Blogging, evolved?

Message from Jeremy: To all Tech IT Easy readers, who could obviously not necessarily remember the initial announcement, I have invited my friend Kari to help me try to provide you, dear readership, with everyday better technology insights. Kari’s mission statement is that there’s no mission statement: what matters most is raising the right issues on underlying market trends as well as purely technical considerations. Kari, the floor is yours…  

TumblrI don’t really like the format of a blog.

As frequent readers of this blog know, Jeremy would love if more people were active in the comments (even if says he doesn’t care anymore). I too agree that more discussion on the topics we can only so much write about would be welcome. I don’t learn much by writing and telling, but I believe that there is much to learn from a good discussion. In this way this blog is not enough forum-y. Is there a platform that could balance community and content?

The length of a blog piece and it’s nature of being defined in time are also problematic. No-one’s going to read a blog post that’s too long, yet we can’t just write “I find this site interesting” and put a link. Yet, this is how we communicate in Reddit, del.icio.us, IM and sometimes in e-mail. Unfortunately none of the mentioned (besides Reddit, but that’s public and not private link-sharing) give any opportunity to expand your ideas or get commentary (except e-mail and IM, but that’s too private). Forums on the other hand would give us a place for discussion, but the format doesn’t is hard to publish to. More forum-like approaches in my opinion are Worse than Failure and in some sense, Slashdot. Unforunately, as readers of these two sites know, the discussion are rarely intellectually stimulating.

Commentary on blogs is hard, one main reason is poor design. I think the default WordPress templates actually discourage commentary. Blogger goes to extremes as it likes to separate discussion into a pop-up window. There are some blogs that have been designed with comments in mind and give good space to them, but commeting still sucks. It’s really difficult to engage in a discussion in a blog’s comments and I don’t believe I’m the only one who thinks so.

I’ve noticed that Jeremy has added his del.icio.us links to the sidebar, and in fact, we have been trying to share links using del.icio.us for a while. It is amazing that this “social bookmarking” doesn’t actually seem to suit our needs. Unless we used a special tag in each of our links (which is kind of a hack), it’s almost impossible to link to a group’s links. I can view my network, but my links aren’t there. I can’t even find a way to follow my network’s tags like I can either mine or everyone’s (ie del.icio.us/network/zyx/webcomics in this case). The only way, devised by Vincent, is to create a dummy-account and add everyone to its network.

Then there are the other ways to mini-blog (or is it called microblogging?). Most people associate this with twitter, which in my mind is starting to look more and more like a successful and simple hack. Maybe the idea is in the simplicity. Also, it seems the major talking point about twitter is about the fact that it’s developed using Ruby on Rails (for better or worse).

In my opinion, there are two really good competitors, both which have a killer feature, that unfortunately hasn’t been developed fully. Both Jaiku (which I already mentioned as a formidable opponent to Twitter in a previous post) and Tumblr give you the option to import your “life-feeds” into them. By “life-feeds” I mean your photos in Flickr, your tracks at last.fm, your wines at cork’d, your saved links in reddit, etc. I’ve tried to give a shot at both these tools (see mu jaiku and my tumblr blogs), but even they don’t fulfill my need to express myself completely. In Tumblr the shortcoming is you can’t comment on someone’s entry, buth at Jaiku they’ve thought this out, which in my opinion is another killer feature. There’s still a lot of promise in Tumblr and Jaiku. At least I hope so. They might not be the platform I’m looking for, but that doesn’t really matter as I can always integrate the content in these aggreagated life-feeds into whatever finally feels right as, naturally, you can export their data as RSS.

Lately some people in this blog have argued that XHTML, AJAX and XML are the cornerstones of Web 2.0. I still believe it’s actually RSS. Granted, it’s XML, but its the killer application, the open format was just an enabler and catalyst for its adoption. (In other sidenote, XHTML was a mistake and what we call AJAX was actually just a revelation that all modern browsers have a mature JavaScript support, and XML is way too generic in general sense.)

Anyway, what are your development ideas for blogging, revision 2? Mine is more engaging commentary, or actually, more engaging discussion. I think the first mistake is calling those things below these posts just “comments”. They should and could be so much more.

Related posts:

  1. Blogging, evolved? Another opinion.
  2. The noise of web 2.0
  3. 10 reasons I love blogging
  4. Blogging’s not dead, but it’s pretty damn unrewarding
  5. Blogging and mute visitors

  • Kari, you're totally right. Comments are the one single most important thing on a blog. Blogging platforms today don't respect readers enough. In other words, it's the comments that should be underlined, not the posts.



