Showing posts with label Blogging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blogging. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Article: Educational Blogging

Educational Blogging
Stephen Downes

EDUCAUSE Review, vol. 39, no. 5 (September/October 2004): 14–26.
© 2004 Stephen Downes


Stephen Downes (http://www.downes.ca) is a Senior Researcher with the E-Learning Research Group, National Research Council Canada, Moncton, New Brunswick. Comments on this article can be sent to the author at .

"I think it's the most beautiful tool of the world and it allows us the most magic thing..."
—Florence Dassylva-Simard, fifth-grade student

The bell rings, and the halls of Institut St-Joseph in Quebec City echo the clatter of the fifth- and sixth-graders. Some take their chairs in the more traditional classroom on the lower floor. Others attend to their projects in the large, open activity room upstairs, pausing perhaps to study one of the chess games hanging on the wall before meeting in groups to plan the current project. A third group steps up a half flight of stairs into the small narrow room at the front of the building, one wall lined with pictures and plastercine models of imagined aliens, the other with a bank of Apple computers.

This last group of students, eight or so at a time, fire up their browsers and log into their cyberportfolios, a publication space that Principal Mario Asselin calls a "virtual extension of the classroom."1 This virtual space is composed of three sets of weblogs, or blogs: a classroom Web space, where announcements are displayed and work of common interested is posted; a public, personal communication zone, where students post the results of their work or reflection; and a private personal space, reserved for students� thoughts and teacher guidance.

Dominic Ouellet-Tremblay, a fifth-grade student at St-Joseph, writes: "The blogs give us a chance to communicate between us and motivate us to write more. When we publish on our blog, people from the entire world can respond by using the comments link. This way, they can ask questions or simply tell us what they like. We can then know if people like what we write and this indicate[s to] us what to do better. By reading these comments, we can know our weaknesses and our talents. Blogging is an opportunity to exchange our point of view with the rest of the world not just people in our immediate environment."2

The students at St-Joseph are reflective of a trend that is sweeping the world of online learning: the use of weblogs to support learning. And even though the world of fifth grade may seem remote to educators in the college and university system, these students, when they enter postsecondary education, may have had more experience writing online for an audience than writing with a pen and paper for a teacher. Such students will bring with them a new set of skills and attitudes.

Writes Asselin in his own blog, Mario tout de go: "The school administration�s objective with this weblog initiative was to offer students and teachers a support tool to promote reflective analysis and the emergence of a learning community that goes beyond the school walls."3 The blogs fit the bill perfectly. "I see more than 2,000 posts and nearly 3,000 comments," says Asselin. "Because of that, I am able to name what they do and see where it comes from. I can also figure out the directions they are taking and how they do it."4

Institut St-Joseph is an unassuming, yellow-brick school on a tree-lined road in the west side of Quebec City. The students inside may be early adopters, but they are far from alone in their use of blogs. The phenomenon known as blogging, or weblogging, is sweeping the Internet. A February 2004 report published by the Pew Internet & American Life Project noted that at least 3 million Americans have created blogs, with similar numbers being seen worldwide.5 And schools have not been immune from this trend. While nobody can say for sure just how many students are blogging, inside the classroom or out, it seems clear that their numbers are equally impressive.

In his day job, Will Richardson is the supervisor of instructional technology at Hunterdon Central Regional High School in Flemington, New Jersey. But online, Richardson is known as one of the leading proponents of blogging in education and the maintainer of the Weblogg-Ed Web site. "More and more teachers and schools are starting to experiment with the technology as a way to communicate with students and parents," he writes. Blogs are used to "archive and publish student work, learn with far-flung collaborators, and �manage� the knowledge that members of the school community create."6

And the number of educational bloggers is growing daily. The Educational Bloggers Network, sponsored by the Bay Area Writing Project and Weblogger.com, is a community of some 120 teachers and educators involved in blogging. The following announcement on the site, by San Diego State University�s Bernie Dodge, is typical: "It�s that time of semester again. Tonight I introduced blogging to my class of pre-service English and foreign language teachers." The result: twenty-eight new student blogs.7 This same pattern is being repeated in schools and universities across the United States and around the world.

In my own case, blogging evolved from three major directions. First, the blog that began as Stephen�s Web (http://www.downes.ca) and that eventually became OLDaily originated as a better means for me to store bookmarks. Second, the blog that became NewsTrolls originated as a series of posts by Pasty Drone. Called Media Rant News Trolls, these were posted on the old Hotwired Threads. When eight of us, including Pasty and myself decided to leave the site in 1998, we adopted Pasty�s format and name. And third, when I created The Brandon Pages site, about the city of Brandon, I created a blogging tool to announce new links and events.

Today, the weblog is frequently characterized (and criticized) as (only) a set of personal comments and observations. A look at the history of weblogging shows that this isn�t the case. As Rebecca Blood observes: "The original weblogs were link-driven sites. Each was a mixture in unique proportions of links, commentary, and personal thoughts and essays." Bookmarks, rants and raves, news, events: all were fodder for the weblogger. Weblogs (so named in 1997 by Jorn Barger in his Robot Wisdom Web site) began to be recognized as such in 1999 when Jesse James Garrett, the editor of infosift, began compiling a list of "other sites like his." Garrett sent this list to CamWorld�s Cameron Barrett, who published it on his site. Soon after, Brigitte Eaton compiled a list of every weblog she knew about, creating the Eatonweb Portal.8 There is no doubt that these early lists were incomplete; weblogging was springing up around the Web more quickly than anyone realized.

Many writers assert that blogs came into their own only after the events of September 11, 2001. As Charles Cooper writes, "If you were scouring the Internet for news and context during those first terrible hours, you could have done a lot worse than eavesdropping on the free-wheeling mini-universe of Web logs chockablock with first-hand info and spirited commentary about what was going on. . . . For my money, some of the best stuff was being served up in this most unlikely venue."9

I myself spent the two days following 9-11 updating NewsTrolls. Although we had covered and commented on the tech boom, world events, and a presidential election, the events of September 11 brought home to me the immediacy of blogging. We ran ongoing coverage, submitted via SMS to my e-mail, as one of our own made her way from the dust and debris of New York's financial district to her home on the west side. Blogging not only allowed us access to the event; it made us part of the event. And with that, the form had indeed finally come into its own.

