Hey Team Chaordic! Just testing our new simplified blog functionality... You can start your own blog by clicking on the "My Page" tab and then clicking the "Edit Blog" link in the left side/nav. Let me know what you think... about the blog... not my post : ) 
Blog Definition From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A weblog (usually shortened to blog,
but occasionally spelled web log or weblog) is a web-based publication
consisting primarily of periodic articles, most often in reverse
chronological order. Early weblogs were simply manually updated
components of common websites.
However, the evolution of tools to facilitate the production and
maintenance of web articles posted in said chronological fashion made
the publishing process feasible to a much larger, less technical,
population. Ultimately, this resulted in the distinct class of online
publishing that produces blogs we recognize today. For instance, the
use of some sort of browser-based software is now a typical aspect of
"blogging". Blogs can be hosted by dedicated blog hosting services, or they can be run using blog software on regular web hosting services.
Like other media, blogs often focus on a particular subject, such as food, politics, or local news. Some blogs function as online diaries. A typical blog combines text, images, and links to other blogs, web pages, and other media related to its topic. The History of Blogs
Precursors
Electronic communities existed before internetworking. For example the AP wire was, in effect, similar to a large chat room with "wire fights" and electronic conversations. Another pre-digital electronic community, amateur (or "ham") radio, allowed individuals who set up their own transmitters to communicate with others directly.
Before blogging became popular, digital communities took many forms, including Usenet, e-mail lists and bulletin board systems (BBS). In the 1990s Internet forum software, such as WebEx,
created running conversations with "threads." Threads are topical
connections between messages on a metaphorical "corkboard." See "Common
terms," below.
The modern blog evolved from the online diary
where people would keep a running account of their personal lives. The
first of these started in 1994 by Swarthmore student Justin Hall. Most
of the writers called themselves diarists, journalists, journallers, or journalers. A few called themselves escribitionists. The Open Pages webring included members of the online-journal community.
Other forms of journals kept online also existed. A notable example was game programmer John Carmack's widely read journal, published via the finger protocol.
Websites, including both corporate sites and personal homepages, had and still often have "What's New" or "News" sections, often on the index page and sorted by date.
One noteworthy early precursor to a blog was the tongue-in-cheek personal website that was frequently updated by Usenet legend Kibo.
Blogging appears
The term "weblog" was coined by Jorn Barger on 17 December 1997. The short form, "blog," was coined by Peter Merholz. He broke the word weblog into the phrase "we blog" in the sidebar of his weblog in April or May of 1999. [1]
"Blog" was accepted as a noun (weblog shortened) and as a verb ("to
blog," meaning "to edit one's weblog or to post to one's weblog"). [2]
Justin Hall, who began eleven years of personal "blogging" in 1994 while a student at Swarthmore College, is generally recognized as one of the earliest bloggers[3]. After a slow start, blogging rapidly gained in popularity: the site Xanga,
launched in 1996, had only 100 diaries by 1997, and over 50 000 000 as
of December 2005. Blog usage spread during 1999 and the years
following, being further popularized by the near-simultaneous arrival
of the first hosted blog tools:
- Open Diary
launched in October 1998, soon growing to thousands of online diaries.
Open Diary innovated the reader comment, becoming the first blog
community where readers could add comments to other writers' blog
entries.
- Brad Fitzpatrick started LiveJournal in March 1999.
- Andrew Smales's projects: Pitas.com created in July 1999 (as an
easier alternative to maintaining a 'news page' on a website), and
Diaryland, created in September 1999 (focusing more on a personal diary
community)[1]
- Evan Williams and Meg Hourihan (Pyra Labs) launched Blogger.com in August 1999 (purchased by Google in February 2003)
- Paul Kedrosky's GrokSoup
Blogging combined the personal web page with tools to make linking to other pages easier — specifically permalinks, blogrolls and TrackBacks. This, together with weblog search engines enabled bloggers to track the threads that connected them to others with similar interests.
Blogging gains influence
The first broadly popular American blogs emerged in 2001: Andrew Sullivan's AndrewSullivan.com, Ron Gunzburger's Politics1.com, Taegan Goddard's Political Wire and Jerome Armstrong's MyDD—all blogging primarily on politics.
