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CONTENTS

  1. Atom
  2. Audioblogging
  3. Blog Carnival
  4. Blogcast
  5. Blog feed
  6. Blog fiction
  7. Blogger.com
  8. Bloggies
  9. Blogosphere
  10. Blogroll
  11. Blog software
  12. Citizen journalism
  13. Collaborative blog
  14. Community Server
  15. Content Management System
  16. Corporate blog
  17. Dooce
  18. Edublog
  19. Electronic literature
  20. Escribitionist
  21. Facebook
  22. Flaming
  23. Forum moderator
  24. Fotolog
  25. GNU General Public License
  26. Google bomb
  27. Google Reader
  28. Inauthentic Text
  29. International Weblogger's Day
  30. Internet Troll
  31. Linkback
  32. Link rot
  33. List of blogging terms
  34. LiveJournal
  35. Massively distributed collaboration
  36. Micropatronage
  37. Moblog
  38. Moderation system
  39. Movable Type
  40. MySpace
  41. MySQL
  42. News aggregator
  43. Online diary
  44. OPML
  45. PageRank
  46. Permalink
  47. Personal journal
  48. Photoblog
  49. Pingback
  50. Ping-server
  51. Podcasting
  52. Political blog
  53. Project blog
  54. Rating community
  55. Reputation management
  56. Reputation system
  57. RSS
  58. Social media
  59. Spam blog
  60. Spamdexing
  61. Spam in blogs
  62. Sping
  63. Technorati
  64. TrackBack
  65. User generated content
  66. Virtual Community
  67. Vlog
  68. Weblog
  69. Windows Live Spaces
  70. WordPress.com
  71. Wordpress
  72. Yahoo 360°
  73. YouTube

 

 



THE BOOK OF BLOGS
This article is from:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blogosphere

All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_the_GNU_Free_Documentation_License 

Blogosphere

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

 

Blogosphere is the collective term encompassing all blogs as a community or social network.

The notion of a blogosphere is an important one for understanding blogs. Blogs by themselves are simply the published text of an author's thoughts, but the authors read and comment on others' blogs, link to them and cite them. These relationships between blogs compromise a shifting Internet-wide social and cultural network.

Contents

  • 1 History
  • 2 Tracking
  • 3 References
  • 4 See also
  • 5 External links

History

The term blogosphere was coined on September 10, 1999 by Brad L. Graham, as a joke.[1] It was re-coined in 2002 by William Quick,[2] and was quickly adopted and propagated by the warblog community. The term resembles the older word "logosphere" (from Greek logos meaning word, and sphere, interpreted as world), the "the world of words," the universe of discourse. It also resembles the term "noosphere" (Greek nous meaning mind).

As of 2007, some people still treat the term blogosphere as a joke; however, National Public Radio's programs Morning Edition, Day To Day, and All Things Considered have used the term several times to discuss public opinion. A number of media outlets in recent years have started treating the blogosphere as a gauge of public opinion, and it has been cited in both academic and non-academic work as evidence of rising or falling resistance to globalization, voter fatigue, and many other phenomena. [3]

Tracking

Sites such as Technorati, Blogdex (as of March, 2007, site is currently being "rethought"), Bloglines, Blogrunner, Blog Street, BlogsNow, PubSub, and Truth Laid Bear use the links made by bloggers to track the interconnections between bloggers. Taking advantage of hypertext links which act as markers for the subjects the bloggers are discussing, these sites can follow a piece of conversation as it moves from blog to blog. These also can help information researchers study how fast a meme spreads through the blogosphere, in order to determine which sites are the most important for gaining early recognition.

References

  1. ^ http://www.bradlands.com/weblog/1999-09.shtml#September%2010,%201999
  2. ^ http://www.iw3p.com/DailyPundit/2001_12_30_dailypundit_archive.php#8315120
  3. ^ Blogosphere: The new political arena, Michael Keren, 2006.

See also

  • Bloggernacle
  • Israel Blogosphere
  • Canadian blogosphere
  • J-Blogosphere
  • New Zealand blogosphere
  • Group Blogging

External links

Look up Blogosphere in
Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
  • Article on growth of the blogosphere
  • The Chinese blogosphere and the Persian blogosphere at Wanabehuman
  • State of the Blogosphere, April 2006 by Dave Sifry: Part 1: On Blogosphere Growth, Part 2: On Language and Tagging
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blogosphere"

 


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