Rethinking the Blog as Database: My First Post on the Blog Herald

I am proud to announce that I have joined the Blog Herald. The Blog Herald has been blogging about the blogosphere since 2003 and has since become an established source in the blogosphere. I have been reading the Blog Herald for a while now and was absolutely thrilled when they asked me to write for them. I will be joining an excellent team of bloggers including Lorelle VanFossen, Tony Hung, Chris Garrett, (founder & ex-Blog Herald/now TechCrunch-blogger) Duncan Riley and more.

I will be blogging about blogging and blog software from an “academic” point of view. My first series of posts will be related to my upcoming thesis on Blog Software and the Act of Blogging.

You are welcome to read and comment on my first post at the Blog Herald: “Rethinking the Blog as Database

WordPress Glitches: Visual/Code editor & Advanced Visual editor

I noticed another glitch in the software when I was saving an unpublished post. When you press Save and Continue Editing the editor switches from Visual to Code and back to Visual. So while saving you are temporarily faced with the code while you are actually working in the Visual mode. I think this is another example that demonstrates that the visual editor is an added option (see my previous post: WordPress problems: Visual editor gone (fixed), or: A glitch in the software)

What is even more interesting is that I recently discovered that the visual editor offers even more options than it actually displays. This extra toolbar is not activated by default nor is there a button to activate it. The extra formatting options were hidden from the general user until someone noticed it and posted it to a WordPress forum. Activating the extra options is done by pressing Alt-V in Internet Explorer or Alt-Shift-V in Firefox.

Visual editor standard
The standard visual editor toolbar
Visual editor advanced
The advanced visual editor toolbar

But everytime you press Save and Continue Editing the extra toolbar disappear again (not with automatic saving) so you have to press Alt-(Shift)-V again and again until you have finished your post. To solve this issue a Visualize Advanced Features plugin has been released that adds a button to your standard visual editor toolbar that enables you to toggle the advanced options on or off (and leaves the options on or off.)

With some advanced knowlegde of TinyMCE, the Javascript WYSIWYG editor implemented in WordPress, the toolbar can contain many more features such as using subscript, superscript, tables, layers, CSS layout etc. I wonder if using the CSS layout creates conflicting stylesheets, or does it create an inline stylesheet, or does the existing stylesheet always overrule, or if there is the possibility of other conflicting issues when using these advanced issues (which might be a reason WordPress hasn’t implemented them.)

Software constraints in blogging software

WidgetI’ve been working with WordPress for about two months now and I am still getting used to it. My blog seems like an open-ended project, one that will never finish. Maybe that seems like a rather obvious statement, since a blog is a tool for continuously expressing your thoughts. What I actually mean is the form or shape of the blog. I feel like I am building a house and even though the framework is done, the house itself is under constant construction.

The framework itself feels restrictive and I have been looking for tools to accomplish what I want. In the case of WordPress I have been looking for Widgets and Plug ins that can achieve what I want. Or rather, the backend tools that shape and form my blog. Plugins and widgets are solutions to the restrictions in the WordPress software, but are restrictions being reproduced on another level? What kind of constraints are built into the internet on the content level? How does software control meaning (content). These are several questions I am planning to ask myself in my MA thesis.
I recently came across two related posts: Ranting on WordPress Plugin Development by Justin Shattuck and Ranting on WordPress Plugin Development by David at Blogger Pro

WordPress problems #3

So I decided it is time to finally implement the Ultimate Tag Warrior. I am not a php wizard, but I am patient and eager to learn new stuff, both of which help a lot when installing WordPress plug-ins. Although all the plug-ins come with instructions I am often experiencing difficulties.

Tag archive errorAdding tags to my posts was easy, but creating a tagcloud wasn’t. I was able to create a tag archive page which would display a tagcloud (following the instructions), but that wasn’t quite what I was looking for. I wanted to display my tagcloud in my dynamic sidebar which uses widgets. So I put the php code in the (empty) Text1 widget, but it turned up empty. So I tried adding list HTML tags, which didn’t help either. After some googling it turns out that you cannot put php code in your widgets. But of course there is a widget to help me fix this widget problem.

