Sunday, January 08, 2006
Tuesday, January 13, 2004
Sunday, December 07, 2003
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Jennifer Balderama: My Blog, my self
Dave Winer: The History of Weblogs
Rebecca Blond: weblogs, a history and perspective
Camworld: Anatomy of a Weblog
Microcontent News: The Unofficial Weblog Glossary
Jennifer Balderama: My Blog, my self
Dave Winer: The History of Weblogs
Rebecca Blond: weblogs, a history and perspective
Camworld: Anatomy of a Weblog
Microcontent News: The Unofficial Weblog Glossary
Tuesday, September 09, 2003
Thursday, August 07, 2003
Thursday, July 17, 2003
pressetext.deutschland
Internationaler Kongress über Weblogs in Wien
23. und 24. Mai im Techgate
(german)
Internationaler Kongress über Weblogs in Wien
23. und 24. Mai im Techgate
(german)
.
Deep Thinking about Weblogs
by Andrew Grumet
The pet rock of the 00's
Weblogs are everywhere. No longer the hideout of programmer nerds, weblog authors count among their ranks a Stanford law professor, a cast member of Star Trek: The Next Generation, a woman who works in the adult film industry, a popular humor columnist (who no doubt would be thrilled to appear in a list next to "a woman who works in the adult film industry").
In the words of weblog conceiver and chief evangelizer, Dave Winer, "A Weblog allows you to easily publish a wide variety of content to the Web. You can publish written essays, annotated links, documents (Word, PDF, and PowerPoint files), graphics, and multimedia." To many this will sound a lot like a Geocities home page. Nothing new here: Geocities has been making it easy to publish to the Web for almost as long as there has been a Web. Scan a few weblogs, either those listed above or others that you may know about, and it should become clear that a weblog is exactly what it sounds like: a log that is published to the Web. The log entries are typically short, informal, and posted daily.
We can think of a weblog as a special kind of home page that has a time element. Or, even better, as a public, online diary. So why all the excitement? Everybody seems to have one and yet a weblog feels more like a pet rock than a revolution. We are particularly reminded of the excitement that accompanied the explosion of home pages in the early days of the Web. We suspect that, like home pages, the appearance of so many weblogs isn't the interesting part. The interesting part is, rather, the pervasive use of a set of technologies. Let's leave that thread for now and pick it up a little later on.
Andrew Grumet
Deep Thinking about Weblogs
by Andrew Grumet
The pet rock of the 00's
Weblogs are everywhere. No longer the hideout of programmer nerds, weblog authors count among their ranks a Stanford law professor, a cast member of Star Trek: The Next Generation, a woman who works in the adult film industry, a popular humor columnist (who no doubt would be thrilled to appear in a list next to "a woman who works in the adult film industry").
In the words of weblog conceiver and chief evangelizer, Dave Winer, "A Weblog allows you to easily publish a wide variety of content to the Web. You can publish written essays, annotated links, documents (Word, PDF, and PowerPoint files), graphics, and multimedia." To many this will sound a lot like a Geocities home page. Nothing new here: Geocities has been making it easy to publish to the Web for almost as long as there has been a Web. Scan a few weblogs, either those listed above or others that you may know about, and it should become clear that a weblog is exactly what it sounds like: a log that is published to the Web. The log entries are typically short, informal, and posted daily.
We can think of a weblog as a special kind of home page that has a time element. Or, even better, as a public, online diary. So why all the excitement? Everybody seems to have one and yet a weblog feels more like a pet rock than a revolution. We are particularly reminded of the excitement that accompanied the explosion of home pages in the early days of the Web. We suspect that, like home pages, the appearance of so many weblogs isn't the interesting part. The interesting part is, rather, the pervasive use of a set of technologies. Let's leave that thread for now and pick it up a little later on.