In 1999, then owner of popular technology review portal, The Review Center,
John Guilfoil theorized that daily, and often multi-daily updates
instead of the often used weekly news updates seen throughout the
technology reviews world would soon be needed in order for these web
sites to survive. He suggested that shorter, more pointed news updates
in the theme of livejournal.com, which was then a fledging blog site,
would be necessary across the board. This revolution in
up-to-the-minute updating and real-time news updates has led to the
evolutionary shutdown of countless amateur technology web sites.
By 2001, blogging was enough of a phenomenon that how-to manuals
began to appear, primarily focusing on technique. The importance of the
blogging community (and its relationship to larger society) gained
rapidly increasing importance. Established schools of journalism began researching blogging and noting the differences between journalism and blogging.
In 2002, Jerome Armstrong's friend and sometime partner Markos Moulitsas Zúniga began DailyKos. With up to a million visits a day during peak events, it has now become one of the Internet's most trafficked blogs.
Also in 2002, many blogs focused on comments by U.S. Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott. Senator Lott, at a party honoring U.S. Senator Strom Thurmond,
praised Senator Thurmond by suggesting that the United States would
have been better off had Thurmond been elected president. Lott's
critics saw these comments as a tacit approval of racial segregation, a policy advocated by Thurmond's 1948 presidential campaign. This view was reinforced by documents and recorded interviews dug up by bloggers. (See Josh Marshall's Talking Points Memo.)
Though Lott's comments were made at a public event attended by the
media, no major media organizations reported on his controversial
comments until after blogs broke the story. Blogging helped to create a
political crisis that forced Lott to step down as majority leader.
The shaping of this story gave greater credibility to blogs as a
medium of news dissemination. Though often seen as partisan gossips,
bloggers sometimes lead the way in bringing key information to public
light. This puts the mainstream media in the unusual position of
reacting to news that bloggers generate.
Since 2003, blogs have gained increasing notice and coverage for their role in breaking, shaping, and spinning news stories. The Iraq war saw both left-wing and right-wing bloggers taking measured and passionate points of view that did not reflect the traditional left-right divide.
Blogging by established politicians and political candidates, to
express opinions on war and other issues, cemented blogs' role as a
news source. (See Howard Dean and Wesley Clark.) Meanwhile, an increasing number of experts blogged, making blogs a source of in-depth analysis. (See Daniel Drezner and J. Bradford DeLong.)
The second Iraq war was the first "blog war" in another way: Iraqi bloggers gained wide readership, and one, Salam Pax, published a book of his blog. Blogs were also created by soldiers serving in the Iraq war. Such "milblogs"
gave readers new perspectives on the realities of war, as well as often
offering different viewpoints from those of official news sources.
Blogging was used to draw attention to obscure news sources. For
example, bloggers posted links to traffic cameras in Madrid as a huge
anti-terrorism demonstration filled the streets in the wake of the March 11 attacks.
Bloggers began to provide nearly-instant commentary on televised
events, creating a secondary meaning of the word "blogging": to
simultaneously transcribe and editorialize speeches and events shown on television. (For example, "I am blogging Rice's testimony" means "I am posting my reactions to Condoleezza Rice's testimony into my blog as I watch her on television.") Real-time commentary is sometimes referred to as "liveblogging."
Blogging gains popularity
In 2004, the role of blogs became increasingly mainstream, as political consultants,
news services and candidates began using them as tools for outreach and
opinion forming. Even politicians not actively campaigning, such as MP Tom Watson of the UK Labour Party, began to blog to bond with constituents.
Minnesota Public Radio broadcast a program by Christopher Lydon and Matt Stoller called "The Blogging of the President," which covered a transformation in politics that blogging seemed to presage. The Columbia Journalism Review
began regular coverage of blogs and blogging. Anthologies of blog
pieces reached print, and blogging personalities began appearing on
radio and television. In the summer of 2004, both US Democratic and Republican
parties' conventions credentialed bloggers, and blogs became a standard
part of the publicity arsenal. Mainstream television programs, such as Chris Matthews' Hardball, formed their own blogs. Merriam-Webster's Dictionary declared "blog" as the word of the year in 2004. (Wikinews)
Blogs were among the driving forces behind the "Rathergate" scandal. To wit: (television journalist) Dan Rather presented documents (on the CBS show 60 Minutes)
that conflicted with accepted accounts of President Bush's military
service record. Conservative bloggers declared the documents to be forgeries
and presented arguments in support of that view, and CBS apologized for
what it said were inadequate reporting techniques. (See Little Green Footballs.)