Barger's original definition of a weblog reads as follows: "A weblog (sometimes called a blog or a newspage or a filter) is a webpage where a weblogger (sometimes called a blogger, or a pre-surfer) 'logs' all the other webpages she finds interesting. The format is normally to add the newest entry at the top of the page, so that repeat visitors can catch up by simply reading down the page until they reach a link they saw on their last visit."10

The personal journal, also widely popular in the late 1990s, actually developed independently of weblogs. Personal journals, or online diaries, were described by Simon Firth as "direct, personal, honest, almost painful to read and yet compelling too," but by the time Firth's article in Salon was written in July 1998, personal journals were on the verge of extinction. "Many of the biggest journal 'fans' began online journals themselves, and soon everyone ended up mostly writing about each other. Some of them got famous, others got resentful."11

The confusion between these two distinct forms is evident in the observations of commentators such as Catherine Seipp. "In general, 'blog' used to mean a personal online diary, typically concerned with boyfriend problems or techie news," she writes. "But after September 11, a slew of new or refocused media junkie/political sites reshaped the entire Internet media landscape. Blog now refers to a Web journal that comments on the news—often by criticizing the media and usually in rudely clever tones—with links to stories that back up the commentary with evidence."12

But this definition—which tries to characterize the blog by what it contains—seems to miss the point. Commenting on Seipp's statement, Meg Hourihan takes a different approach: "Whether you're a warblogger who works by day as a professional journalist or you're a teenage high school student worried about your final exams, you do the same thing: you use your blog to link to your friends and rivals and comment on what they're doing. Blog posts are short, informal, sometimes controversial, and sometimes deeply personal, no matter what topic they approach."13 The definitions of blogging offered by bloggers, as opposed to those offered by external commentators, follow this theme. Blogging is something defined by format and process, not by content.

A blog, therefore, is and has always been more than the online equivalent of a personal journal. Though consisting of regular (and often dated) updates, the blog adds to the form of the diary by incorporating the best features of hypertext: the capacity to link to new and useful resources. But a blog is also characterized by its reflection of a personal style, and this style may be reflected in either the writing or the selection of links passed along to readers. Blogs are, in their purest form, the core of what has come to be called personal publishing.

In the hands of teachers and students, blogs become something more again. The Web is by now a familiar piece of the educational landscape, and for those sites where personal publishing or chronologically ordered content would be useful, blogs have stepped to the fore. Crooked Timber's Henry Farrell identifies five major uses for blogs in education.14

First, teachers use blogs to replace the standard class Web page. Instructors post class times and rules, assignment notifications, suggested readings, and exercises. Aside from the ordering of material by date, students would find nothing unusual in this use of the blog. The instructor, however, finds that the use of blogging software makes this previously odious chore much simpler.

Second, and often accompanying the first, instructors begin to link to Internet items that relate to their course. Mesa Community College's Rick Effland, for example, maintains a blog to pass along links and comments about topics in archaeology.15 Though Mesa's archaeology Web pages have been around since 1995, blogging allows Effland to write what are in essence short essays directed specifically toward his students. Effland's entries are not mere annotations of interesting links. They effectively model his approach and interest in archaeology for his students.

Third, blogs are used to organize in-class discussions. At the State University of New York at Buffalo, for example, Alexander Halavais added a blog to his media law class of about 180 students. Course credit was awarded for online discussion, with topics ranging from the First Amendment to libel to Irish law reform. As the course wound down with a discussion of nude bikers, Halavais questioned whether he would continue the blog the following year because of the workload, but students were enthusiastic in their comments.16

Mireille Guay, an instructor at St-Joseph, notes: "The conversation possible on the weblog is also an amazing tool to develop our community of learners. The students get to know each other better by visiting and reading blogs from other students. They discover, in a non-threatening way, their similarities and differences. The student who usually talks very loud in the classroom and the student who is very timid have the same writing space to voice their opinion. It puts students in a situation of equity."17

Fourth, some instructors are using blogs to organize class seminars and to provide summaries of readings. Used in this way, the blogs become "group blogs"—that is, individual blogs authored by a group of people. Farrell notes: "It becomes much easier for the professor and students to access the readings for a particular week—and if you make sure that people are organized about how they do it, the summaries will effectively file themselves."18

Finally, fifth, students may be asked to write their own blogs as part of their course grade. Educational Technologist Lane Dunlop wrote about one class at Cornell College: "Each day the students read a chunk of a book and post two paragraphs of their thoughts on the reading." In another class, French 304, students were given a similar exercise. Using a French-language blogging service called Monblogue, Molly, a business student, posted a few paragraphs every day.19

What makes blogs so attractive, in both the educational community and the Internet at large, is their ease of use. A blog owner can edit or update a new entry without worrying about page formats or HTML syntax. Sebastian Fiedler, a media pedagogy specialist at the University of Augsburg in Germany, has been monitoring the rise of blogs for a number of years. "Many lightweight, cost-efficient systems and tools have emerged in the personal Webpublishing realm," he writes. "These tools offer a new and powerful toolkit for the support of collaborative and individual learning that adheres to the patterns of contemporary information-intensive work and learning outside of formal educational settings."20

The blogging tool is, at its heart, a form with two fields: title and entry—and the title field is optional. Learning Media Consultant Jay Cross captures the concept with his Bloggar tool. "Blog software comes with a personal Website for those who don't already have one. The software captures your words in dated entries, maintaining a chronological archive of prior entries. In the spirit of sharing inherent to Net culture, the software and the personal Websites are usually free."21 What needs to be kept in mind here is that with respect to blogging tools, anything other than the entry field is a bell or whistle. Since the essence of the blog is found in individual, dated entries, the essence of the blogging tool is the entry field.

Blogging software breaks down into two major categories: hosting services and installed applications.

Hosting services. A hosting service is a Web site that will give you access to everything you need in order to create a blog. It will offer a form for you to input your entries, some tools that allow you to create a template for your blog, and access to some built-in accessories. Your blog is hosted on the hosting service (hence the name), and the URL will typically reflect the hosting service's URL. In a way, blogging hosting services are very similar to the services that allowed people to host their own Web sites (services such as GeoCities or Angelfire) or their own discussions (services such as Yahoo! Groups or ezboard).

The best-known (and one of the earliest) hosting service is Blogger (http://www.blogger.com), founded by Pyra Labs. When the company was bought by Google early in 2003, it reporting having about 1.1 million users.22 The Blogger interface is not much more complicated than Jay Cross's Bloggar: the large field at the top allows you to submit an entry, while instructions and some options are provided in the lower pane (after you post, the help disappears, and you can view and edit your previous posts).

Another major hosting service is LiveJournal (http://www.livejournal.com), a name that speaks to the side of blogging that began as an online diary. Far more so than any other service, LiveJournal attempts to foster a community of users, a strategy that used to be reflected in its terms of use: "LiveJournal relies on the community it creates to maintain an enjoyable journaling environment. In order to encourage healthy community growth, new free accounts must be sponsored by a present member of LiveJournal." LiveJournal reports more than 3 million accounts, with about half that in active status.

