-
Website
http://mashable.com/ -
Original page
http://mashable.com/2008/07/27/blogging-journalism/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
Robert Basil
142 comments · 8 points
-
Jennifer Van Grove
149 comments · 23 points
-
r0cketman22
317 comments · 52 points
-
rajagiri4
160 comments · 2 points
-
barringtonarch
150 comments · 4 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
Enter the Zappos Sharing Happiness $3,000 Shopping Spree Giveaway Contest
8 hours ago · 101 comments
-
Holiday Mojo: What Kind of Seasonal Twitter User Are You?
1 hour ago · 6 comments
-
Head to Head: Chrome for Mac vs. Chrome for Windows
3 hours ago · 16 comments
-
Your Next Car Radio Might Be Pandora
7 hours ago · 29 comments
-
Google Launches Chrome for Mac
9 hours ago · 31 comments
-
Enter the Zappos Sharing Happiness $3,000 Shopping Spree Giveaway Contest
These blogs are not simply keeping up with the Joneses, but are an admission of the fact that if newspapers did not get onboard, they would be left behind. This is ample proof that blogging and the dialogue that blogs by definition acitvely encourage via commments (just like this) are not only here to stay but have forced the print media to add value to their publications by doing likewise.
Following from the above print media which produces dated commentary had lost readership due to being blogless. Now actively reference their blogs in the newspapers, magazines they publish.
Quality of research while directly related to production resources, will undoubtedly continue to improve as blog networks gain more traction. This is not about if but when it occurs; & is all downto time.
While I do not always agree with Scoble's antics, I respect his position in this industry. More so I respect his opinions - not that I agree with them, but that he has opinions and is very vocal with them.
Scoble's post was dead on. I am a little nervous that those commenting on my blog would be responsible for my fact checking, and this leaves a bit to be desired. However, I have to hand it to Scoble for his observation.
The comments are indeed part of the post, and this is the point of blogging.
So, what's next? Usenet posts? The well?
~ addressing? Playing Hack?
I personally think Friendfeed feeding back into blogs and Disqus and OpenId et. al. can help ameliorate spam, noise, haters, and other downsides to the on-line conversation.
I agree that "blogs have arrived" to paraphrase. Does that mean they are officially dead? Or is that simply the early blogger's lament for a simpler time? Is Calacanis' retirement simply an act of snobbery? Time will tell, I suppose. For tomorrow is.... another day!
What has happened based on these events it has gone somewhat viral in that small niche of the car business.
Blogs do level the playing field in the one way news distribution channels that many have come to rely on. They are merely opinion based on fact for the most part.
Will they ever be fully embraced as a news medium? I would like to think so!!
http://www.californiaconservative.org/humor/wha...
You can't make this sh*t up...
"Finally, Black people across the country have a search engine that is shaped by the interests and usage of the Black community," said RushmoreDrive.com's Johnny Taylor in a statement.