Thoughts on blogging
As I mentioned in the earlier post, I don't want to blog in the "traditional" way, meaning observing my surroundings, or websites, or news world, and comment on things that have happened lately. It doesn't mean I don't enjoy reading those blogs, in fact I have few of their RSS feeds bookmarked, especially few interesting global warming ones.
It was quite obvious last December how powerful and fast media blogs are. It took only few hours after tsunami had hit various places in Asia that European blogs started collecting the newest news and reporting whatever they had found online or heard from news. Blogs were the fastest way to read a summary of things happening, but also with the cost of not being the most reliable source. Traditional press needs time to check the facts, do serious source seeking and getting indepth with their news when blogs are way more flexible in that way. One of course should keep that in mind.. but then again, it's not that hard to forget that you're reading a blog instead of a real news agency material.
I've been paying attention to New Zealander, or Kiwi in other words, blogs lately. We're planning to move there in some years, and I'm looking for interesting contacts there. They had their government elections two days ago, so all the Kiwi blogs are filled with politics and aftermath of the vote results. Funny to notice that almost all of the bloggers were voting for Greens, it seems to be the young, educated people's party, and these bloggers fit into that category well. Green party had been using blogging as a political promotion, all the big name candidates have an audioblog at Green party's Frogblog, and they also made a multimedia-DVD as the first party in NZ ever to use these communication tools. It's interesting to see how NZ is a bit behind us in new media, and I will definitely get back into that subject sooner or later here.
These new trends of blogging (audio, videoblogs) are still fairly uninteresting to me. The problem of blogs is that they are from people I usually don't have a connection with, and I don't get any amazing experiences from their products. Blogging is mostly, after all, one way communication. What I miss instead of all these fancy technologies is a whole experience, something for everybody, an artistic, a cathartic, a stunning moment where I'd experience something new, something that would touch me. When blogging becomes an all around feeling, then I'll get interested.
In the mean time I would be happy to receive links to really interesting blogs that are just more than commenting on websites! Sure Slashdot is cool and nerdy, but I don't find it interesting enough to read it everyday. Also big blogs like that create trends that is definitely one of the ways to handle power and promotion. If you get your new product mentioned in cool way at Slashdot, it's sure that it will be a hit among computer people. I also earlier mentioned that I prefer community based "blogging" than private persons. Slashdot is somewhere there in between, but it's already too big to be a working community. I don't know.. maybe the new thing, business blogging, is something that will make it more interesting for bigger publics as well and make it easier for consumers to feel connected to companies.
But what I want to see in the future of blogging... News agencies and TV stations blogging their news on their websites using video and sound, continuous feed from their sources and seeing that also normal people can send their own news as almost as important as any other news are.
It was quite obvious last December how powerful and fast media blogs are. It took only few hours after tsunami had hit various places in Asia that European blogs started collecting the newest news and reporting whatever they had found online or heard from news. Blogs were the fastest way to read a summary of things happening, but also with the cost of not being the most reliable source. Traditional press needs time to check the facts, do serious source seeking and getting indepth with their news when blogs are way more flexible in that way. One of course should keep that in mind.. but then again, it's not that hard to forget that you're reading a blog instead of a real news agency material.
I've been paying attention to New Zealander, or Kiwi in other words, blogs lately. We're planning to move there in some years, and I'm looking for interesting contacts there. They had their government elections two days ago, so all the Kiwi blogs are filled with politics and aftermath of the vote results. Funny to notice that almost all of the bloggers were voting for Greens, it seems to be the young, educated people's party, and these bloggers fit into that category well. Green party had been using blogging as a political promotion, all the big name candidates have an audioblog at Green party's Frogblog, and they also made a multimedia-DVD as the first party in NZ ever to use these communication tools. It's interesting to see how NZ is a bit behind us in new media, and I will definitely get back into that subject sooner or later here.
These new trends of blogging (audio, videoblogs) are still fairly uninteresting to me. The problem of blogs is that they are from people I usually don't have a connection with, and I don't get any amazing experiences from their products. Blogging is mostly, after all, one way communication. What I miss instead of all these fancy technologies is a whole experience, something for everybody, an artistic, a cathartic, a stunning moment where I'd experience something new, something that would touch me. When blogging becomes an all around feeling, then I'll get interested.
In the mean time I would be happy to receive links to really interesting blogs that are just more than commenting on websites! Sure Slashdot is cool and nerdy, but I don't find it interesting enough to read it everyday. Also big blogs like that create trends that is definitely one of the ways to handle power and promotion. If you get your new product mentioned in cool way at Slashdot, it's sure that it will be a hit among computer people. I also earlier mentioned that I prefer community based "blogging" than private persons. Slashdot is somewhere there in between, but it's already too big to be a working community. I don't know.. maybe the new thing, business blogging, is something that will make it more interesting for bigger publics as well and make it easier for consumers to feel connected to companies.
But what I want to see in the future of blogging... News agencies and TV stations blogging their news on their websites using video and sound, continuous feed from their sources and seeing that also normal people can send their own news as almost as important as any other news are.