Read More…

I am a hard bloggin’ scientist


I am a hard bloggin' scientist. Read the Manifesto.I am an official self proclaimed hard bloggin’ scientist now. To find out what this means please read the hard bloggin’ scientist Manifest Vo.1

This initiative was pointed out to the Masters of Media by Geert Lovink. When I read the manifesto I could identify with it, but at the same time it made me reconsider my blog. This blog is supposed to be a research tool for my Master Thesis (hence #4), but so far I haven’t written down any ideas.

So I am planning on writing down more random thoughts and maybe sketch them out to get a sense of where I am going. I am also planning on participating more on other blogs, besides our own collaborative Masters of Media blog. I have to get out of my own personal safe blog shell and participate in the big World Wide Web world!

Review: We’ve got Blog. How Weblogs are Changing our Culture – Rebecca Blood (ed)

We’ve got blogPerseus Books Group, 2002
176 pp. Hardcover, $15.60 USD
ISBN 0738207411 - Buy at Amazon

We’ve got Blog is a collection of thirty four articles about weblogs compiled and edited by John Rodzvilla. It was published in 2002 during which blogs had been around for three years. As well known blog essayist Rebecca Blood puts in the introduction ‘The articles in this collections are early reflections on the weblog phenomenon’. But the reflections are rather superficial and the subtitle ‘how weblogs are changing our culture’ doesn’t seem to get answered.

The book starts off with a few essays describing the history of weblogs. We see a shift from the weblog as a kind of filtering tool with links and brief commentary to the weblog which is more like a frequently updated journal. The question is being raised if the weblog is a rediscovery of the homepage. Cameron Barrett disagrees and sees homepages and weblogs as two different things:

“Homepages are places where you put pictures of your family and your cats. It’s a place to distribute information to a close circle of family and friends. Weblogs, however are designed for an audience. They have a voice. They have a personality. Simply put, they are an interactive extension of who you are.”

In his essay, which is written in 1999, he hopes that the weblog format will overtake the homepage format so that the Web will contain more expressive pages. He doubts it will happen, but seven years later the weblog format seems to be replacing the homepage format after all, including the cats. Hey, even cats are blogging nowadays!

I think the blogging format will eventually completely take over the homepage format because it makes maintaining a webpage easier than ever. Setting up a Blogger or WordPress blog takes five minutes and requires no HTML knowledge at all. Just enter a title, a few lines and maybe a picture and that’s all, your post is done. Because such tools make it exceptionally easy there has been a tremendous growth in weblogs.

Several authors see blogs in the light of the utopic vision of the Internet as a democratization tool. With the arrival of Blogger and other automatic blogging tools nearly everyone could suddenly start a blog without the knowledge of HTML. Everyone can write down their opinion and make themselves heard. But the question is, who is listening? Or even better, in the case of an opinion that could lead to a discussion, who is answering? In a democracy there are questions, there are answers and most importantly there are discussions. But if comments can be turned off, monitored or deleted there is no true open discussion. Jon Katz says about these limitations that “One obvious payoff is that the flow of ideas is strong, interrupted, and impressive”. Of course, excluding abusers from the discussion is a good idea when they are spammers, but people with a different opinion might as easily be excluded. So saying that “they [blogs] seem to almost all be ideologically opposed to hostility, including essayish commentary and observations” seems rather naive.

We’ve got Blog is a collection of short articles that were originally published online. This makes reading the book sometimes somewhat awkward because of the continuous web references. At one point I actually read the book from my keyboard so I could quickly look up a reference. Tom Coates actually compiled a list of all the (originally published on the web) articles on his website.

So should you buy it? Sure, the book is fun and easy to read, but it doesn’t answer the question of how weblogs are changing our culture. If you are interested in personal historical accounts of early webloggers (including weblog romances) and don’t mind that the articles feel somewhat incestuous after reading the same names and same weblogs mentioned over and over again this book is a good buy. But if you rather skim through the articles and pick out a few interesting things I’d recommend visiting Tom’s list.

This blogpost was also posted on the Masters of Media blog.