Yes, yes, we get the irony. Weâre writing a book about blogs. Where is the comments section? Where are the links? By the time youâre thumbing through this at the bookstore several months will have transpired since we wrote these words. With no comments from readers. Or updates.
But believe it or not, a book about blogging fits neatly into this juncture in communication history. You see, printed books themselves were once a rather revolutionary idea. Six hundred years ago, if people wanted to share ideas, they had few options. We could shout our complaints from the barn rafters. Maybe a few chickens would hear us. We could scrawl or draw our musings and post them in the town squareâbut soon the elements would take their toll. Documents were preserved, of courseâmedieval monks specialized in hand-copying important textsâbut to justify years of a monkâs time, these documents had to be privileged indeed. Few normal people could spare five years to hand-write their stories.
Then, in mid-fifteenth-century Germany, printer Johannes Gutenberg happened upon a discovery: By creating type pieces out of metalâknown as movable typeâand arranging them to form words, you could make multiple copies of a document far faster than a monk could write. Gutenbergâs most famous creation was the Gutenberg Bible, but before long, people were using movable type to print science books, political commentaries, and other works that fundamentally changed the world.
Fast-forward to 2001. Somewhere in California, a twentysomething woman named Mena Trott, laid off from her dot-com job, started keeping an online diary of her life. She called it Dollar Short (as in a day late and aâŚ). She wasnât happy with the available online publishing tools. So she and her husband, Ben, decided to create their own. On October 8, 2001, they released their contribution to the nascent blogging software industry. You could download it free of charge (though donations to the Trott rent fund were certainly welcome). With a wink at the past, they called the software Movable Type.
So there you have the blog/book connection: from movable type, to books, to books on Movable Type. Is blogging as big a revolution as what Gutenberg started? Only time will tell. But since we at The Huffington Post like to report on news and history in the making, weâd like to help you, dear reader, get started on making some history of your own.
What Is a Blog?
A blog at its most fundamental level is simply a âweb log.â That is, a regularly updated account of events or ideas posted on the web.
But calling blogs mere updated web diaries is a bit like calling poetry a pleasant arrangement of words on a page. There is an art to this. Those of us who work at HuffPost believe we are fortunate enough to be present at the advent of a new form of human communicationâone that is more interactive, more democratic, and just more fun than what has come before.
Blogs can bring down a Senate majority leader. They can show what a presidential candidate talks about in unguarded moments. They can provide stay-at-home parents with a little space to rant about the tragedy of colic (or maybe share updates on a local environmental issueâand Brad Pittâduring naps). They cut out the gatekeepers of information and shorten the news cycle. They give companies new ways to communicate with customers and shareholdersâand give customers and shareholders new ways to make their voices heard. Blogging gives you a feeling of satisfaction that writing a letter to the editor, or a letter to the âcustomer careâ department of a corporation, cannot match. The public nature of blogs means that any of the billion people on this planet who own or have access to a computer can read what any of the rest of us is saying. Thatâs true even if what weâre saying is about a niche (for instance, issues germane to the mini off-road buggy community) that in the past would have gotten us labeled as freaks. In fact, because the potential audience is so huge, there is space for just about every topic you can imagine. As we link to each other, the marketplace of ideas sorts out who is worth listening to and who is not. A congressmanâs statement on an issue does not necessarily take precedence over a constituentâs, the way it often does in a traditional news story.
It is this mix of the high and low, the personal and the political, that makes blogs so fascinating and so important in an open society. When we launched HuffPost in 2005, we knew we liked blogs, but even we underestimated how head over heels weâd fall. âBlogging is definitely the most interesting thing Iâve done as a writer, and Iâve been writing full-time since the late seventies,â Carol Felsenthal, author of Clinton in Exile: A President Out of the White House and a HuffPost blogger, tells us. âI used to walk my dog, Henry, first thing in the morning. Now Iâm often at my computer writing a post while Henry looks at me and wonders what happened to the good old days when his owner was compulsive but not hyper-compulsive.â
Itâs the informality and the immediacy that make blogging addictive for many of us. No editor stands between us and the public. This leads to a lot of rumors and other fluff going up on the web. But itâs also enormously liberating. You can put all kinds of ideas out there. âMy thoughts donât all have to be fully baked,â says Marci Alboher, who writes the âShifting Careersâ column and blog for The New York Times. She posts an idea and sees what her readers think. âThey help me solve the problem and let me know if Iâm going down the right path. It helps me figure out what the issues are very quickly.â
It is this multidirectional conversationâgiving all of us a platform, expanding the scope of news, and making it a shared enterprise between producers and consumersâthat makes blogs so revolutionary. We have a lot of fun blogging. Weâre writing this book because weâre pretty sure you will too.
