Saturday

Register Your Blog With GlobeOfBlogs

Once you have some content in your blog, make sure you register it with GlobeOfBlogs. They have a very detailed listing of categories so you should be able to find the one that matches your blog (although it might take some time to find it).

Globe Of Blogs Registration

Blogging: An insider's view

"I put off starting a blog for several months because I was convinced a) the technology would be beyond my handling and b) I wouldn't have anything of interest to say.

Now that I've started, I realise how silly I was.

Even with a slow Net connection, this is ridiculously easy. And yesterday, just as I'd posted a few scattered thoughts on a movie I'd seen, I got an appreciative comment from this amateur filmmaker based in Los Angeles -- his name's even listed on the Internet Movie Database!

Welcome to the global village, Jabberwock.

Sites like the Google-owned blogspot.com (also known as blogger.com) or Rediff have the simplest, most user-friendly interfaces.

All you have to do is choose a username and password, enter a few basic things about yourself, choose from the template options (this defines the look of your site) and start posting."

Blogging: An insider's view

Thursday

TrackBack Explanation from the creators

In an effort to learn more about TrackBack, I went to the creators (Movable Type) to search their website. Here is a brief explanation of the feature and the link below contains more information than anyone would ever have to know!


"In a nutshell, TrackBack was designed to provide a method of notification between websites: it is a method of person A saying to person B, 'This is something you may be interested in.' To do that, person A sends a TrackBack ping to person B.

TrackBack ping: a ping in this context means a small message sent from one webserver to another.

And why would person B be interested in what person A has to say?
Person A has written a post on his own weblog that comments on a post in Person B's weblog. This is a form of remote comments--rather than posting the comment directly on Person B's weblog, Person A posts it on his own weblog, then sends a TrackBack ping to notify Person B.

Person A has written a post on a topic that a group of people are interested in. This is a form of content aggregation--by sending a TrackBack ping to a central server, visitors can read all posts about that topic. For example, imagine a site which collects weblog posts about Justin Timberlake. Anyone interested in reading about JT could look at this site to keep updated on what other webloggers were saying about his new album, a photo shoot in a magazine, etc. "

movabletype.org : TrackBack Explanation:

With TrackBack your blog can communicate with other blogs.

"TrackBack is an emerging protocol that allows Web sites to automatically store records of any links which occur between them. For example, for each article produced by CNET News.com, TrackBack automatically creates and posts records of any blogs that link to that article. As a result, readers can easily find the blogs that discuss the story, gaining multi-faceted insight on the issues that interest them. In turn, bloggers using TrackBack gain visibility before the audience of one of the most popular news sources on the Web when they link to a CNET News.com story, and the CNET News.com editorial team gains valuable feedback to their stories and insight on which topics are generating the most buzz, so they can expand their coverage of those topics. "

CNET News.com Introduces TrackBack, Linking Blog Commentary to CNET News.com Stories:

Wednesday

Internal Blog Links Increase Search Engine Rankings.

- Search Engine News Journal:

"When website owners and bloggers think of linking, they are usually referring to inbound links from external websites and blogs. While adding more incoming links from pages in external sites is very important, it's very easy to forget the internal linkage factors at work in your own blog.

The blog's incoming links provide Google PageRank to the receiving web page. The inbound links boost both the page itself, and help the blog overall, receive additional link popularity boost. The links received from external sources are only part of the overall linking program for a website or blog.

Some very important link popularity increases will arise directly from a website's internal linkage system. In fact, some improvements in the site linking and navigation can give a site a major boost in the search engines. This very important optimization technique is often ignored by link seeking website owners."

Getting Better Search Engine Ranking For Your Blog!

First of all, blogs have a natural tendency to rank higher in search engines because they

* Have well-structured site architecture
* Make use of anchor text linking
* Are well linked,
* Are frequently updated, and,
* Are focused tightly around a narrow theme, among other things.

Couple this with the ease of being able to get one-way links from several sites favored by the search engines, and you have two-thirds of the formula for a well-ranked blog.

However, just because these sites appear on publicly displayed ping notification lists and other sites that keep abreast of blog updates, this doesn’t mean that you can get away with pinging them without updating your site.

It also doesn’t mean that sites that have authentically updated and sent pings will appear in Google, Yahoo or MSN simply from being frequently updated.

The good news is, you don’t need to deluge the ping sites to get noticed. Doing so is often a waste of time, and may be a harmful one.

