Weblog
Creating and publishing weblogs\nSince their introduction, a number of software packages have appeared to allow people to create their own weblog. Blog hosting sites and Web services to provide editing via the Web have proliferated. Common examples include Pitas, Blogger, LiveJournal and Xanga. Many more advanced bloggers prefer to generate their blogs by using server-side software tools such as Movable Type, WordPress, and Manila to publish on their own Web site or a third party site, or to host a group of blogs for a company or school. Such programs provide greater flexibility and power, but require more knowledge. If they provide a Web interface for editing, server-based systems may reduce the ease of creating and editing text for travellers, some of whom like to produce their travelblogs from Internet cafes as they travel around the globe. Many blogging tools have also been developed to improve the blogging experience, with commonly used ones providing blogrolls and feedback comment systems. Well known examples of these are blogrolling and the commenting system HaloScan. Tools such as Ecto and w.bloggar allow users to maintain their Web hosted blog without the need to be online while composing or editing posts. Enhancements to weblog technology continue to be developed, such as the TrackBack feature introduced by Movable Type in 2002 and subsequently adopted by other software companies (e.g., Userland) to enable automatic notification between websites of related content -- such as a post on a particular topic or one which responds to a post on another blog [1]. Blogs with features such as TrackBack are credited with complicating search engine page ranking techniques [1] [1] and confusing (perhaps deliberately gaming) search engines that try to establish context. Web hosting companies and online publications also provide blog creation tools, such as Salon, Tripod, and America Online, which calls its subscriber blogs "journals."Types of weblogsPersonal\nOften, the word blog is used to describe an online diary or journal, such as LiveJournal. The weblog format of an online diary makes it possible for users without much experience to create, format, and post entries with ease. People write their day-to-day experiences, complaints, poems, prose, illicit thoughts and more, often allowing others to contribute, fulfilling to a certain extent Tim Berners-Lee's original view of the World Wide Web as a collaborative medium. In 2001, mainstream awareness of online diaries began to increase dramatically. Online diaries are integrated into the daily lives of many teenagers and college students, with communications between friends playing out over their blogs. Even fights may be posted in the diaries, with not-so-veiled insults of each other easily readable by all their friends, enemies, and complete strangers. Online diaries may also be a bane to job seekers, if their diaries are discovered by potential employers. The University of Texas at Austin ran a set of six journals kept by first-year students in 2002-2003 and 2003-2004.Topical\nAnother common blog type is a topical blog. It focuses on a specific niche, often a technical one. (An example is a Google Blog, covering nothing but Google news.)FriendBlog\nA FriendBlog is a distributed networked journal on the web, composed of short, frequently updated posts written by friends connected through their similar interests. The author allows his FriendBlog to connect to other FriendBlogs, belonging to friends and acquaintances, and by doing so, their posts also appears in his.Collaborative (also Collective or Group)A weblog which is written by more than one person about a specific topic. It can be either open to everyone or limited to a group of people. Examples:\n* Metafilter\n* WatchBlog\n* Living on the Planet\n* Sobhaneh (Persian)\n* SarGardoon (Persian)Political\nAnother common kind of blog is a political blog. Often an individual will link to articles from news web sites and post their own comments as well. Many of these blogs comment on whatever interests the author. Some of them are more specialized. One subspecies is the watch blog, a blog which sets out to criticize what the author considers systematic errors or bias in an online newspaper or news site - or perhaps even by a more popular blogger. One of the earliest and most popular examples of this genre of blog is www.AndrewSullivan.com, the personal blog of Anglo-American journalist and writer Andrew Sullivan which claims (as of late 2002, early 2003) over 250,000 unique visitors per month. The most influential liberal blog is the dailykos which is run by political consultant Markos Moulitas Suniga, which has a weekly traffic of over 1,000,000. Political blogs attracted