Other major blog hosting services include GrokSoup, Salon Blogs, and TypePad. Major international hosting services include FarsiBlogs, for Iranian writers, and BlogsCN, for Chinese contributors.

Installed Applications. A remotely installed application is a piece of software that you obtain from the provider and install on your own Web site. These systems are similar to Web-based applications such as ColdFusion or Hypermail. Because of this, the number of users is much lower, but those who do use them tend (arguably) to be more dedicated and more knowledgeable than those who use hosting services. Installed applications are also more suitable for institutional use, since access can be controlled.

Probably the best-known remotely installed application is Six Apart's Movable Type (http://www.moveabletype.org). As shown in the screenshot from the Learning Circuits blog back-end (figure 1), Movable Type offers numerous options for the blog author, including extended entries. Most school blogs use Movable Type. "We used this product because it is free for use by educational institutions such as schools," says the National Research Council's Todd Bingham, who with Sabastien Paquet has just completed work with Le Centre deApprentissage du Haut-Madawaska, an elementary school in northern New Brunswick, providing Weblogs to all its students and teachers. "In addition to its semi–open source nature, Movable Type is written in Perl and can be back-ended by a MySQL database system," Bingham adds. "Both of these products are also open-source in nature. This allows us to customize some of the features, rather than having to write something from the ground up. We were also able to set up an additional security system using this interface by using Linux's default security features. A private blog, viewable only by the teacher and a singular student, can be set up this way. This allows the student and teacher to have a private means of feedback, as opposed to the public blog open to the public."23

Figure 1

In mid-May 2004, however, Six Apart changed its pricing strategy for Movable Type, dramatically increasing costs for sites with multiple blogs. This prompted a storm of protest from a blogging community fearful of even greater licensing changes, as typified by Mark Pilgrim�s remarks: "Movable Type is a dead end. In the long run, the utility of all non-Free software approaches zero. All non-Free software is a dead end." And although Movable Type recanted, many bloggers moved to an open source blogging tool, WordPress (http://wordpress.org/).24

Another major installed application, and one of the earliest available, is UserLand's Radio (http://radio.userland.com). This is an updated version of more comprehensive site-management tools such as Frontier and Manila. Instead of running on a Web server, Radio runs on the user's desktop and displays through a Web browser; blog entries are then uploaded to a Web site. In addition, "Radio includes a powerful newsreader that allows you to subscribe to all of the sites you like. Radio will automatically go out onto the Web and find new updates to sites like the NYTimes, the BBC, and weblogs that you subscribe to every hour."25

UserLand's software was used to launch a high-profile blogging experiment, Weblogs at Harvard Law, which was created when UserLand's founder, Dave Winer, became a Berkman Fellow. Arising from a conference in November 2002 called "What Is Harvard's Digital Identity?" it was intended, at least in part, to establish "intellectual community" among "the University's disparate schools and centers."26 Launched in February 2003, it allows anyone with a harvard.edu e-mail address to create a weblog, and a hundred or so staff and students have done so, including Philip Greenspun, John Palfrey, and an anonymous blogger known only as "The Redhead."

Harvard's experience illustrates one of the pitfalls of hosting such free-ranging media. Though the university administration had intended not to interfere with blog content—sometimes a challenge, since staff and students can be openly critical—it was forced to step in when Derek Slater, a student, posted internal memos from Diebold Election Systems, an electronic voting-machine manufacturer, on his blog. The memos suggested that the machines faced numerous problems, and the company threatened legal action against Slater and Harvard University.27

Though the company retreated, the potential for conflict between a blog writer and an institution's administration remains. In addition to posting copyrighted or protected information, students can get into trouble for libelous content. For example, a Valley High School student in Nevada was reprimanded for writing, "Kill Alaina!" (a classmate he found irritating) and for making a vulgar comment about a teacher. In another case, a student at St. Martin High School in Mississippi was suspended for three days after using her blog to call a teacher "perverted."28

Despite the risks, teachers and students alike feel the benefits make blogging well worthwhile, if for no other reason than that blogs encourage students to write. As Rosalie Brochu, a student at St-Joseph, observes: "The impact of the blogs on my day to day life is that I write a lot more and a lot longer than the previous years. I also pay more attention when I write in my blog (especially my spelling) since I know anybody can read my posts."29

In one sense, asking why anyone would write a weblog is like asking why anyone would write at all. But more specifically, the question is why anyone would write a weblog as opposed to, say, a book or a journal article. George Siemens, an instructor at Red River College in Winnipeg and a longtime advocate of educational blogging, offers a comprehensive list of motivating factors. In particular, he notes, weblogs break down barriers. They allow ideas to be based on merit, rather than origin, and ideas that are of quality filter across the Internet, "viral-like across the blogosphere." Blogs allow readers to hear the day-to-day thoughts of presidential candidates, software company executives, and magazine writers, who all, in turn, hear opinions of people they would never otherwise hear.30

The students at Institut St-Joseph learned about the communicative power of blogs firsthand. "In the beginning, students anticipated the audience in a restricted circle," notes Principal Asselin. "According to the comments about their work, they realized that a lot of people could react and be part of the conversation. Each student received more than ten comments related to their posts. They had not fully realized that the entire world could read them."31 Imagine the young students� surprise when, some time after posting a review of a circus on their blog, someone from the circus read the review and wrote back!

But perhaps the most telling motivation for blogging was offered by Mark Pilgrim in his response to and elaboration on "The Weblog Manifesto": "Writers will write because they can�t not write. Repeat that over and over to yourself until you get it. Do you know someone like that? Someone who does what they do, not for money or glory or love or God or country, but simply because it�s who they are and you can�t imagine them being any other way?"32

Pilgrim's moving declaration should be read as a cautionary note. The warning is not about bosses who don't want employees to write weblogs (though that danger exists), but this: writing weblogs is not for everybody. In particular, if you feel no empathy, no twinge of recognition, on reading Pilgrim's words, then writing a weblog is probably not for you. This does not mean that you are not a part of the weblog world. It merely means that you participate in a different way.

And herein lies the dilemma for educators. What happens when a free-flowing medium such as blogging interacts with the more restrictive domains of the educational system? What happens when the necessary rules and boundaries of the system are imposed on students who are writing blogs, when grades are assigned in order to get students to write at all, and when posts are monitored to ensure that they don�t say the wrong things?

