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cmcgoun's bookmarks matching tag "internet blogging"
 
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Weblogs and the Epistemology of the News: Some Trends in Online Journalism
D Matheson
New Media & Society 6 (4), 443 (2004)
Abstract: Journalism has been slow to develop distinctive forms in response to the new contexts provided by the internet. One rapidly developing form, unique to the world wide web, is the weblog. This article reviews the claims made by proponents of the form and explores, through the case study of a weblog produced by the British Guardian newspaper, epistemological differences to the dominant Anglo-American news form. The article argues that the rearticulation in this institutional product of the relation between journalists and users, of the claim to authority made in the news text and of the news text as product, provides historians of both journalism and new media with a case study of the adaptation of journalism to new contexts.
Posted by cmcgoun to internet blogging on Mon Mar 10 2008 at 22:20 UTC | info | related
 
Blogs during the London attacks: top information sources and topics
Mike Thelwall
WWE: 3rd Annual Workshop on the Weblogging Ecosystem, (2006)
Good on methodology.
Posted by cmcgoun to internet blogging on Mon Mar 10 2008 at 22:18 UTC | info | related
 
Blogging, RSS and the Information Landscape
Kathy Gill
WWW 2005 Chiba, Japan, (2005)
Posted by cmcgoun to internet blogging RSS on Mon Mar 10 2008 at 22:14 UTC | info | related
 
Interactive online journals and individualization
Paul Hodkinson
New Media & Society 9 (4), 625 (2007)
Posted by cmcgoun to internet blogging on Mon Mar 10 2008 at 22:02 UTC | info | related
 
Blogging Down the Dictator? The Kyrgyz Revolution and Samizdat Websites
Svetlana Kulikova and David Perlmutter
International Communication Gazette 69 (1), 29 (2007)
Posted by cmcgoun to internet blogging on Mon Mar 10 2008 at 21:59 UTC | info | related
 
Personal knowledge publishing and its uses in research
Sebastien Paquet
In this document, I analyze an emerging form of knowledge sharing that I call personal knowledge publishing. Personal knowledge publishing has its roots in a practice known as "weblogging" that has been rapidly spreading on the World Wide Web over the last three years. It is a new form of communication that many expect will change the way people work and collaborate, especially in areas where knowledge and innovation play an important role. If you are a researcher or knowledge worker who is not very familiar with weblogging and personal knowledge publishing, reading this document should help you grasp the significance of this practice and better understand how you might benefit from getting involved in personal knowledge publishing. Although the emphasis is on research work, most of the ideas generalize to other kinds of creative knowledge work where knowledge sharing plays a role. In the first section, I describe what weblogs are, and explain how they are altering communication patterns on the Web. The second section focuses on personal knowledge publishing and similarly describes the new patterns of communication that this practice is giving birth to. In particular, I explain how these patterns can facilitate the emergence of new communities of knowledge. I also point out the current limitations of personal knowledge publishing. I review the most important points in the conclusion.
Posted by cmcgoun and 3 others to internet blogging RSS on Mon Mar 10 2008 at 21:30 UTC | info | related
 
On the literature
Walt Crawford
City & insights 7 (9), (Aug 2007)
Article on the role/status of blogs for the academic community. Formal literature (research rticles/formal research lit) serves as history: the real action is informal communication such as blogs. But are blogs scholarly and authoritative?
Posted by cmcgoun to internet blogging on Mon Mar 10 2008 at 21:27 UTC | info | related
 
Top ten shock blogs
Linton Chiswick
The First Post
Useful for a review of 'over the top' blogs - the danger of free blog speech.
Posted by cmcgoun to internet blogging on Mon Mar 10 2008 at 21:24 UTC | info | related
 
Blogging as social activity, or, would you let 900 million people read your diary?
Bonnie Nardi
Posted by cmcgoun to internet blogging on Mon Mar 10 2008 at 21:19 UTC | info | related
 
Content delivery in the 'blogosphere'
Richard Ferdig and Kaye Trammell
The Journal, (Feb 2004)
Interesting comments on the pedagogy that can be harnessed (vygotskian scaffolding) through the use of blogs in education.
Posted by cmcgoun to internet blogging on Mon Mar 10 2008 at 18:20 UTC | info | related

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