The History of Blogs
For all that blogging is changing society, itâs important to remember just how new it is. Remember EliĂĄn GonzĂĄlez, the Cuban boy that the entire country was obsessed with in the spring of 2000? His story had the markings of a blogosphere sensation: memorable photos, passionate opinions on U.S./Cuban policy, a political hot potato for the Clinton administration. But it was only a mainstream media mainstay because the blogosphere as we know it today had not yet evolved. The linking, commenting, and annotating we find commonplace today was still to come.
The term âweblogâ was coined in 1997 by Jorn Barger, the editor of Robot Wisdom (itself a blog, albeit one with some nasty anti-Semitism bopping around on it, so we donât recommend you humor him by visiting the site). The shortened word âblogâ was coined by Adaptive Path founder and former Epinions.com creative director Peter Merholz on his website (peterme.com) in 1999.
The number of blogs was small at first. According to Technorati (a company that conducts a sort of blogging census), the one millionth blog came online in the fall of 2003. At that time, people were creating blogs at a rate of about five thousand to six thousand per day. But the rate soon picked up. The blog total hit four million in the fall of 2004, around the time that blogs really exploded on the national radar screen for their role in the flap about memos related to President Bushâs National Guard service. By that time, twelve thousand new blogs were coming online each day. Like a colony of bacteria, the blogosphere continued to post a quick doubling rate through 2005 (fourteen million blogs in August) and 2006 (fifty-seven million blogs in October). These days, Technorati is tracking 112 million blogs. Web users create approximately fifty thousand new blogs a day. This being the web, about three to seven thousand of these new blogs are nothing but spam, spam, and links to more spam. The rate of doubling has slowed as the blogosphere has matured. But new voices are still coming online in droves.
The demographics of the blogosphere could be the subject of several blog posts in their own right. For instance, in late 2006, the most common language for blogs was actually not English. According to Technorati, it was Japanese (37 percent). English (at the time) was a close second at 36 percent. About 8 percent of blog posts are in Chinese and 1 percent is written in Farsi (the language spoken in Iran and some of the former Soviet republics). According to a 2006 survey from the Pew Internet and American Life Project, more than half of American bloggers (54 percent) are under age thirty. Both men and women blog at equal rates, but bloggers are less likely to be white (60 percent) than other Internet users (74 percent) and more likely to be Hispanic (19 percent vs. 11 percent).
Q&A with Peter Merholz, the âBlog Fatherâ
HUFFPOST: | Why did you start blogging (before it was called that)? |
MERHOLZ: | I started blogging because I wanted to make a name for myself. In 1998, I was a neophyte interaction designer with a lot of ideas. I wanted to get known for my ideas, and, having been a web developer for the prior few years, I had no fear of posting things online. At the job I had at the time, I was known as the guy who sent interesting URLs around on internal mailing lists, and I realized that there was likely a broader audience who would appreciate my efforts. |
HUFFPOST: | How did you think up the word âblogâ? |
MERHOLZ: | There was a word, âweblog,â used to describe the kind of site I was maintaining, with lists of links and annotations of the web. I shifted the syllables from web-log to weblog, and that became âblog.â |
HUFFPOST: | Were you surprised how quickly it caught on? |
MERHOLZ: | Yes. It benefited from the rise of the tool âBlogger,â the first popular technology for maintaining blogs. |
HUFFPOST: | Do you ever get any special treatment for having coined such a popular word? |
MERHOLZ: | Iâve been interviewed for TV and radio [such as NPRâs Morning Edition] because of it, and itâs a great conversation starter, particularly with lexicographers. |
The majority of the 112 million blogs out there will never grab more than a few readers. Thatâs OK; 37 percent of bloggers told the Pew survey that keeping in touch with friends and family was a major reason for blogging, and 52 percent said they blogged mostly for themselves rather than for an audience. On the other hand, the most popular blogsâBoing Boing, Engadget, Gizmodo, TechCrunch, and HuffPostâget millions of unique visitors every month.
To Blog or Not to Blog: Top Ten Reasons Why You Should
- To build a reputation as a wise, thoughtful expert on family values.
- To destroy someone elseâs reputation as a wise, thoughtful expert on family values with one drunken photo from the all-nude male cabaret.
- To entertain the fantasy that a baby-model scout is lo...