It’s a Blogosphere. Get over it.

Found this article in a news link the other day. It seems that the growing list of terminology surrounding the “new web” (can I call it that?) is getting up some people’s noses…

“Blog”, “netiquette”, “cookie” and “wiki” have been voted among the most irritating words spawned by the Internet, according to the results of a poll published on Thursday. Topping the list of words most likely to make web users “wince, shudder or want to bang your head on the keyboard” was folksonomy, a term for a web classification system. “Blogosphere”, the collective name for blogs or online journals, was second; “blog” itself was third; “netiquette”, or internet etiquette, came fourth and “blook”, a book based on a blog, was fifth. “Cookie”, a file sent to a user’s computer after they visit a website, came in ninth, while “wiki”, a collaborative website edited by its readers, was tenth.

I must say that I quite like the term “blogosphere”, although to be fair it didn’t make much sense to me until I became a blogger myself. However, I think it describes the blogging ecosystem rather well. It is amazing the way that we who write blogs all seem to become interlinked together… My friend Simon was telling me that when I published a podcast recently about his Flat Planet Project, the site hits on his wiki spiked into the hundreds over the next few days. It really is a very connected world.

Whenever I talk to teachers about blogging with their students, the usual first questions are “How will anyone ever find what we wrote?”, and “Why would anyone read what we write?” These are obvious questions, but to ask them is a great underestimation of just how big the Internet really is and the curiousity levels of the people who use it. I don’t really know how people find it, and why they read it. But I know they will and they do. I can’t explain how and why, but I know it works. If you build it, they will come.

One of the very first posts I ever wrote on this blog was about the nature of blogging as I naively understood it at the time. One of the things I wrote back then (that I now understand with much greater appreciation) is this…

…the true worth of blogging cannot be appreciated on a small scale. A single blog post, or even a single blog, is not what it’s all about. Blogging gets it’s power from becoming a large scale ecosystem, a thriving community of people all cross linking to each other, creating connections and networks of ideas. The power of blogging is way more than the sum of its individual parts, and to gauge the power of this new medium it needs to be seen in the light of the much bigger picture that it creates.

To me, the word “blogosphere” works well to describe that concept of connectedness between bloggers. I cannot think of a better pre-Web2.0 word to describe the same thing. Besides, I’m told that Shakespeare invented many words and phrases that did not exist before he dreamed them up… If he was trying to express an idea and there was not a readymade word to adequately say it, he just made one up. In fact, he made about 1700 of them up, according to one source I looked at.

The funny thing about that early post I wrote was that it was written in response to a book I read about blogging called “Who Let the Blogs out” by a fellow called Biz Stone, (Biz was behind things like Xanga, Odeo and Twitter). Within a week or so of me posting it, I stumbled across a response on Biz’s blog where he was commenting on my blogpost which was originally commenting on his book. As a beginning blogger, it was at that point that I realised just how truly interconnected we all are through this “blogosphere” thing.

So, like it or not, Blogosphere it is.

technorati tags:, ,

Been Playing

James Farmer has been up to his upgrading tricks again, and Edublogs has been offline for a few hours today.  I don’t mind, I just appreciate the facts that he takes the trouble to keep the Edublogs service at the cutting edge of WordPress technology.  Anyway, it gave me a chance to do a bit of playing on my other blogs, tweaking a few things here and there.

I also managed to get a new episode of the Virtual Staffroom podcast online.  It’s been a long time between episodes, due mainly to a series of personal dramas but also because it took me a while to get broadband on again where I’m living now.  Anyway, the point is that a new episode is up –  “Open Minded”  – and another episode is in the works, Taking it Further”.  Check them out, they are pretty good actually!  🙂

I’ve also been having a good play with the Sidebar Widgets in WordPress.  Very cool.  I’d been wondering how to add extra services to the sidebars like Clustr maps and other things where you are supposed to just cut and paste some html code to make it work.  That’s all fine, and was easy under the Old Blogger, but WordPress doesn’t easily let you get to the template code to make these changes.  I finally figured out that you have to add a new text widget to the sidebar tools and paste the code into that.  Obvious really I guess.  I’m really impressed at what a cool, flexible tool WordPress is.  The New Blogger too for that matter.  It’s just so easy to publish to the web these days!

I’ve also been swapping some great podcast suggestions with My Linda too… we have discovered a whole bunch of interesting ‘casts to listen too.  In fact I spend way more time these days listening to podcasts than live radio or TV, and I love the fact that we are so on each others wavelengths in terms of what interests us.  It’s a good sign I think.

technorati tags:, , ,

More Tagging, Less Bookmarking

I had a little spare time tonight so I decided to do a job that I’ve been meaning to do for a while… cleaning up my bookmarks collection. (What’s up with that? I can live in a house that’s messy, my desk at work looks like a bomb has hit it, but my hard drive is really well organised… go figure!)

I mentioned recently that I’ve been using Flock as my main browser these days… mainly because it has a bunch of wonderful built-in features that seem really sensible, but I can’t help wondering why the bookmark organisation is set up like it is. One of the many nice things about Firefox, or even IE for that matter, is that you can arrange your collection of bookmarks/favourites into folders and subfolders. This is largely a very good thing, although I did notice I tended to get just a little over-organised at times and I had a large number of folders that had only one item in them, which is perhaps getting just a tad granular.

But I did have a lot of top-level folders with subfolders in them and it was, by and large, quite well organised.  So for example, in the folder labeled “Education”, there were subfolders for, say, “Literacy”, “Contructivism”. “Gifted Education”, and so on. The problem was that I often tended to forget what I put in these folders, and that sometimes I would find an interesting site and go to bookmark it for later use without realising I already had a sub folder catergory set up that was suitable. Over time, this led to quite a bit of duplication and disarray.

Flock however, does not support this subfoldering approach. Although Flock can imports bookmarks directly from Firefox, when you go to the bookmark organiser you only get a top-level folder for each category you imported, (including the stuff that was originally in subfolders).  In other words, every folder, no matter what level it was when it was imported, now becomes a top-level folder. This meant I ended up with LOTS of top level folders, in fact way too many to be sensibly managed. I’ve been spending some time tonight going through them and realising that many bookmarks have been linkrotted, some are just plain irrelevant, and most can be found quicker on Google than I can find them in my bookmark collection.

I’m finding that Google has changed the need to bookmark everything. If I want to find a site that I am after, it’s usually a simpler proposition just to Google it.

I’m also learning that tagging a bookmark is generally better than filing it, but I must admit I’m still really just starting to get my head around the tagging concept. I mean, I get it, but I’m still figuring out excatly how to organise things to get the best leverage out of the tagging system.

The really big plus for using Flock as my browser is that it has a very seamless integration with del.icio.us, so I can  bookmark both locally AND to the web. Firefox can do the same sort of thing by using an Add-On, but I do like the way it’s organised right inside of Flock.. that, and the built in Flickr uploader and web clippings make it a really useful tool.

Edublogs now has a neat plugin tool that lets me embed my del.icio.us feed directly to this blog page. I’ve currently added it as the last webpart on the right column, so scroll down a bit and you can see a list of the last few sites I’ve bookmarked. I’m not sure why sharing my favourite websites with the world is a good thing, but I guess I’ll do it anyway.

Anyway, I’m off to figure out how tagging works!

technorati tags:, , ,

Blogged with Flock