If you're a professional communicator, chances are good you've already asked yourself whether it's time to start your own blog. But there's another tech question that you probably have not yet asked yourself, and perhaps you should: Is it time to start your own wiki?
Forbush, Dan. Communication World Bulletin (2005). Articles>Web Design>Blogging>Wikis
How to Create and Promote a Blog in Eight Easy Steps
A new buzzword you should know about is 'blog' or 'web log', meaning web log, digital journal, or online diary. Blogs are the Next Big Thing to hit the Internet, after conventional Web Sites.
Streight, Steven. Usability Interface (2005). Articles>Web Design>User Centered Design>Blogging
Great writing can’t be taught, but bad writing can be avoided. Mahoney shares tips that may enhance the writing on your personal site.
Mahoney, Dennis A. List Apart, A (2002). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging
The Labyrinth Unbound: Weblogs as Literature
While the weblog tends toward esoterically personal content (as evidence in the examples above) and often delivers some contextual account of the author’s life and activities, the obvious exceptions to this rule preclude understanding the form simply as an online diary. Likewise, the structural and technical definitions many in the weblogging community focus on fall equally short of describing what is a complex, earnest, and distinct literary form. In other words, it is insufficient to explore the weblog exclusively at the level of content, and equally insufficient to focus wholly on the technical delivery of that content. Accounting for the diversity of weblogs and webloggers—yet still maintaining some larger sense of what they have in common—requires instead a careful look both at what weblogs do, and how they do it for both writers and readers.
Himmer, Steve. Into the Blogosphere (2004). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging
Listen To Me, Not Jakob Nielsen
A response to Jakob Nielsen's 2007 "Write Articles, Not Blog Postings." Nielsen's article is also chock-full of bad information. Why bad? Because most of it is made up. The length of the article requires you to really read it. You can't scan it. The problem is, most people scan online.
Oliphant, Matthew. Usabilityworks.org (2007). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging
Measuring the Influence of Blogs on Consumers, the Media and Corporate Reputation
According to the report "State of the News Media 2005" from the Project for Excellence in Journalism, "more than a third of Americans, some 36 percent, are regular consumers of four or more different kinds of news outlets—network news, local TV, newspapers, cable, radio, the Internet and magazines."
Woods, Julie. Business Communication World (2005). Articles>Web Design>Audience Analysis>Blogging
Theoretically, you can annotate your bookmarks, entering free-form reminders to yourself so that you can remember why you bookmarked this page or that one. I don't know about you, but I never actually got around to doing this. Until I started blogging.
Doctorow, Cory. O'Reilly and Associates (2002). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging
New Toys or Tactics for New Communication Challenges?
New technologies are changing the ways we can achieve excellence in communication. Three new web-based communication tools have caught the imagination of innovators and early adopters. Blogs and wikis are proliferating all over the Internet, and podcasts look like they will soon be commonplace.
Williams, Tudor. Communication World Bulletin (2005). Articles>Web Design>Blogging>Podcasting
With little exaggeration it might be claimed that the primary emotion associated with popular thinking about blogging is anxiety. The number of bloggers and blogs is unwieldy and amorphous: to my mind a sublimity that is often associated with the innumerable swamps journalistic and other commentators who believe that one must, perforce, make some generalization about blogs, all blogs, every blog. Is there something that could be said about every blog? Where would one start?
Curtain, Tyler. Into the Blogosphere (2004). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging
Should Businesses Embrace the Blogging Phenomenon?
When news reports announced that Apple Computer was suing unnamed individuals (presumed to be employees) who had allegedly leaked information about a prototype Apple product to several blog news sites, it raised a number of questions. What does the lawsuit mean for freedom of expression and the role of journalists who serve an information-hungry audience? How will the courts balance the fundamental right of freedom of expression against a company's claims that trade secrets have been violated on a blog?
Blackshaw, Pete. Communication World Bulletin (2005). Articles>Web Design>Business Communication>Blogging
The Spirit of Paulo Freire in Blogland: Struggling for a Knowledge-Log Revolution
Weblogs and knowledge-logs, or 'blogs' and 'klogs,' have emerged into the post-dot.com bubble online world as a notable (and often non-commercial) social phenomenon. While some hear echoes of Web homepage voices from the mid-1990s, the blogging phenomenon during the Iraq war may have taken Web cybercultures in new directions.
