a project I produced in 1995 which provided live ongoing updates during a football game.

Maybe I'm strange (that will come as a surprise to few) but I particularly enjoy reading about the trial from a jurror's perspective. I really enjoyed the time I spent sitting on a jury and it's interesting to see the system from that perspective.

Blogs as journalism

Discussions have been going on for some time about the status of blogs. Are they journalism? I believe that they can be in many ways. They can break stories. They can contain information that is factually correct. One of the biggest shortcomings, however, is the lack of the integrity of the publication. Not the kind of integrity shown to be recently lacking at the New York Times, but the kind of integrity that what I see today is what I will see tomorrow.

Scripting News was recently plagued by a robot that was rather annoying (to Scripting News). However, it brought to light one of my long-time frustrations - Blogs change. Not just by adding new postings but by removing or changing content. There is not the integrity of an issue of Time magazine - something that once held in my hands and read will remain the same. While it would be technically possible to print many common blogs this defeats the growth of knowledge created by the rapid recombination of data possible through blogging.

For example, some weeks ago, Dave Winer, publisher of Scripting News grew weary of the mud slinging and petty nature of personal attacks and turned off Scripting News. This is completely in his rights as a publisher. The problem is what happens when Scripting News does go away. For whatever reason. There is no comprehensive library that will preserve every issue ever published there (or here for that matter). How will scholars of the future tap the publications of today as they become increasingly temporary?

What's the point?

What is the point of perma-links in blogs if they aren't truly permeant? Many times I've looked at some blogs like Scripting News and seen an interesting point. Nothing major, just a comment like the one the other day about plans for taking the afternoon off and taking a drive. Later the content is removed. I'd like to figure out what the rules are.... When is it proper to de-link text? When are things considered "here to stay".

On this site, once things are posted they stay. They might not run on the front page any longer or they might have to be modified if for example someone claimed infringement (unlikely). But there would still be text letting the reader (or re-reader) know they aren't loosing it.

What is a Blog?

The Harvard Law Blogging site has the beginings of an essay attempting to define what weblogs are. I'm not sure I agree with all of the "technical" aspects of what is required to be a weblog. However it's an interesting start at quantifying what blogs are.

Hart joins blogging community

This isn't really "news" as much as a topic I'd meant to touch on a while back. Gary Hart senator and former presidential candidate has joined the blogging world. It will be interesting to see how successful a high-profile politician in the real world will be in the cyber-realm. While he didn't claim to invent the internet he is one of the first high profile politicians to move to the first-person world of blogging.

Meanwhile elsewhere in political space Coyote Gulch has been keeping up on the political races in Denver.

Heads Down

This has been a heads down coding and production weekend. More than 200 photos and several hours of video have gone into the production of Justin's graduation video. It's been a fun project but for the first time I find myself considering a dual processor system. The x-serve is great but how well it runs as the primary desktop I'm not sure. Other notes include problems with the Contour Shuttle-Pro. For whatever reason it won't believe that I want to move forward a frame at a time. The other half the weekend included lots of PHP work and cleaning up several trees from the backyard. It's a large pile. More to come soon.

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