Blogging
My Tragic Addiction
95%How Addicted to Blogging Are You? [http://mingle2.com/blog-addiction] [Via Adriana [http://www.mediainfluencer.net/2007/08/how-addicted-to-blogging-are-you/]]
The art and craft of the personal blog — and the business of blogging as part of the creator economy.
Blogging
95%How Addicted to Blogging Are You? [http://mingle2.com/blog-addiction] [Via Adriana [http://www.mediainfluencer.net/2007/08/how-addicted-to-blogging-are-you/]]
alexa
Things I’ve been meaning to link for a while: * Dan Blank points out that the lesson of the exposure of Fake Steve Jobs [http://danblank.com/blog/2007/08/09/editors-as-their-own-media-brands/] is that journalists can really inovate, if given the chance. * Scoble gives an idea of the competition and
biglorryblog
busybusybusybusybusy So I share a couple of links with you. One of our bloggers, the venerable Brian Weatherley of Big Lorry Blog [http://www.biglorryblog.com/] has done a guest post for the Automotive PR blog giving some, hmm, vivid descriptions of what it’s like being a committed journoblogger
Blogging
One of my collegues here in RBI’s editorial development team has decided to spread his blogging wings and move beyond theatrical whinging. He’s joining the publishing 2.0 debate over at [Engagement 101](http://engagement101.blogspot.com/).
bloggers
But the internet’s barely a couple of decades old and the most venerable of the technologies we’re talking about here, blogging, has only a decade of publishing history behind it. People are still finding new ways of creating compelling sites with this stuff. A few years back, “authoritative”
Blogging
Like the hero in a 1980s cartoon series, I have learned an important lesson today. A lesson about friendship and trust… Well, no. But then, I won’t be holding aloft my magic sword later, unless I get really, really lucky. No, I’m talking about learning that trying to
Blogging
Well, I’m back in RBI’s palatial office in sophisticated Sutton, getting on with the job. And, after four days in salubrious Suffolk (and having had a rant or two on here), I’m feeling much more positive about everything. Hopefully, I’ll have some more positive posts about
Blogging
If you were to say to me “Adam, old chap, what’s the toughest challenge you face in getting journalists to blog?”, two things would cross my mind. The first is that you have an incredibly mannered way of speaking, and good on you in this age of enforced casualness
Blogging
Noodlepie explains how a blog post differs from a magazine article [http://www.noodlepie.com/2007/08/how-a-blog-post.html], using pictures not words. Genius.
bloggers
All this begs the question: should we bother trying to get journalists blogging? Is there a value in it, if they find it hard to move beyond something that sits between traditional journalism and opinion pieces? Can’t we just leave journalists to do traditional journalism and use their work
Blogging
Having taken an rather uninformative side-swipe at the corporate blogging life in my last post, I feel it’s only fair to point out some good stuff that’s been going on, too. Last Friday’s news of an outbreak of foot and mouth [http://www.fwi.co.uk/Articles/
blog advice
You know, whenever things get difficult doing the Web 2.0 thing within a traditional publisher (and I’ve just seen some more journalistic backlash – always fun), I come across something like this (sighted on Adriana’s revamped and rehoused blog [http://www.mediainfluencer.net/2007/08/force-blogging/]) to make