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Some of the earliest proponents of blogging are moving on to other things. The Economist reports that the founder of Weblogs, Inc., one of the first blogging networks, has announced that he is giving up on blogging and going back to email to distribute his opinions. Meanwhile, the founder of Blogger, arguably the biggest blogging tool, which was bought by Google, now runs Twitter, the mobile-phone-based micro-blogging network with a 140-character limit on messages, and he says Twitter is the future.
But as the Economist report points out, “Blogging has entered the mainstream, which—as with every new medium in history—looks to its pioneers suspiciously like death. To the earliest practitioners, over a decade ago, blogging was the regular posting of text updates, and later photos and videos, about themselves and their thoughts to a few friends and family members. Today lots of internet users do this, only they may not think of it as blogging. Instead, they update their profile pages on Facebook, MySpace or other social networks….traditional blog pages tend increasingly to belong to conventional media organisations. Nearly every newspaper, radio and television channel now runs blogs and updates them faster than any individual blogger ever could.
“….Simultaneously, companies far outside the media industry have embraced blogging as just another business tool. They are using blogs both to get corporate messages to the public and as an internal medium for staff. Companies like Six Apart, which provides Movable Type, TypePad and other blogging tools, see firms as their most promising market.
“Gone, in other words, is any sense that blogging as a technology is revolutionary, subversive or otherwise exalted, and this upsets some of its pioneers. Confirmed, however, is the idea that blogging is useful and versatile. In essence, it is a straightforward content-management system that posts updates in reverse-chronological order and allows comments and other social interactions. Viewed as such, blogging may “die” in much the same way that personal-digital assistants (PDAs) have died. A decade ago, PDAs were the preserve of digerati who liked using electronic address books and calendars. Now they are gone, but they are also ubiquitous, as features of almost every mobile phone.”
In other words, blogging is now acceptable and understood widely enough to be embraced by traditional companies. Roll on the revolution!
Tags: blogging, blogs, social media, social networking, social networks
Posted on Monday, November 10th, 2008 at 11:15 am under Marketing, Media companies, Technology.
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