Archive for the ‘Blogger Relations’ Category
Cool Tool: Newsgator Inbox
Technorati Expands Reach of Blogs
Americans Adopting High-Speed Access
A new report from the Pew Internet and American Life Project shows more than 40 percent of Americans now have high-speed access at home.
To Blog or Not To Blog
That was the question at the recent 3rd annual Personal Democracy Forum conference earlier this May. I sat on a panel moderated by Jonah Seiger of Connections Media and which featured Mary Katherine Ham of Read the rest of this entry »
You can’t trick bloggers
Two recent revelations about the validity of comments being posted on blogs are raising some interesting questions. In one instance, an LA Times columnist was caught in April posting comments to his own blog under a Read the rest of this entry »
Cool Tool: iWriter
This new software product from Talking Panda turns an iPod into a study tool. It allows you to mix text and audio files into learning programs (e.g. spelling quizzes, reading lists) and includes eight project templates to help get you started.
The tool can also build Web sites for students without iPods.
Are blog comments worth the hassle?
As prominent blogger Steve Rubel notes, two high-traffic blogs — Blog Maverick and Seth Godin’s Blog — have disabled the comments feature on their sites. According to Mark Cuban, author of Blog Maverick, comments Read the rest of this entry »
The Blogosphere: Changing the Face of American Politics?
Banking off the success of Howard Dean’s 2004 online fundraising campaign, liberal blogger Markos Moulitsas Zuniga (head of www.thedailykos.com and co-author of “Crashing the Gates”) and the hundreds of others who joined Read the rest of this entry »
To Blog or Not To Blog
That was the question at the recent 3rd annual Personal Democracy Forum conference earlier this May. I sat on a panel moderated by Jonah Seiger of Connections Media and which featured Mary Katherine Ham of TownHall.com and HughHewitt.com, Matt Stoller of MyDD.com and David All, Communications Director for Rep. Jack Kingston. It was, as you might imagine, a lively discussion. We all had very different perspectives but seemed to agree that blogging is not a casual undertaking for a candidate or organization. MKH has a report here on HughHewitt.com with her thoughts. Read the rest of this entry »