After returning from a writing teachers� conference with sessions on blogging, Richard Long, a professor at St. Louis Community College, explained the issue this way: "I'm not convinced, however, the presenters who claimed to be blogging are actually blogging. They�re using blogging software, their students use blogging software, but I'm not convinced that using the software is the same as blogging. For example, does posting writing prompts for students constitute blogging? Are students blogging when they use blogging software to write to those prompts?"33

After three years of experimentation with his Weblogg-Ed blog, Will Richardson also expressed his doubts: "By its very nature, assigned blogging in schools cannot be blogging. It�s contrived. No matter how much we want to spout off about the wonders of audience and readership, students who are asked to blog are blogging for an audience of one, the teacher." When the semester ends, "students drop blogging like wet cement." Richardson wants to teach students to write with passion, but he notes: "I can't let them do it passionately due to the inherent censorship that a high school served Weblog carries with it."34

It seems clear that although blogging can and does have a significant and worthwhile educational impact, this impact does not come automatically and does not come without risks. As many writers have noted, writing a weblog appears in the first instance to be a form of publishing, but as time goes by, blogging resembles more and more a conversation. And for a conversation to be successful, it must be given a purpose and it must remain, for the most part, unconstrained.

One of the criticisms of blogs, and especially student blogs is that the students write about nothing but trivia. Examples can be seen all over the Internet. And how many students, when facing the blogging screen, feel like "Matt," who writes: "Now each time I warily approach writing a blog entry, or start writing it, or actually write it, I end up thinking what is the point?—and, after all, what is?" When given their own resources to draw on, bloggers, especially young bloggers, can become frustrated and may eventually report having "committed the ultimate blogging sin of losing interest in myself."35

As Richardson says, blogging as a genre of writing may have "great value in terms of developing all sorts of critical thinking skills, writing skills and information literacy among other things. We teach exposition and research and some other types of analytical writing already, I know. Blogging, however, offers students a chance to a) reflect on what they are writing and thinking as they write and think it, b) carry on writing about a topic over a sustained period of time, maybe a lifetime, and c) engage readers and audience in a sustained conversation that then leads to further writing and thinking."36

Good conversations begin with listening. Ken Smith, an English teacher at Indiana University, explains: "Maybe some folks write flat, empty posts or bad diary posts because they don't know any other genres (they just aren't readers, in one sense) and because [they] aren't responding to anything (that is, they aren't reading anything right now)." It's like arriving late to a party: the first act must be to listen, before venturing forth with an opinion. Smith suggests, "Instead of assigning students to go write, we should assign them to go read and then link to what interests them and write about why it does and what it means."37

The jury is still out, but as Richardson suggests, "It's becoming more clear just what the importance of blogging might be." As Smith writes, "It is through quality linking . . . that one first comes in contact with the essential acts of blogging: close reading and interpretation. Blogging, at base, is writing down what you think when you read others. If you keep at it, others will eventually write down what they think when they read you, and you'll enter a new realm of blogging, a new realm of human connection."38

But it is more than merely assigning topics to blog about. As Jeremy Hiebert, a Web designer and graduate student in Canada, comments, "I've seen evidence of this in courses with required e-portfolio or reflective journal elements. . . . As soon as these activities are put into the context of school, focused on topics the students are unlikely to care about much, they automatically lose a level of authenticity and engagement. These disengaged students (non-writers and writers alike) won�t get the main benefits of true reflective learning no matter how good the instruction and tools are."39

Despite obvious appearances, blogging isn't really about writing at all; that's just the end point of the process, the outcome that occurs more or less naturally if everything else has been done right. Blogging is about, first, reading. But more important, it is about reading what is of interest to you: your culture, your community, your ideas. And it is about engaging with the content and with the authors of what you have read—reflecting, criticizing, questioning, reacting. If a student has nothing to blog about, it is not because he or she has nothing to write about or has a boring life. It is because the student has not yet stretched out to the larger world, has not yet learned to meaningfully engage in a community. For blogging in education to be a success, this first must be embraced and encouraged.

From time to time, we read about the potential of online learning to bring learning into life, to engender workplace learning or lifelong learning. When Jay Cross and others say that 90 percent of our learning is informal, this is the sort of thing they mean: that the lessons we might expect to find in the classroom work their way, through alternative means, into our day-to-day activities.

Blogging can and should reverse this flow. The process of reading online, engaging a community, and reflecting it online is a process of bringing life into learning. As Richardson comments, "This [the blogging process] just seems to me to be closer to the way we learn outside of school, and I don't see those things happening anywhere in traditional education." And he asks: "Could blogging be the needle that sews together what is now a lot of learning in isolation with no real connection among the disciplines? I mean ultimately, aren't we trying to teach our kids how to learn, and isn�t that [what] blogging is all about?"40

Notes
My thanks to the many educational bloggers who contributed to this article and without whom it could not have been completed: Will Richardson, Jeremy Hiebert, George Siemens, Todd Bingham, Rod Savoie, Mario Asselin, Mireille Guay, Dominic Ouellet-Tremblay, Florence Dassylva-Simard, Hugo De Larochelli�re, Jean-Philippe L. C�t�, and Rosalie Brochu, and to all the rest of my friends in the blogosphere—you know who you are.

1. Mario Asselin, "Weblogging at the Institut St-Joseph," Mario tout de go, September 1, 2003, .

2. Visit the Institut St-Joseph public spaces online at or .

3. Asselin, "Weblogging at the Institut St-Joseph."

4. Mario Asselin, e-mail to the author, March 25, 2004.

5. See Amanda Lenhart, John Horrigan, and Deborah Fallows, "Content Creation Online," Pew Internet & American Life Project, February 29, 2004, ; and "Content Creation Online," Pew Internet & American Life Project press release, February 29, 2004, .

6. Will Richardson, "Blogging and RSS—The �What�s It?� and �How To� of Powerful New Web Tools for Educators," Information Today, January/February 2004, .

7. Bernie Dodge, "Birth of 28 New Bloggers," One-Trick CyberPony, January 20, 2004, , cited in the Educational Bloggers Network: .

8. This short history and the quotation come from Rebecca Blood, "Weblogs: A History and Perspective," Rebecca�s Pocket, September 7, 2000, .

9. Charles Cooper, "When Blogging Came of Age," CNET News.com, September 21, 2001, .

10. Jorn Barger, "Weblog Resources FAQ," Robot Wisdom, September 1999, .

11. Simon Firth, "Baring Your Soul to the Web," Salon, July 3, 1998, .

12. Catherine Seipp, "Online Uprising," American Journalism Review, June 2002, .

13. Meg Hourihan, "What We�re Doing When We Blog," O�Reilly Web Devcenter, June 13, 2002, .

14. Henry Farrell, "The Street Finds Its Own Use for Things," Crooked Timber, September 15, 2003, .

15. Rick Effland, "The Treasure Fleet of Zheng He," Rick Effland Blog, April 4, 2004, .

16. Alexander Halavais, "Media Law" course website, February 17, 2004, .

17. Mireille Guay, e-mail to the author, March 26, 2004.

18. Farrell, "The Street Finds Its Own Uses."

19. Lane Dunlop, comment, Crooked Timber, September 18, 2003, .

20. Sebastian Fiedler, symposium leader, "Introducing Disruptive Technologies for Learning: Personal Webpublishing and Weblogs," Ed-Media Meeting, June 24, 2004, .