Your best bet for now is to continue to achieve your natural search engine position through blogging, basic search engine optimization, and a common sense approach to frequent updates.

And yes, by the way, there IS an ethical way to get into search engines and achieve high rankings with a blog, but it’s not a matter of volume. It’s more a matter of timing, supply and demand. But explaining that process takes a level of detail and an amount of space not available here.


http://www.searchenginejournal.com/index.php?p=1243

Friday

Weblogging Software Leader Six Apart Acquires LiveJournal

Six Apart: Weblogging Software Leader Six Apart Acquires LiveJournal:

"Weblogging Software Leader Six Apart Acquires LiveJournal
LiveJournal Acquisition Solidifies Six Apart's Leadership in Blogging Software, Now Powering Over 6.5 Million Weblogs for Individuals, Corporations and Institutions

San Francisco, CA -- January 6, 2005 -- Six Apart, makers of the highly acclaimed Movable Type publishing platform and TypePad personal weblogging service, today announced that it has acquired Danga Interactive, Inc., the operators of the popular service LiveJournal, for an undisclosed amount of stock and cash. With the acquisition, Six Apart solidifies its position as the industry's recognized leader in weblogging software across all markets, and LiveJournal can continue its rapid growth trajectory under Six Apart's umbrella. As of today, the combined user base of both companies exceeds 6.5 million users, with thousands more added daily.

LiveJournal, an online community organized around personal journals, is run by Danga, a Portland, Oregon-based company founded by Brad Fitzpatrick in 1999. LiveJournal has helped fuel the rapid growth of weblogging by offering consumers both free and paid subscriptions to its easy to use personal publishing blogging tool, built on open source software. Every week, over 860,000 users update their blogs. LiveJournal's users are predominately in their teens and twenties, younger than users of Six Apart's other products.

As part of Six Apart, LiveJournal will continue to operate as a separate division and will continue to foster an active community around the globe. Brad Fitzpatrick, Danga's founder, president and lead developer, will join Six Apart as the company's chief architect, extending his proven skills in scaling large services to the rest of Six Apart's products. The Danga staff will remain dedicated to LiveJournal and Six Apart expects the staff to grow as it invests in the service. LiveJournal will continue to distribute a large portion of its software under various open source licenses. Six Apart intends to invest in the LiveJournal software, which will remain separate from Six Apart's Movable Type and TypePad products, with dedicated engineering and support teams for each product.

"Six Apart's business -- and only business -- is weblogging software and services," said Barak Berkowitz, Six Apart's chief executive officer. "We are driven to provide the best quality weblogging tools on the planet, to the broadest number of users, and our acquisition of LiveJournal reflects this passion.

"We are now the only company to offer the full range of weblogging tools to the market," he said. "We have a service intended for individuals to interact with family and friends through LiveJournal; a hosted service for avid webloggers who want more flexibility and power with TypePad; and the leading server-based solution for power users, corporations and institutions through Movable Type. We welcome LiveJournal users to the Six Apart family, and promise to keep the LiveJournal culture and quality which has earned their devotion."

Berkowitz said the acquisition of LiveJournal makes Six Apart the industry's largest independent provider of weblogging tools and that the company is committed to continued innovation on each of its product lines to meet the needs of a growing number of webloggers. According to a survey released this week by the Pew Internet & American Life Project, over 8 million U.S adults now have weblogs and blog readership jumped by 58% in 2004.

"We're extremely pleased to have Brad and his team join Six Apart," said Mena Trott, Six Apart's co-founder and president. "Not only does LiveJournal have roots similar to Six Apart's -- both companies founded by young hobbyists with a passion for weblogging -- but Danga also understood the importance of community and communication before anyone else. LiveJournal has been one of the most innovative services for many years and we're proud to be able to join forces."

"It's a natural fit for LiveJournal to become part of Six Apart," said Brad Fitzpatrick. "Both companies are fanatics about weblogging, both have great relationships with their users and both have cultures driven to create the very best products. I'm excited that the acquisition will let us keep growing at an incredible speed -- backed by an experienced management team and the international reach of Six Apart."

About Six Apart Ltd.
Six Apart Ltd., based in San Francisco, CA, is the company behind the Movable Type publishing platform and the TypePad personal weblogging service. Founded by husband and wife team Ben Trott and Mena G. Trott in 2002 and funded by Neoteny Co., Ltd. and August Capital, Six Apart's sole focus is to create tools that enable millions of individuals, organizations and corporations to participate in the Web's full potential by publishing their ideas on the Internet with simple, yet powerful software and services. For more information about Six Apart, TypePad, Movable Type and LiveJournal visit the Six Apart corporate weblog at www.sixapart.com.