attention because of their use by two insurgent political candidates in 2003: Howard Dean and Wesley Clark. Both gained political buzz on the internet, and particularly among bloggers, before they were taken seriously by the establishment media as candidates. Joe Trippi, Dean's campaign manager, made the internet a particular focus of the campaign. Both candidates stumbled in the end, but were, at one time or another, thought of as front runners for the Democratic Nomination. In 2004, the Democrats took political blogging a major step forward by creating Blog Swarmto coordinate the hypertext links of progressive blogs. This allowed one blog to drive traffic by harnessing the power of a full blog array.Directory\nWeblogs are useful for web-surfers because they often collect numerous web sites with interesting content in an easy to use and constantly updated format. News-related weblogs (such as Slashdot) can fall into this category or the previous one (political blogs).Formats\nSome weblogs specialise in particular forms of presentation, such as images (see web comics), or videos, or on a particular theme, and acronyms have been developed for some of these, such as moblogs (for "mobile" blog).Notable weblogs
Blog directories\n*Microsoft Employee Blogs\n*Sun Employee Blogs\n*Photoblogs.org\n*Blogwise\n*Eatonweb Portal\n*pLoogle\n*Invisiblog.com - provides a system for publishing weblogs anonymously using GPG and Mixmaster.\n*Regional or Language-specific\n**Svenskt Webbloggindex (Swedish)\n*Topical\n**St. Blog's Parish (Catholic Blogs)Blogging systems\n*Writing and Publishing tools\n**AOL Hometown\n**b2\n**b2evolution\n**bBlog Free PHP blogging tool\n**bbCity\n**Blog\n**Blog.com \n**Blogger (owned by Google)\n**Bloghorn\n**Bloki\n**Blosxom\n**CheesyBlog\n**COREBlog Open Source Blog system on Zope\n**drupal\n**Digital Expressions\n**elowel - Free Blogging Community\n**Funchain.com Socially-networked collaborative blog, FriendBlog\n**Issue Dealer\n**JournalScape\n**JournURL\n**Leonardo\n**LiveJournal and other sites based on the LiveJournal codebase such as:\n***Blurty\n***DeadJournal\n***Plogs.net\n**Manila and Radio Userland by Userland Software\n**ModBlog\n**Movable Type and TypePad by Six Apart\n***Weblogs.us free Movable Type based blog host\n**NewLife Blogger\n**Nucleus Open source PHP blogging program\n**Pivot\n**pLog OpenSource Multi User-/Multi Blog-Software based on PHP and MySQL\n**pMachine\n**Roller Weblogger - open source Java weblogging\n**.Text Blog Hosting Engine\n**Textpattern\n**Tripod Blog\n**WordPress\n**Worldlog simple and free online diary/blog system\n**Xanga\n**ZIMoBLOG.com - a moblog focused blogging site
Blog search engines\n* Blogdigger - \n* technorati - Also similar to blogdex and popdex, but also analyzes weblog popularity not just link popularity.\n* blo.gs - tracks weblog updates\n* Popdex - similar to Blogdex\n* BlogPulse - Full-text search engine for blog postings. Also analyzes Top Links, Key People, Key Phrases, and produces BlogBites every day. Showcases trend graphs from the blogosphere. Allows you to create your own trend graphs.Websites that analyze weblogs maybe with search engine\n* Blogdex - tracks links from blogs, part of the MIT Media Lab\n* Blogosphere Ecosystem\n* Daypop - weblog search engine, also tracks links from blogs\n* blogosphere.us - similar to blogdex and popdex, but provides graphs and commentary as well\n* Blogstreet - Tracks Blog neighbourhood and influence\n* Feedster - Search blogs.\n* Waypath - Search the full text of blogs.Websites that analyze weblogs, not focused on searching blogs\n* Blogshares - A fantasy stock market where weblogs are the companies. Players invest fictional dollars on shares in blogs. Blogs are valued by their incoming links and add value to other blogs by linking to them. Prices can go up or down based on trading and the underlying value of the blog.\n* Weblogs.com - a list of weblogs updated in the last three hoursRelated articles\n* BlogRoots\n* Blogstream\n* Commonplace: a historical precedent for the weblog\n* Content management system\n* PhpMySQL\n* News aggregatorExternal links\n*http://www.livejournal.com\n*http://www.deadjournal.com\n*http://www.blogtavern.com\n*http://www.modblog.com\n*http://www.journalspace.com\n*http://www.usemod.com/cgi-bin/mb.pl?WebLog on MeatballWiki\n*Learn about weblogs on Know-how Wiki\n*A free picture blogging site\n*Guardian: special report - weblogs\n*weblogs: a history and perspective by Rebecca Blood.\n*Compendium of terms\n*Boffins isolate 'blogging gene' (Meme de Chose, The Register, 1 April 2004) \n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\n\nsimple:blog\n\n\n\nzh-cn:Blog/简\nzh-tw:Blog/繁 |
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