21. Jay Cross, "Blogs," Learning Circuits, April 2002, .

22. Dan Gillmor, "Google Buys Pyra: Blogging Goes Big-Time," SiliconValley.com, February 15, 2003, .

23. Todd Bingham, e-mail to the author, April 14, 2004. See also S�bastien Paquet, "Weblogs Enter New Brunswick School," Seb�s Open Research, April 16, 2004, .

24. Mena Trott, "It�s About Time," Mena�s Corner, May 13, 2004, Six Apart Web site, ; Mark Pilgrim, "Freedom 0," Dive Into Mark, May 14, 2004, ; Mena Trott, "Announcing Pricing and Licensing Changes to Movable Type," Six Log, June 15, 2004, Six Apart Web site, .

25. "Radio UserLand v8.0.8," PC World, July 6, 2004, .

26. Beth Potier, "Berkman Center Fellow Dave Winer Wants to Get Harvard Blogging," Harvard Gazette, April 17, 2003, .

27. John Harvard�s Journal, "Creating Community, On-line and Off," Harvard Magazine, vol. 106, no. 3 (January-February 2004), .

28. Lisa Kim Bach, "Internet Diaries: School Discipline Questioned," Las Vegas Review-Journal, November 10, 2003, ; "Miss. School Suspends Student for Calling Teacher �Perverted� in Online Journal," Student Press Law Center, January 29, 2004, .

29. Mario Asselin, quoting the student, e-mail to the author, March 25, 2004.

30. George Siemens, "The Art of Blogging—Part 1," elearnspace, December 1, 2002, .

31. Mario Asselin, e-mail to the author, March 25, 2004.

32. Mark Pilgrim, "Write," Dive Into Mark, October 1, 2001 (no longer extant); "The Weblog Manifesto," Talking Moose, September 29, 2001, .

33. Richard Long, "Back from San Antonio," 2River, March 28, 2004, .

34. Will Richardson, "The Blogging in Schools Question," Weblogg-Ed, April 13, 2004, .

35. Matt, "Circle Limit II," Walky Talky, September 25, 2003, .

36. Will Richardson, "Metablognition," Weblogg-Ed, April 27, 2004, .

37. Ken Smith, "CCCC Waves and Ripples," Weblogs in Higher Education, March 30, 2004, .

38. Will Richardson, "Reading and Blogging," Weblogg-Ed, March 31, 2004, ; Smith, "CCCC Waves and Ripples."

39. Jeremy Hiebert, e-mail to the author, April 22, 2004.

40. Will Richardson, e-mail to the author, April 27, 2004.

Reader Submitted Comments
Reference link error
Su-Tuan Lulee, Consultant
2/5/06 10:47 PM
In article, the author stated, "Major international hosting services include FarsiBlogs, for Iranian writers, and BlogsCN, for Chinese contributors". I supposed that "BlogsCN" should be "BlogCN" that refers to the website "http://www.blogcn.com/".

-- A student of Distance Education Program, University of Wisconsin, and a faithful reader of Mr. Stephen Dawn