Contact:
Krause Taylor Associates for Six Apart
Jane Anderson
650.854.3883 direct
650.440.0450 cell
408.918.9080 main
jane@krause-taylor.com

Sunday

Red Cross Tsunami Donations Via Amazon

The other day I gave $100 to the Red Cross through the Amazon site. At that time I saw they had collected about $1.6 Million for the Red Cross, today it's over $12 million which I think is fantastic! Many of the victims were living in poverty before the distaster and now they have lost what little they had. Please give what you can if you haven't already.


Amazon Honor System

Click Here to PayLearn More


Thursday

Bloggers offer witness accounts, ways to help quake and tsunami victims

Yahoo! News - Bloggers offer witness accounts, ways to help quake and tsunami victims:

"NEW YORK (AFP) - Blogs from around the world are offering instant witness reports from the region affected by the Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami that the traditional media cannot match, as well as links to relief groups for readers seeking to provide immediate help. "

What Bloggers Can Learn From Journalists

Poynter Online - What Bloggers Can Learn From Journalists

Steve Outing makes a somve very good points in this article discussing how bloggers must be careful what they say on their blogs. Copyright violations and libel will be two things that every blogger will have to be careful to avoid.

Here is a quote from Steve's piece:

"But having an editor involved -- even if it's immediately after hitting the Publish button, a.k.a. back-editing -- is a brilliant idea, even for solo bloggers. An extra pair of eyes can certainly help to catch spelling, grammar, and factual errors, but more importantly they can catch really dangerous issues -- such as when you're about to libel someone.

With so many new people involved in blogging, most of them having no training in journalism practices, ethics, and media law, personal legal liability is a big deal. Bloggers publishing without the protection of an employer to pay for their libel defense are on their own should they make a mistake. In the years ahead, I expect to see some solo bloggers get in trouble -- and some get driven to personal ruin when they lose libel lawsuits. It's a wonder it hasn't happened yet.

Ah, but some bloggers say, audience members are our editors. Mistakes are pointed out quickly and bloggers readily acknowledge and correct their errors in plain sight. Good point, but a blog item that libels someone will remain on the record, likely archived for a good long time, and a libelous statement left online for even a day puts a blogger at tremendous risk. So bloggers, take a tip from traditional journalists and find yourself some form of editing safety net."

Tuesday

19 yr old makes $5000/mo blogging - Fortune Article

Is Google Worth $165 a Share? :

This is what I'm teaching in my Blogging Course @ http://successblog.biz. My goal is to help hundreds of people do what Jon is doing. Making a great living doing something that they enjoy!


"Jon Gales loves Google, but not for the reason you might think. It's a terrific search engine, sure, but what Gales really likes is that Google is making him money. Gales's website, Mobiletracker.net, is a compendium of news and reviews about cellphones that after a year and a half attracts about 200,000 users a month. Google supplies the ads for the site, visitors click on the ads, and because of the site's popularity, Google sends Gales monthly checks of $5,000 or more.

That's a decent chunk of change for any sole proprietor. But for Gales, the numbers are eye-popping. He's only 19 and lives expense-free at home with his parents in Tampa, posting four or five items in the course of the day while parked on the living room couch with his laptop. Says Gales: 'If things keep going the way they are going, I'll be making more money than my dad next year.' "

Local site a top dog in Web logs

Local site a top dog in Web logs:

"A fraudulent document and a fallen television icon propelled a trio of online writers to Internet stardom earlier this year when they used their Web site, Power Line, to help uncover the truth of a fake story shown on CBS' '60 Minutes.'

The rise to celebrity status was validated Sunday when Time magazine named Twin Cities-based Power Line the 'Blog of the Year,' the first such award from the magazine.

'It's so gratifying,' said Scott Johnson, a Minneapolis banker and one of three authors at the site (www.powerlineblog.com). 'It's totally unexpected.'"

Time: Powerline.com Blog Of The Year

kare11.com : Minneapolis, St. Paul:


Time Magazine has picked a Twin Cities-produced Web site as its 2004 'Blog of the Year.'