Andrew Grumet
Frankfurter Rundschau
Frankfurt am Main, 17.07.03
Pingpong mit Pingback
Lass mich Deine Suchmaschine sein: Webseiten finden neue Wege der Vernetzung
(german)
Frankfurt am Main, 17.07.03
Pingpong mit Pingback
Lass mich Deine Suchmaschine sein: Webseiten finden neue Wege der Vernetzung
(german)
Tuesday, June 24, 2003
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futurezone.orf.at
Web-Erfinder für "semantisches Web"
W3C-Direktor Tim Berners-Lee auf Europa-Tour | "Intelligenteres" Web soll durch neues System von Metadaten leichter durchsuchbar werden | XML, URI und RDF sollen Daten "inhaltlich" miteinander vernetzen
w3.org
SWAD-Werbetour
(german)
Scientific American
The Semantic Web
A new form of Web content that is meaningful to computers will unleash a revolution of new possibilities
By Tim Berners-Lee, James Hendler and Ora Lassila
W3C Semantic Web
futurezone.orf.at
Web-Erfinder für "semantisches Web"
W3C-Direktor Tim Berners-Lee auf Europa-Tour | "Intelligenteres" Web soll durch neues System von Metadaten leichter durchsuchbar werden | XML, URI und RDF sollen Daten "inhaltlich" miteinander vernetzen
w3.org
SWAD-Werbetour
(german)
Scientific American
The Semantic Web
A new form of Web content that is meaningful to computers will unleash a revolution of new possibilities
By Tim Berners-Lee, James Hendler and Ora Lassila
W3C Semantic Web
Sunday, June 22, 2003
Saturday, June 14, 2003
Wednesday, June 11, 2003
Tuesday, June 10, 2003
ClickZ Weblog Business Strategies 2003 Conference & Expo
June 9 - 10, 2003 • Sheraton Boston • Boston, MA
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BlogTalk
___A European Conference on
___Weblogs
BlogTalk - A European Conference On Weblogs: Web-based publishing, communication and collaboration tools for professional and private use.
What is a weblog? A weblog is a form and a format: a frequently updated website containing entries arranged in reverse-chronological order. But this simple form is infinitely malleable, and weblogs have huge potential for professional and private use. Easily maintained via computer or mobile devices, weblogs are organizing businesses, creating and strengthening social ties, filtering the World Wide Web, and providing a platform for ordinary people to publish their views to the world. (Rebecca Blood) [more by George Siemens]
Conference date: May 23 - 24, 2003
Conference location: Vienna, Austria
Organizer:
Danube-University Krems, Center for New Media
Thomas N. Burg, Head of Center;
BlogTalk
___A European Conference on
___Weblogs
BlogTalk - A European Conference On Weblogs: Web-based publishing, communication and collaboration tools for professional and private use.
What is a weblog? A weblog is a form and a format: a frequently updated website containing entries arranged in reverse-chronological order. But this simple form is infinitely malleable, and weblogs have huge potential for professional and private use. Easily maintained via computer or mobile devices, weblogs are organizing businesses, creating and strengthening social ties, filtering the World Wide Web, and providing a platform for ordinary people to publish their views to the world. (Rebecca Blood) [more by George Siemens]
Conference date: May 23 - 24, 2003
Conference location: Vienna, Austria
Organizer:
Danube-University Krems, Center for New Media
Thomas N. Burg, Head of Center;
.
science.orf.at
Weblogs: Wissensspeicher, der sich selbst erzeugt
weblogging by scientists
For better understanding of the value of weblogging by scientists read
Personal knowledge publishing and its uses in research
by
Sébastien Paquet
Seb's Open Research
Pointers and thoughts on the evolution of knowledge sharing
and scholarly communication, collected by Sébastien Paquet
.
science.orf.at
Weblogs: Wissensspeicher, der sich selbst erzeugt
weblogging by scientists
For better understanding of the value of weblogging by scientists read
Personal knowledge publishing and its uses in research
by
Sébastien Paquet
Seb's Open Research
Pointers and thoughts on the evolution of knowledge sharing
and scholarly communication, collected by Sébastien Paquet
.