Boese, Christine. Into the Blogosphere (2004). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging
Top Seven Tips to Writing an Effective Blog
If ever there were a perfect tool for the corporate communication expert, blogging is it. Think of a blog as the 3D version of your capabilities, one in which you provide context and meaning to your work experience and expertise. So let's talk about how to blog well.
Weil, Debbie. Communication World Bulletin (2005). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging
Usability of U.S. Presidential Candidate Blogs: Why it Matters
When it comes to the usability of the presidential candidates' blogs, they all need some work from a usability standpoint. Applying good usability practices would make better use of campaign funds, attract young voters, and give candidates a better idea of what is important to the electorate.
Russo, Thomas. Usability Interface (2005). Articles>Web Design>Usability>Blogging
Native to the Internet and personal in approach, weblogs deliver bite-sized portions of information on a daily basis to an ever expanding audience. Weblogs are the conjunctions of the Internet: the ands, the buts the ors – they add to online conversations, refute them, or provide new perspectives altogether.
Badger, Meredith. Into the Blogosphere (2004). Articles>Web Design>Visual Rhetoric>Blogging
Visual Factors in Constructing Authenticity in Weblogs
Authenticity is something which must be constructed rather than simply accruing to verbal content, and visual and other design features are an inherent, but often overlooked, factor in this construction.
Thompson, Gary. Saginaw Valley State University (2003). Articles>Web Design>Visual Rhetoric>Blogging
Weblog Usability: The Top Ten Design Mistakes
Weblogs are often too internally focused and ignore key usability issues, making it hard for new readers to understand the site and trust the author.
Nielsen, Jakob. Alertbox (2005). Articles>Web Design>Usability>Blogging
It's been shown that the distribution of links on the web scales according to a power law, so it comes as no surprise that the distribution of links to weblogs does as well.
Kottke, Jason. kottke.org (2003). Articles>Web Design>History>Blogging
Weblogs and the Mass Amateurization of Publishing
A lot of people in the weblog world are asking 'How can we make money doing this?' The answer is that most of us can't. Weblogs are not a new kind of publishing that requires a new system of financial reward. Instead, weblogs mark a radical break.
Shirky, Clay. Shirky.com (2002). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging
Weblogs Enable User-Centric Sites
Weblogs give users information from multiple sources in one page.
Bohmann, Kristoffer. Bohmann Usability (2000). Articles>Web Design>User Centered Design>Blogging
Weblogs Revisited: The Phenomenon of Public Digital Journals
Notwithstanding the fact that lexicographers have come up with definitions for blog, if you asked a few dozen bloggers what makes a blog a blog, you would probably get a few dozen answers.
Kissell, Joe. Interesting Thing of the Day (2004). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging
Weblogs, Rhetoric, Community, and Culture
Looking at blogs as rhetorical artifacts allows scholars to examine the ways in which they contribute to changing what it means to communicate online. To this end, the articles presented here view the blog through the lens of their social, cultural, and rhetorical features and functions. Through study of the language, discourse, and communicative practices of bloggers, the authors provide insight into weblogs as a means of representing and expressing the self, forming identity, facilitating student-centered learning, building community, and disseminating information.
Gurak, Laura J., Smiljana Antonijevic, Laurie Johnson, Clancy Ratliff and Jessica Reyman. Into the Blogosphere (2004). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging
Weblogs: A History and Perspective
Rebecca Blood, an early blogger, describes the rise of blogging.
Blood, Rebecca. Adobe (2005). Articles>Web Design>History>Blogging
Assuming a Wiki is a weblog-like system that allows anyone to edit anything (I know some don't) then a Wiki represents an interesting amalgam of many voices, not the unedited voice of a single person.
Winer, Dave. Harvard University (2003). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging
'Blogs,' or Web logs, are the newest form of one-way and interactive online communication to hit the Internet. Most people would agree that a 'blog' is a regularly updated set of Web pages with a chronological set of thoughts and links. Starting around 1999, the blog movement has gained so much momentum that hundreds of thousands of Web logs and many different styles of blog now exist.
Archee, Raymond K. Intercom (2003). Articles>Web Design>Publishing>Blogging
Every day it seems another article about weblogs appears in the press. At first, most of these stories seemed content to cover the personal nature of blogging. But more and more I'm seeing articles that attempt to examine the journalistic and punditry aspects of weblogs prominent in many of the so-called 'warblogs,' or sites that began in response to the events of September 11th
Hourihan, Meg. O'Reilly and Associates (2002). Articles>Web Design>Writing>Blogging
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