test
Matt Pasiewicz, Content Program Manager, EDUCAUSE
4/18/06 9:52 AM
test


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Friday, September 14, 2007

On Blogging

Time to check: Are you using the right blogging tool?
Blogs are one of the hottest publishing tools around, but picking blog software can be confusing and frustrating. Use this primer to get a feel for what's available and what will work best for you.
By Susannah Gardner
Posted: 2005-07-14
Related link: Which tool does what? A blog software comparison chart
"Blogs Will Change Your Business" declared the front cover of the May 2, 2005 Business Week. Without question, the Web publishing format is gaining popularity as a legitimate business and marketing tool. Technologically savvy businesses are using blogs, or weblogs, to build relationships with their customers by sharing information, corporate culture and expertise. Technologically savvy publishers, from the New York Times to freelancers, are also jumping into the medium.
Journalists (or would-be journalists, depending on whom you talk to) find blogs are an ideal format for handling breaking news situations and commentary or columns. The Los Angeles Times, for instance, maintains a local breaking news blog that keeps readers abreast of current stories with local significance.
But before the fun of posting about earthquakes or political squabbles can start, every new blog publisher faces the problem of selecting, installing and configuring blog software. The array of possible options and configurations varies widely. While all blog software involves a learning curve, the amount of customization possible means that selecting the right software is important for a quicker, easier start.
There are two kinds of blog software available to the hopeful blog publisher. The first is hosted blog software. A hosted blog is one where all data and the publishing interface reside on the server of the blogging software company. The alternative is independent blog software that must be downloaded from the blogging software company and installed on a Web server. There are pluses and minuses to both. Your decision may be influenced by everything from how fast you need to get your blog up to how much control you want to have over the final design.
In both cases, the blog is set up and controlled by a database that handles the posts and the way they may be sliced and diced for display. Nearly all blog software stores your posts in a database, which permits handy things like searching and archiving.
Your blog's appearance and layout is usually controlled by a set of templates that includes information about things like the background color and logo placement, as well as the formatting information for how many posts are displayed on the front page. The power of databased content and templates working together has produced the Weblog phenomenon – easily updated Web sites that usually display updated content from most to least recent, along with reader comments and feedback.
Blogging jargon
Whichever blog software package you chose, there are a few technical options you may want to look for. Here's a short glossary of blog technology:
Post: Every time you put an update on your blog, you create a post. In typical computer jargon fashion, this noun can also be used as a verb: You can post to your blog. Posts are also sometimes called entries.
Comments: Blogs are often referred to as conversations, and it's the ability of your readers to leave comments on each post you make to your blog that creates the feel of a conversation. Comments are usually time-stamped and identified by the author’s name and perhaps a link to their Web site or blog. On some blogs, comments are threaded so that readers can comment on other comments, but on most blogs comments are simply displayed chronologically.
Comment spam: Sad to say, spam is a problem on blogs just as it is in email. Comment spam, as you would expect, is left in the comments of a blog. It usually includes a few words and a link to a Web site. The point for the spammer is to get as many links as possible to the Web site, giving it higher search engine rankings.
Categories: Categories permit a blogger to subdivide content, putting posts about politics into one basket and posts about celebrities in another. Categorization helps readers read only what they are most interested in and is a good tool for those scanning a blog's archives.
Trackbacks: Trackback technology helps bloggers link back to other posts on related subjects. Functionally it's a little complicated: If you're posting about something you've seen on another blog, look for the Trackback URL. Paste that URL into the allotted spot in your own blogging software, and the two pieces of blog software will communicate, building a link from the original post to yours (without the other blogger having to life a finger).
Trackback spam: Like comment spam, but done via Trackback.
Pings: There are several blogging tracking Web sites where you can search for other blogs and look for recent posts. If your blog software allows you to ping those sites when you post, that post gets included in the ping site's index, potentially increasing your traffic.
RSS/Atom feeds: In the blogosphere, syndication is a big deal. With millions of blogs to read, many consumers use news aggregators, or readers, to pull in posts and read them, rather than visiting 150 blogs every day. RSS and Atom are two flavors of blog syndication.
Blogroll/lists: Ever noticed those long lists of other blogs alongside the posts in a blog? That's a blogroll, a list of the blogs read by the blogger whose site you are on. Sometimes lists are also kept to recommend books and other media, as well.
News aggregation: Many blog software packages allow you to pull in and display the RSS or Atom feed of another blog. This is useful if you want to create a site with constantly updated content fed by blogs. For example, a blogger who posts about politics could pull in the feeds of other political blogs.
Moblogging: Moblogging is the short form of "mobile blogging." Lots of blog software lets you post by e-mail from your phone, PDA, or anything else that allows you to send e-mails.
Blacklist: Blacklists are usually lists of URLs that have been identified as spam URLs, and that are therefore eliminated from comments and Trackbacks on your blog. With most blog software, the software company builds and maintains a common blacklist for all users to which individuals can contribute.
Captchas: Captchas are an additional security feature for commenting and user registration. By providing an image that includes letters and numbers, and by requiring the user to type in those letters and numbers, blog software can eliminate some of the comment and Trackback spam produced by robot programs.
URL Redirection: In an effort to render comment and Trackback spam ineffective, links included in comments and Trackbacks are tagged with the NOFOLLOW tag, which indicates to search engines that it shouldn't be counted when tallying search engine rankings for a Web site.
Skins: Most blog software includes a set of pre-designed templates that give the blog a certain look and feel. These are called skins.
Post scheduling: Some blog software allows you to write posts and schedule them to be published at some point in the future. This is handy for vacations and holidays.
Bookmarklets: A bookmarklet is a link directly to the new post page of your blog software. If you add this small Javascript to your browser toolbar, it's a shortcut to posting quickly.
The tools
This chart reflects the features and options configurable in the default installation of each software application. In some cases additional modules and plug-ins can add functionality that is not available in the default installation.
BloggerBlogger is a free, hosted blogging tool. It's one of the oldest blogging tools around and today has millions of users. Blogger promises that you will be blogging within 10 minutes of coming to the site, and in fact does deliver on that. This tool is about the simplest one around, and though free, nonetheless has an impressive array of features.
The biggest hole in Blogger's offerings is the lack of post categorization, followed closely by the need to know HTML and Cascading Style Sheets to make custom changes to the templates provided. Unlike some of the most complex hosted services, Blogger doesn't make customization easy, though it does provide some attractive skins to choose from.
One unusual feature of Blogger is the integration with the Audioblogger service. Program the Audioblogger number into your phone, and you can put audio recordings on your blog quickly by simply calling the number and recording yourself. This offering is unique among blog software packages.
Of special note is that Blogger does allow you to FTP the files generated for your blog to your own Web site. Used together with customization of the Blogger template, this fairly unique functionality means that your readers may never realize that you are using Blogger. It also means that you can publicize your own domain name, rather than the more usual Blogger URL: blogname.blogspot.com.
Blogger is perfect for the future blogger who’s in a hurry and less than interested in design customization. If your priority is to start blogging now, you can't do better than Blogger. Clearly, it's also a great tool for those on a budget, since there are absolutely no costs. In fact, you need not even have a Web site or a domain name, so you can literally get started using Blogger without spending a penny.