Many bloggers view this scandal as the advent of blogs' acceptance by
the mass media, both as a source of news and opinion and as means of
applying political pressure.
Some bloggers have moved over to other media. The following bloggers (and others) have appeared on radio and television: Duncan Black (known widely by his pseudonym, Atrios), Glenn Reynolds (Instapundit) , Markos Moulitsas Zúniga (Daily Kos), and Ana Marie Cox (Wonkette). Hugh Hewitt
is an example of a media personality who has moved in the other
direction, adding to his reach in "old media" by being an influential
blogger.
Some blogs were an important source of news during the December 2004 Tsunami such as Medecins Sans Frontieres, which used SMS text messaging to report from affected areas in Sri Lanka and Southern India.
In the United Kingdom, The Guardian newspaper launched a redesign in September 2005, which included a daily digest of blogs on page 2.
In January 2005, Fortune magazine listed eight bloggers that business people "could not ignore": Peter Rojas, Xeni Jardin, Ben Trott, Mena Trott, Jonathan Schwartz, Jason Goldman, Robert Scoble, and Jason Calacanis. [4]
Blog popularity dynamics
Recently, scientists have analyzed the dynamics of how blogs become
popular. There are essentially two measures of this: popularity through
citations (i.e. permalinks), as well as popularity through affiliation
(i.e. blogroll). The basic conclusion from studies of the structure of
blogs is that while in order for a blog to become popular through
blogrolls takes a fair amount of time, permalinks can accumulate more
quickly, and are perhaps more indicative of popularity and authority
than blogrolls, since they denote that people are actually reading the
blog's content and deem it valuable or noteworthy in specific cases.[2]
The Blogdex project was launched by researchers in the MIT Media Lab
to crawl the web and gather data from thousands of blogs in order to
investigate their social properties. It has now been gathering this
information for over 4 years, and currently autonomously tracks the
most contagious information spreading in the blog community.
Many bloggers differentiate themselves from the mainstream media,
while others are members of that media working through a different
channel. Some institutions see blogging as a means of "getting around
the filter" and pushing messages directly to the public. Some critics worry that bloggers respect neither copyright nor the role of the mass media in presenting society with credible news.
Bloggers' credibility problem, however, can be an advantage for the
bloggers and for the mainstream journalists who take an interest in
them. News organizations are sometimes reluctant to tell stories that
will upset important people. But when bloggers or activists make
sensational claims, then they become stories themselves, and
journalists can use them as cover for reporting the underlying scandals.
Blogs have also had an influence on minority languages, bringing together scattered speakers and learners; this is particularly so with Gaelic blogs, whose creators can be found as far away from traditional Gaelic areas as Kazakhstan and Alaska.
Blogs are also used regularly by Welsh language activists. Minority
language publishing (which may lack economic feasibility) can find its
audience through inexpensive blogging.
How blogs are made
A variety of different systems are used to create and maintain
blogs. Dedicated server-based systems can eliminate the need for
bloggers to manage this software. With web interfaces, these systems
allow travelers to blog from anywhere on the Internet, and allow users
to create blogs without having to maintain their own server. Such
systems allow users to work with tools such as Ecto, Elicit and w.bloggar
which allow users to maintain their Web-hosted blog without the need to
be online while composing or editing posts. Blog creation tools and
blog hosting are also provided by some Web hosting companies (Tripod), Internet service providers (America Online), online publications (Salon.com) and internet portals (Yahoo! 360º or Google). Some advanced users have developed custom blogging systems from scratch using server-side
software, and often implement membership management and password
protected areas. Others have created blogs using wiki software, such as
the Mediawiki platform.
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