The site, Power Line, is produced by Minneapolis lawyers John Hinderaker and Scott Johnson, along with Washington-based lawyer Paul Mirengoff. The site gained attention this election year for challenging mainstream media reporting from a conservative perspective, including a story by '60 Minutes' relating to President Bush's service in the National Guard.

'Blog' is short for Web log, and Time Magazine says the medium vaulted to newfound prominence in 2004, alongside TV, radio and magazines.

Johnson tells the magazine that the mainstream media acts as a 'filter' that makes it difficult to understand what's going on in reality. He says Power Line tries to, quote, 'bring people closer to reality.'

Johnson is an attorney and senior vice president at TCF Bank in Minneapolis. Hinderaker is with the Minneapolis law firm Faegre and Benson.

http://powerlineblog.com

Sunday

Several Hosts Disable Movable Type as Comment Spam Slows Servers

Comment spam attacks on Movable Type weblogs are straining servers at web hosting companies, leading some providers to disable comments on the popular blogging tool. The issues are caused by bugs in MT, forcing publisher Six Apart to recommend configuration changes while it prepares fixes.

The server load issues have affected "a number of web hosts," according to Six Apart's Jay Allen, and are "especially evident in shared hosting environments." Allen said the problems are tied to two bugs that cause Movable Type to rebuild posts even when no pages are being changed, allowing comment spam attacks to tie up server resources. Six Apart is promising a fix within 48 hours.

Comment spam, also known as link spam, is believed to boost a site's ranking in Google, which uses inbound links as a measure of a site's popularity. Spammers are using automated scripts to bombard weblogs with comments that include links to sites offering prescription drugs or porn. While weblogs on all platforms have been affected, Movable Type and its mt-comments.cgi script have become a particular target.

"Over the past two weeks, five hosts have in some way disabled MT or MT comments because of the server load they were creating," writes MT blogger Reid Stott. "Not five little Mom & Pop hosts - at least three of them I’d consider serious to top-notch hosts." Other bloggers also reported web hosts disabling MT scripts. One said their host, XO Communications, disabled MT after seeing 100 active connections to mt-comments.cgi, suspecting a denial of service attack was underway.

In shared hosting, dozens and even hundreds of sites can share the same web server, meaning that overactive scripts on a single site can impact many other customers. As a result, hosts will disable resource-hogging scripts, usually by changing their permissions so they can't be executed. Repeated problems can prompt a hosting company to ban a script or application from its servers. Movable Type users fear continuing comment spam problems could prompt such a "death sentence" from more hosts.

Six Apart, which also operates the TypePad blog hosting service, says it is working with web hosts on a resolution. "We have learned a lot from running TypePad, and we're working on a way to share that information out with the hosting community at large," says Anil Dash of Six Apart.

While they await a fix, some bloggers are collecting tips and strategies to help reduce comment spam and server load. Six Apart says it is determined to fix the software, and develop broader solutions to the comment spam problem. "There is no higher priority to us than making sure that our customers and their websites are protected from the effects of these malicious attacks," said Allen.

TIME: 10 Things We Learned About Blogs

TIME Person of the Year 2004: 10 Things We Learned About Blogs:

"Radio had its golden age in the 1930s. In the 1950s, it was television's turn. Historians may well date the golden age of the blog from 2004�when Merriam-Webster.com's most searched-for definition was blog. How long can it last? Who knows? Here's what we discovered about the new medium this year"

Bloggers Make Money (Most important item)

Earn a living in your pajamas! Online ads (along with Google's automated ad server) allow popular bloggers to go pro. Joshua Micah Marshall of talkingpointsmemo.com, a political blog, says he makes $5,000 a month from banner ads—enough to hire a research assistant.


Thursday

Fired for blogging

Moral of the story: Bloggers have to be careful not to offend those they work for or work with. Unlike a personal journal, a blog can be read by anyone including your boss and co-workers. The best solution is to become a Full Time Blogger!


By Ellen Simonetti


My name is Ellen Simonetti, but I am better known to Web surfers as the Queen of Sky.

I had been a flight attendant for Delta Air Lines for almost eight years when I started my blog, or online diary, in January of this year. I entitled it "Diary of a Flight Attendant."

On Saturday, Sept. 25, I came home to flashing messages on my answering machine.

"Ellen, I need you to call me back. It's about your trip tomorrow," repeated the urgent-sounding voice on the tape.