Very few professional Bloggers stick with Blogger for very long, if they even start there. Because it is so simple, and perhaps because it is free, most professional bloggers choose to use blogging software that has more prestige (read: is harder to set up and install). However, it is an ideal tool to use when first beginning, especially if you want to test blog for a couple of weeks before devoting any serious time or money to a blog.
Cost: NothingTime to launch: 10 minutes
TypepadTypepad is one of Six Apart's hosted half blogging software services (read about Movable Type below) and one that has proved very popular with journalistic blogging efforts. Jim Romenesko uses Typepad for his Obscure Store blog; Joel Achenbach of the Washington Post writes Achenblog using Typepad.
The Typepad pricing scheme and features are divided into three levels: Basic, Plus, and Pro. Design customization is extremely limited at the Basic level and only fully accessible at the Pro level. If you want to run a group blog, or give some people editor access and others publishing access, you must go with the Pro account.
At all account levels, Typepad has a built-in feature called Typelists that allows you to build lists, associating each item with a URL. These lists can be added with a minimum of fuss to the left- or right-hand column of your blog – no need to touch the templates. Use a Typelist for your current reading list, links to other blogs, or links to new stories.
In some ways, it is actually more usable than its elder brother Movable Type. Typepad is a good option for users who want to get started quickly but still want all the bells and whistles. Customization is possible, but complicated, so it's also a good option for those who just want a blog that works without fussing too much over how it looks. However, Typepad Plus and Pro do a better job than most blog software at allowing you to configure layout options without having to go into the templates.
Cost: $4.95 - $14.95 monthly, depending on level of service chosenFree trial: 30 daysTime to launch: 20 minutes
BlogwareTucows is the creator of the Blogware blog software package, a robust system with a great selection of the top blogging tools. Blogware, like Typepad, can be difficult to customize, even for an experienced HTML jockey. However, it also provides a fair number of options within the administration interface to let you set up layouts and styles without getting into the templates.
Purchasing a Blogware blog is a little different than some of the other blogging software packages; you must get your Blogware blog through a reseller, so expect prices and packages to vary. It's a good idea to shop around to get the best package for your needs. A good reseller to start with is Blog Harbor.
It's unusual – and useful – that Blogware permits you to upload files via FTP to the server where your blog is hosted. If you're looking to create a blog that has a few non-blog pages, this is especially helpful.
Cost: varies by reseller, but expect to pay from $8-$15 a monthFree trial: usually offered for 30 daysTime to launch: 20 minutes
WordPressWordPress is a solid, powerful blogging system ideal for publishers who are on a budget but who don't want to give up any functionality. Professional blogger Darren Rowse maintains nearly 30 blogs using WordPress, from his popular ProBlogger to an Athens Olympics Blog. In two weeks the Athens blog received close to 2 million readers, said Rowse – a real testament to WordPress' ability to handle heavy traffic loads.
Each WordPress post is formatted with search engine friendly URLs that also look good to humans. Comments can be extensively moderated: you can review them before they go live. You can also filter comments containing certain words or more than a certain number of links.
WordPress' built-in blogroll management tool allows you to categorize blogs, set criteria for the display order of the links, and turn off and on visibility. You can also import an existing blogroll from some link manager services.
This software has inspired numerous developers to write plugins and extra features for use with WordPress, which makes plugin installation a quick and painless affair. You will find that the selection of additional themes (or skins), for instance, numbers in the hundreds, and that WordPress fans and friends have developed tools for adding photo galleries, a music player, an event calendar, and even geo mapping.
WordPress promises a 5-minute installation, but for that to be true you do have to have some familiarity with uploading files to a Web server and using an FTP client.
Cost: FreeTime to launch: 20 minutes
Movable TypeMovable Type, created by Six Apart, is perhaps the best known of all blogging software tools. Built by a husband and wife team looking for a better tool for blogging, the system is powerful, but not simple to install or use. Although it has been used to create Web sites that don't look entirely like blogs, doing so requires quite a bit of code tweaking. Movable Type is used by blogger Joshua Micah Marshall to create Talking Points Memo, and by Kevin Roderick who writes the L.A. Observed blog.
As a blogging tool alone, Movable Type has nearly every feature you might desire, and continues to add more. Many of their users are highly technical themselves, and have created additional plug-ins that can be added to the standard installation. You might say that Movable Type is the blogging package chosen by bloggers who care what other bloggers think, and who notice and appreciate other Movable Type blogs. If you are looking for street "cred" in the blogosphere, this is the software for you.
The least attractive functionality of Movable Type is the need to rebuild the blog whenever you make a change to a template, a configuration setting, or add a new category. Waiting for the rebuild is annoying, to say the least, and certainly slows down any customization work you do to the design or layout. This can be addressed by turning on dynamic page-building, but some users have found that the server load that occurs as a result is unacceptable to their Web host.
For the non-technically inclined, installation of this software can be quite a challenge. Don't attempt it all if you aren't already comfortable with uploading and downloading files to a Web server. There are several Web hosts that offer Movable Type installation as part of their package of services.
There is no trial period for Movable Type, but there is a free version of the software that you can download and install. The paid license entitles you to support, some promotion, and discounts on future upgrades.
Cost: MT's pricing scheme is fairly complex. Personal users will pay at least $69.95. Commercial users pay at least $199.95.Time to launch: 2 hours
Expression EnginepMachine's Expression Engine isn't well-known, but that shouldn't stop you from giving this powerful and extensible software a try. It is technically more accurate to call Expression Engine a content management system, rather than just a blogging software tool. However, it grew out of blogging and has all of the blogging bells and whistles: moblogging, Trackbacks, archiving and so on. Dennis Lloyd uses it for the independent information resource iPodlounge.
In addition to the usual set of blogging functionality, Expression Engine has incorporated modules for image galleries and a mailing list. Uniquely, you can crop, resize, and rotate images in the Expression Engine photo gallery tool, in addition to batch processing a set of images. The people and search engine friendly URLs the system generates are of particular interest to bloggers looking for good search engine listings. You can run multiple Weblogs through the same installation of Expression Engine, and each "new post" page can be customized exactly to fit the use. Most blog software limits you to title, entry, extended entry, and excerpt fields. With EE, you can rename those to suit your publication and add more as needed.
Templates are editable online through a simple textbox interface, but you can set up the system to generate files you can download and edit with an HTML editor. Learning how information relates and how to link across the site is a challenge: expect to spend several hours learning how to use this system. Your reward will be incredible flexibility in building a site that has constant updating needs, blog or not.
Expression Engine is ideal for publishers that need to do more than just blogging; this system is ideal for handling hundreds of members, multiple user groups with different editing privileges, and sites with several blogs. Technically speaking, it's not for the faint of heart.
Cost: $149 for a non-commercial license, $199 for a commercial licenseFree trial: 14 days if installed on your own server, 30 days with a hosted versionTime to launch: 2 hours
Related link: Which tool does what? A blog software comparison chart
Links to this article: Technorati, Yahoo
Comments:
From weldon berger on July 14, 2005 at 11:52 PM I use WordPress and am completely enamored of it. It really did take only a few minutes to install and get rolling, plus a few minutes to install two plugins that have completely eliminated comment and trackback spam. The program accomodates multiple authors with different levels of access, there are literally hundreds of designs available (many of which look better than the one I spent several days designing) and, as the article says, offers hundreds of third-party plugins that do everything from creating an Amazon product gallery to putting a welcoming tune on your site.
The most recent version also allows for the creation of things such as photo galleries.
And no, I'm not getting paid for this.
