[Home]History of Web log

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Revision 14 . . (edit) December 14, 2001 6:15 am by JvaGoddess
Revision 13 . . (edit) November 1, 2001 12:21 pm by Tbc [minor clean-up]
Revision 11 . . November 1, 2001 9:27 am by Laura
  

Difference (from prior major revision) (minor diff, author diff)

Changed: 1c1,3
A web log (also known as a blog, but see below) is a website that tracks headlines and articles from other websites. They are frequently maintained by volunteers and are typically devoted to a specific audience or topic.
A web log (also known as a blog, but see below) is a website that tracks headlines and articles from other websites. They are frequently maintained by volunteers and are typically devoted to a specific audience or topic.

:Weblogs are often-updated sites that point to articles elsewhere on the web, often with comments, and to on-site articles. A weblog is kind of a continual tour, with a human guide who you get to know. There are many guides to choose from, each develops an audience, and there's also comraderie and politics between the people who run weblogs, they point to each other, in all kinds of structures, graphs, loops, etc. -- Dave Winer, [1]

Changed: 9c11
Blog usually means a personal web log, a type of online diary, run by special blog software. Blog sites make it possible for users without much experience to create, format, and post entries with ease. People write their day-to-day experiences, complaints, poems, prose, illicit thoughts and more, often allowing others to contribute, fulfilling to a certain extent Tim Berners-Lee's original view of the World Wide Web as a collaborative medium. In 2001, the popularity of blogs increased dramatically.
Blog usually means a personal web log, a type of online diary, or journal? run by special blog software. Blog sites make it possible for users without much experience to create, format, and post entries with ease. People write their day-to-day experiences, complaints, poems, prose, illicit thoughts and more, often allowing others to contribute, fulfilling to a certain extent Tim Berners-Lee's original view of the World Wide Web as a collaborative medium. In 2001, the popularity of blogs increased dramatically.

Changed: 11,15c13,17
Some Example Weblogs
*http://kuro5hin.org

*http://slashdot.org

*http://wmf.editthispage.com/

*http://www.xplane.com/xblog/

Some Example Web logs
*http://kuro5hin.org/
*http://slashdot.org/
*http://wmf.editthispage.com/
*http://www.xplane.com/xblog/

Added: 18a21
*http://www.scripting.com/

Changed: 20c23,24
See Weblog
A summary of Internet Web log activity
*http://blogdex.media.mit.edu/

Added: 22a27


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