Blogging, the art of spewing forth text onto the web for all to read, usually
in some sort of personal journal sort of format, has turned 10. For a full
decade now, people have been getting up on their virtual soapbox and sharing
with the world their thoughts, fears, hopes and dreams. In recent years,
blogging has taken on a life of its own, getting a piece of the action in the
last US presidential election, and regularly being the "source" of news. Hailed
as both the bane and savior of modern journalism, blogging, and the
democratization of content generation is what grew into Web 2.0.
It's always interesting to ask people why they blog, what motivates them to
share their inner thoughts with strangers across the globe. In recent
years, things have snowballed as the whole thing became "cool", but what about
the people who blogged years before it was popular? It's only been in the
past few years that the idea has reached a sort of critical mass with the public
and media. What was the motivation for someone in 1997 to write an online
journal? Was it the same as it is now? Is the popularity of blogging
due to the attention it now receives, or is it because the tools have become
readily accessible to everyone?
I remember having a personal website on a UNIX server I helped run at my high
school in 1997. It had a "Daily Journal" of sorts where I'd post a few
lines about my day every day. Sometimes I'd post about people I knew,
sometimes about fun things going on after school. Among my friends it was
noteworthy since it was the first such site any of us had. At that point
it was new, unique, and no one else had the resources or knowledge needed to do
it themselves.
Back then it was hard(er). You had to know HTML to make a blog, you had
to manually type it all in, update everything, do the page layout etc. And
you had to muck with that every time you made an update (rotate old entries onto
an "archive" page etc.). Now, it's just a matter of typing your entry into
a text field on a web browser, hit submit and BAM! Your words are out
there for the world to see.
Here at JoeUser, we're a bit of a mix between the traditional blog where
people post about their day, and sites like Digg, MySpace and other social
networking sites. On sites like blogger, xanga, livejournal etc. your blog
is a stand-alone item. People only visit it if they already know it's
there. Here, it's all about community and interaction. You post here
and your stuff is absolutely read by others.
Looking back at the history of it all though, you have to go back further
than the World Wide Web even to find where this whole online journal deal
started. Does anyone remember .plan files and the finger command? If
you had an account on any sort of UNIX system, you could create a .plan file
where you'd just type in your latest thoughts, what you were working on, if you
were on vacation etc. Other users on the system could "finger" your
username and see your latest .plan update, letting them keep an eye on you and
what you're up to.
So from .plan to an online journal via the WWW in the mid-90s, to automated
management systems starting in the late 90s, to connected communities and
content aggregators now with "Web 2.0" What's the next step for blogs?