Post by account_disabled on Dec 2, 2023 2:21:01 GMT -6
There are comments that surprise, in a certain sense, and that push me to write, to delve deeper into the topic, because reading other people's blogs and commenting is not only knowledge and comment marketing, but also that strategic carpe diem which in online communication cannot to miss. We must be quick to create content , I talked about it the other day. Content marketing also requires immediacy. And be careful. Lots of attention to what is said beyond the walls of our blog. The history of blogging comes to our aid But let's get back to us and the question of the usefulness of comments in a blog .
If we look at the etymology of the term blog, this untranslatable word is only a sort of abbreviation of weblog (a word invented by Jorn Barger in December '97), i.e. web+log . It was Peter Merholz who pronounced Phone Number Data weblog as if it were a verb form: we blog , we blog. This is where the blog was born. A diary on the web. But a particular diary. And now let's see why. Blogging has transformed web users Rebecca Blood wrote in September 2000 that she believed in the power of blogs to transform writers and readers from what she called audience - a group of people who receive information but do not act on it (passive) - to public - a group of people who instead choose to do of changes towards that (active) information and to transform them from simple consumers to creators.
And history has proven her right, because thanks to blogging we have all become, both bloggers and readers, creators of content . We no longer consume information, but create it, even from scratch. Blogs are not a panacea for the disabling effects of a saturated media culture, but I believe they are an antidote. Rebecca Blood And a strong antidote, too. The blog has given rise to a real online conversation between people, which already existed in newsgroups and forums, of course, but we know very well that in those places it is quite difficult to create empathy and real interaction. What's the point of a blog if not for people to learn about each other? The comments in the blogs were perhaps the real revolution of a system which, even if it was in its infancy like the internet, needed to modernize itself.
If we look at the etymology of the term blog, this untranslatable word is only a sort of abbreviation of weblog (a word invented by Jorn Barger in December '97), i.e. web+log . It was Peter Merholz who pronounced Phone Number Data weblog as if it were a verb form: we blog , we blog. This is where the blog was born. A diary on the web. But a particular diary. And now let's see why. Blogging has transformed web users Rebecca Blood wrote in September 2000 that she believed in the power of blogs to transform writers and readers from what she called audience - a group of people who receive information but do not act on it (passive) - to public - a group of people who instead choose to do of changes towards that (active) information and to transform them from simple consumers to creators.
And history has proven her right, because thanks to blogging we have all become, both bloggers and readers, creators of content . We no longer consume information, but create it, even from scratch. Blogs are not a panacea for the disabling effects of a saturated media culture, but I believe they are an antidote. Rebecca Blood And a strong antidote, too. The blog has given rise to a real online conversation between people, which already existed in newsgroups and forums, of course, but we know very well that in those places it is quite difficult to create empathy and real interaction. What's the point of a blog if not for people to learn about each other? The comments in the blogs were perhaps the real revolution of a system which, even if it was in its infancy like the internet, needed to modernize itself.