From Andy Skelton on July 15, 2005 at 8:55 AM I am also a WordPress user and I am in love with my blogging tool. It was good when I was a beginner and it's even better now that I know how to write plugins and customize themes. My first blog was created with Blogger and I was able to migrate all of my old posts and comments into my new WordPress blog.
From Aaron Brazell on July 15, 2005 at 12:50 PM It's a mostly good article. Couple of points I'd like to make though.
1. MoveableType is not only hard to install, it is hard to use as well.
2. WordPress, as well as MT, has quite a bit of functionality inclolved that would allow it to power non-blog sites as well. Trust me. I do it all the time. In fact, I have a WP package I use with already preset options and I use that package as a jumping off point for many non-blog sites.
3. Neither WordPress, nor any other software, uses search engine friendly URLs by default. All use Apache's mod_rewrite directives to create those URLs and this functionality has more to do with the server than the software. If you use WordPress on Windows, you will not get friendly URLs without pulling teeth.
From Jon Garfunkel on July 15, 2005 at 3:04 PM The OJR blogging review is a good chart of blogging tools, but it is lacking any mention of CMS software. Some of them have some pretty goodreferences:
Scoop is used by Daily Kos and TPMCafe
Drupal is used by Personal Democracy Forum, Bayosphere (of SF),Universal Hub (of Boston)
Drupal's URLs are also very search-engine friendly; they can be made as simple as Wiki-style. Scoop runs on Perl; Drupal runs on PHP; both are open source.
It's too bad. I would argue that anyone who wants get into online publishing would be much better served by tools which do not only bloggingas one aspect, but do many other things as well. If one chooses blogging software, they're going to be stuck in certain mindsets about having to do "blogging"-- when in reality they may want to do community publishing and other services. I'll give credit to Aaron for explaining that WordPress can do non-blogging publishing. That said, the article should have mentioned the community publishing tools that also happen to do blogging (and also happen to be free).
From Sally Falkow on July 16, 2005 at 7:32 AM On an enterprise level Blogsite works wonders. It was originally developed as an internal knowledge management tool. It has excellent RSS Newsmastering capabilities and business intelligence and monitoring functions.
Sally Falkowhttp://falkow.blogsite.com
From Frank Gruber on July 16, 2005 at 11:39 AM This is an excellent analysis of the different weblog platforms currently available. I mentioned it in my post titled "Blog Platform Option Analysis" on my website: http://www.SomewhatFrank.com
Check it out if you get a chance.
Thanks,Frank GruberSomewhatfrank.com
From Al Hill on July 16, 2005 at 12:52 PM Have any of you tried ModBlog .. when people that have never used editing software ask me how they can set up a blog I point them to ModBlog ...
From Billy Jones on July 17, 2005 at 7:53 PM I spent three months trying out various blogging tools (probably at least 30) before finally moving my blogs BloggingPoet.com and LaureatesKids.com to Squarespace. I have never been more pleased. Squarespace has all the features you mentioned and more... far more. Squarespace can also be used to build regular websites and anything can be moved simply by clicking and dragging it to a new location. It requires NO coding skills and has more whistles and bells than you'll ever need.
On top of all that, Anthony-- the dude who invented Squarespace-- handles tech support and is available to his customers. Try getting a hold of the guys who run most blogging companies.
In the interest of full disclosure: The Squarespace link I provided is a referral link. You see, Squarespace pays one month's hosting for anyone referred by me. I'm sold on Squarespace.
From Irnis Haliullin on July 17, 2005 at 10:40 PM Another great blogging software - boastMachine from http://boastology.com/
From Dan Hollings on July 18, 2005 at 8:32 AM It's interesting to note that there are many blogging platforms and thus many choices for the serious blogger to consider. What might take this analysis to the next level is the phenomena of 'multi-blogging.' There are many people, businesses and even celebrities that are starting to run more than one blog. Typically it is because they want to focus on very different topics for a varied audience; or maintain 'media type' blogs where one might for text/content blogging while another is for podcasting and a third might be for photo-blogging. Yet the variety that will likely appeal to most, is multi-blogging 'similar-topic' original content to multiple target audiences. This variety allows a content publisher or author to compose one content stream (like perhaps, weekly articles on a topic of broad interest) and then have a 'rules-based' software help target and personalize that content stream for many different niche audiences.
Perhaps it sounds complicated, but the best analogy for multi-blogging is 'blogging ala newsletter style.' We all are familiar with newsletter programs that allow the author/publisher to generate one newsletter (perhaps weekly) and as the newsletter goes out each week, the software personalizes the content to each subscribing reader. Most newsletter software programs can do much more personalization and targeting than the publisher employs, yet even in it's most common usage, you have a publisher writing ONE content stream and that content is targeted to its readership.
If any of the above made sense to you, you're likely thinking now... what software will do this for the potential multi-blogger? I know of only two ways to achieve this at the moment and below are my recommendations:
1) You can set-up multiple blogs at most major blog providers. For example, Blogger.com allows (according to their FAQ) "unlimited blogs." Most blog providers also provide the ability to email posts into their system for instant blog entry. For example, Blogger.com gives you a unique personal email address (for each blog) that a blogger can email content to. With this in mind, a multi-blogger could use any newsletter emailing program that has HTML sending capabilities and allows for 'variable' substitutions (you know, where you can do things like: Dear %%fname%% %%lname%%, and have the newsletter software substitute targeted content for the %%variables%%).
This approach is a bit limiting and cumbersome, but it works well. You can now enter all your unique blog emails into the newsletter program (as if they were subscribers) and set up targeted variables associated with each of your multiple blogs. Now, each week (or whenever you post) you enter your original blog content (like it were a newsletter) into the program, set-up variables to personalize each email and click the send button.
Amazing but true, all your 'subscribers' (that is, all your blogs) get personalized emails with you blog content ready to post. In fact, most blogs will post this instantly and you're off to the multi-blogging races.
2) The better method for those wanting more control and less 'jerryrigging' is to use software built specifically for multi-blogging. Currently, I only know of one such software. It's called Blog-zilla, and can be found at, www.Blog-zilla.com There is a news story on this software here: http://www.prweb.com/releases/2005/7/prweb260055.php
Some feel the promotional style used in marketing this software attracts the wrong type (content thieves, plagiarist, and cheats), but without question, it is NOT for those type, quite the contrary. In fact, subscribers to this web-based multi-blogging software are screened, trained and monitored. Blog-zilla eats spammers for lunch :-)
For those wondering how I know so much about all this multi-blogging. Well, let's put it this way... I'm Dan Hollings, Blog-zilla's Zookeeper!
Happy multi-blogging.
From L D on July 18, 2005 at 1:12 PM I am a "multi-blogger". I have three blogs on TypePad (one general blog [current events, sports, books, movies], one photoblog, one parenting blog), a work-related one on Blogger, and another group-authored blog on Blogger as well. One reason to have multiple blogs is to separate your work life and interests from your personal life.
If you have outgrown Blogger, I'd recommend TypePad heartily. Happy blogging!
From C H on July 19, 2005 at 5:05 AM I use Nucleus CMS for my blog (Rumors and Musings. (http://blog.rumor.net).
I have used MT and Blogger in the past, and Nucleus is much more extensible, supports multiple blogs, and of course... is free.
Nucleus is written in PHP, and uses MySQL as it's backend.
From Howard Liptzin on July 19, 2005 at 6:29 AM I agree that the article is a great overview for someone new to blogging, but there are other solutions missing from the list, as has been pointed out.
Another blogging platform (based on a Drupal engine, but highly customized) that's worth checking out is Mo'time. Disclaimer: I'm the project leader of Mo'time.
I won't go into the whole spiel, but would simply say it's very user-friendly, yet integrates advanced features as instant messaging and folksonomies into the platform. I invite the multi-blogger that lives within you to have a look. Oh, it's free.
From Susan Kitchens on July 20, 2005 at 12:23 PM A quick correction on your Weblog Software comparison chart. Expression Engine *is* capable of working with Bookmarklets. Your chart currently says "no" for that item.
From tom sherman on July 21, 2005 at 5:59 PM The "street cred" for a blogging tool would come with Drupal or WordPress. Owing to its great popularity, there are certainly plenty of n00bs who run Movable Type. In reality, a small number of plugin writers support a larger number of beginner and intermediate users on MT.