    I think several developers from WordPress, being quite in disagreement with the road map, has gone to create the Habari project - which is supposed to bring comments on stage rather than leave it in the backstage. Time will tell if Habari solves the problem or not.



    And thank you for your controversial analysis regarding the cornerstone technology in the Web 2.0 era. As far as I'm concerned, I would say RSS is rather a Web 3.0 or next web as opposed to current web, technology. Google makes money from readers visiting sites containing content viewing ads. Because of RSS, web surfers don't get to see ads anymore.



    Hence the potential acquisition of Feedburner by Google for instance: Google has felt RSS is a technology that may potentially harm its adwords & advertising revenue model and is adapting to an upcoming trend.
  • Well, in my own blog there are not many comments either. But I don't agree with you that comments are the most important thing.



    The most important thing are readers. And over time the number of readers might (should) grow.



    For me and my blogging the most encouraging thing are lots of new contacts. If you just follow my comments in the blog, you don't see all the conversation taking place.



    And one final remark concerning this blog: Commmenting here would be easier if this tiny little box I'm writing in would be larger. There is so much empty space on the right hand side - can't you change that in favour of your commentors?
  • Hey Matthias,



    Thanks for your feedback. I'm sorry I can't change the layout of my blog as Tech IT Easy's hosted on WordPress. I'll remember this for the moment we move to our own repository.
  • It's me again - although the little box hasn't grown since yesterday...;-)



    Here another idea about commenting on blogs: Reading (many) blogs is easy and easily you jump from one blog to another. Those many links in and among blogs are an important factor of success.



    But it's different with comments: Once you have commented on a blog, you should remember that and return later to see if there are comments following your own post and how the debate is going on (often enough nothing further has happened).



    In my opinion this is very time consuming, relatively complicated and sometimes disappointing.



    So what I do as a blog reader: Today I comment only on a few blogs (for exemple here!), where I can be sure to get an answer by the blogger himself or other commentators (there is a real conversation).



    As a blog writer in most cases I answer a comment by email, sometimes with an admin-comment on my blog and sometimes with a comment on the blog of the commentator (to encourage further mutual reading).
  • Hey Matthias,



    I wish I can comment your blog, but it's in German and I don't speak the first word of it - quite unfortunately, as one third of business in Europe occurs in German.



    About answering comments: yes indeed, I believe staying close to our readers is THE key to succeed in the blogosphere as well as in the real world (with clients or customers). That's why we tend to answer most comments (when there's something to add of course) on Tech IT Easy.



    What do you think, Kari?
  • Meanwhile Léonard started a discussion with me about my blog. He really insists on the fact that I should post some of my articles also in english. Well, we found a litte tool that might help and I hope to find the time to try it out this week. Then you too, Jérémy, will be able to read and comment on my blog (hopefullly).
  • With great pleasure Matthias, I'm looking forward to reading your posts.
  • Hi Matthias,



    In above comments you said that "if you just follow my comments in the blog, you don’t see all the conversation taking place". What do you mean by this? Is this a good thing or a bad thing?



    I think everyone remembers how difficult it was to go through all the blogs and news sites you followed and tried to see if there was something new there. Fortunately this was such a huge problem that someone came up with solutions, like RSS. I guess we'd need something like this for blog comments too. As you say Matthias, it is way too time consuming right now.



    Yes, Jeremy, I think that staying to close our readers is important. The problem, of course, is that it's difficult when your readers stay so far away, ie we don't know what they want. =)
  • So let's stay close to the readers that come to us. They're a blessing in the blogosphere.
  • Dammit Kari, now you've done it. I was originally going to reply to your post, but the reply is so long, I'll have to write a whole blogpost instead. Aargh!



    Expect it by tomorrow.
  • Vince, I can't wait to read you. Try to keep it short, nice & simple (not like my posts for instance, too long & complicated - I suck).
  • In that case, I suck as well (^_^;) Done and done.
  • Incidentally, since Kari spoke of our del.icio.us venture and failure, I find that just tagging interesting articles with 'techiteasy'' is easier than ''For:techiteasy.' That way everyone can see what's tagged without needing to sign into the techiteasy-account.



    So if anyone, readers and bloggers alike, wants to share interesting links (that they think contribute to the conversation of making tech easy and interesting), tag your del.icio.us bookmarks with 'techiteasy'!
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