The voice was that of a Delta Air Lines in-flight supervisor. I immediately dialed the number on the messages, thinking perhaps my Rome flight the next day had been cancelled. What the supervisor told me, however, left me shocked and sick to my stomach.

The reason I started my blog in the first place was as a form of therapy. "You won't be able to fly your trip tomorrow...it's about some pictures on the Web."

I had to wait more than a week after that phone call to meet with Delta management and find out exactly what was going on. During that very long week, I lived in suspense in my humble Austin, Texas, apartment and prepared for the worst. I assumed I would be fired, so I started consulting with lawyers and other people.

That was when I began to hear stories about people like Heather B. Armstrong, of dooce.com, who was fired because of her blog in 2002. Then there was "the Washingtonienne," who was fired earlier this year because of comments she entered in her blog.

As my story spread on the Web, I started receiving all kinds of e-mails from people on both sides of the Atlantic that employer blog backlash had gotten to. One, a comedian who wished to remain anonymous, told me she was fired from her day job after making a joke about co-workers on her blog.

I have decided to continue to blog and spread my story about employer blog backlash. The very first thing I did after the phone call from Delta was delete all of the photographs from my blog that I thought my employer could possibly have a problem with. That included all of the pictures of me and fellow crew members posing in Delta Air Lines uniforms.

It was not until the meeting with human resources and my supervisor on Wednesday, Oct. 6, that I learned the official reason for my suspension: "inappropriate" pictures. The unofficial reason (implied through an intimidating interrogation): blogging.

The reason I started my blog in the first place was as a form of therapy. I had lost my mother in September 2003 to cancer and that hit me hard. It was much easier to write about my feelings than talk about them. Now, my employer was telling me that the very thing that had gotten me through those tough times, my blog, could cost me my career. I felt my rights were being infringed upon. And I decided to fight back.

After that meeting, I went home and got online and found plenty of pictures of male Delta Air Lines employees in uniform on the Web. I then searched for a specific company policy prohibiting posting pictures on the Web or blogging, which I could not find.

I had an excellent employment record with Delta Air Lines and had never been previously disciplined. Therefore, I find it odd that I was not at least given a warning before my suspension. I am still trying to figure out why I was singled out. In fact, two days after that meeting with Delta Air Lines management, I filed a sex discrimination complaint with the US Equal Employment Opportunity Commission against Delta Air Lines.

Then, on Oct. 29, 2004, three weeks after I filed that discrimination complaint, I received a call from my supervisor. He advised me over the phone that my employment with Delta Air Lines had been terminated due to "inappropriate pictures in uniform on the Web."

I have decided to continue to blog and spread my story about employer blog backlash. If it is to be defeated, we all have to stand up to this silent and arbitrary foe, one that should never again be allowed to rear its ugly head.


I was fired for blogging

Tuesday

Bloggers are the stars of the Internet in 2004

Yahoo! News: Bloggers are the stars of the Internet in 2004:

An amazing statistic from the article: 52% of bloggers under 20 yrs old!

"According to Perseus Development, a company that specializes in tracking and analyzing the 'blogosphere,' there should be more than 10 million blogs in the United States by the end of the year, including 52 percent created by people younger than 20. "

Saturday

Wired 10.05: Must Read

Wired 10.05: The Blogging Revolution


Here is another story I ran across that discusses how Blogging is changing the way media works. I agree that the personal touch and personality that is infused is one of the reasons so many people like the format.

It is my belief that blogs will change online sales as much in the next 2-3 years as they have changed media in the last 2. We are on the cusp of a full blown information revolution and we at http://successblog.biz will be in the thick of things.

Friday

Search Engine Optimization For Blogs - Search Engine News Journal

Search Engine Optimization For Blogs - Search Engine News Journal
( Link To Complete Article )

Blogging software is really a simple Content Management System (CMS) that easily adds new pages and integrates them into your site's navigational structure and linkage. Blogs and blog posts are naturally search engine friendly because they are text-rich, link-rich, frequently-updated webpages that use stylesheets or CSS, and have very little extraneous HTML.

Optimizing a blog is very similar to optimizing a website, and optimizing a blog post similar to optimizing a web page. But depending on the blogging service or software you use, the results may look somewhat different. If you follow some simple rules for search engine optimization, your blog can rank much higher than static website pages in the search engine results pages.

Monday

The Business Of Blogging

Blogging is not only becoming popular, but it's also becoming big business. Whether you are selling a product or service, doing it with a blog is the easiest way to go.

The Business Of Blogging