David Siteman Garland interviews marketing maven Seth Godin.
http://www.therisetothetop.com/badass-blogger/seth-godin-most-revealing-interview-ever/
David Siteman Garland interviews marketing maven Seth Godin.
http://www.therisetothetop.com/badass-blogger/seth-godin-most-revealing-interview-ever/
Martha Payne (AKA ‘VEG’), nine year old blogger, explains how she triggered a wordwide debate on school food.
This week, Merlin looks at one of the most overlooked aspects of having a sustainable blog: managing expectations.
Tagged with spark cbc blogging twitter:user=hotdogsladies
Brad Graham, Rebecca Blood and Evan Williams discuss this new-fangled blogging thing on May 18, 2000. Hosted by Christopher Lydon.
"To be, virtually, is to blog. Blogging, or making a web log, is tracking your own web journey click by click. A web log at its most basic is a mere collection of links, a massive list of virtual cool sites you’ve seen — a story about a gang of drag queen purse snatchers, interviews with physicist Freeman Dyson, a site full of techie horror tales. But most blogs are a lot more — a personal journal or a new journalism, a publishing house where everyman or woman can rant, share or divulge. Blogs are a daily snapshot of the ever-changing web; they may be the new literature. Like the first museums, the web log is an e-cabinet of wonders, a quirky, human attempt to filter a new mass of information — this time online. On a blog you get E-text of Gogol’s The Overcoat, news of a Japanese foot cult and fun facts about potatoes. So, dump the old website, with its pet photos and family updates. We’re Blogging in this hour of The Connection."
John Gruber (DaringFireball.net) and Merlin Mann (43Folders.com) discuss the current state of blogging as a medium for creative expression, weighing the opportunities and challenges of building a thoughtful online presence in a world where everybody owns a printing press. They’ll consider the ascendance of Digg-friendly "problogs" and debate the subtler pleasures of careful writing that reaches smaller, but potentially less "profitable" audiences.
Recently, there has been a huge backlash against people, particularly women who chronicle their lives on the Internet. But the most interesting thing about this is this particular phenomenon has been going on for over a decade, primarily amongst teenage girls. In this panel, we will talk with some of the old school "bloggers" about coming of age baring it all on the Internet before everyone turned it into a punchline. We’ll talk about why we did it, whether or not we still do it and how it has affected the way we lead our lives. We’ll also touch upon what this means for the generation coming up, where sharing every minute detail has become the norm.
Anna Genoese, Aleuromancy
Maria Diaz
Mark Shrayber, Louise Miller Enterprises
Sarah Wulfeck, CBS DMG
Gala Darling, iCiNG
It is not worth starting a blog, and if you already have one you should think about closing it down, an article on the technology website Wired says. Robin Hamman, of computing consultancy Headshift, and Guardian writer and blogger Kate Bevan discuss whether shorter forms of communication, such as Twitter, are taking over.