A look at the Australian blogosphere by blogs.com.au

Blogiest links I could find #5

I collect so many blogging links during general www surfing that instead of doing a proper post on each one I find a quick linkblog about blogging satisfies my desire to announce them to the Aussosphere.

1. A successful entrepreneur has vowed to give up public speaking and focus more on blogging

2. A heartening story that despite the great firewall of china, 20 per cent of bestselling books in China now stem from online literature like blogs. The interesting thing I take from this is that in countries like Australia that already have an established publishing industry structure very few books originate from an online form and are turned into books. Local publishers need to wake up to some o the gold that exist online.

3. A quick guide on finding images to use in your blog posts.

4. While I can’t say I have read or heard anyone specifically say micro-blogging tools like Twitter or online social networks were going to bring about blogging’s demise. Still, one of the Aussie Bloggers has outlined a strong case to why blogging won’t be a replaced anytime soon.

5. There’s another push for a blogging code. This time by a UK law firm. They’ve published a lot of stats about how unaware of legal issues people are but very little detail on their proposed code.

6. Back in the day (’98 + ‘99) there used to be a online service called Web Site Garage that was run by Netscape where you could put your site through to evaluate a number of factors before publishing to the web. One of the features I appreciated most was the spell check. For some reason the whole service went offline and was never replaced. Until now. There’s a soon to be launched service called Spellr.us that will offer a free spell checking service to make sure your blog doesn’t appear by someone who didn’t graduate from Grade 4. I really need this service.

7. A reminder for people a little obsessed with blogging. ‘Tis fun to do but only in moderation.

8. I usually avoid the Blogging VS Journalism debates as I find they focus on the utterly pointless but did find this quote offered an interesting perspective: “…bloggers who are unconstrained by the cold, objective, impersonal style required by Modern Journalism can more easily present themselves as more credible — sincere, authentic, and vulnerable.” (via The Future of News)

3 comments… read them below or add one

1 Jennifer — 05.20.08 at 3:17 pm

Thanks for the link :) People do get obsessed, but there’s usually time for health too.

2 Anthony — 05.20.08 at 3:58 pm

Yes, you can have a life AND a blog. They are not mutually exclusive.

3 Alex Cristache — 05.21.08 at 3:58 am

Thank you for including a link to Blogsessive! Just checked the other links, it’s a very good list.

Leave a Comment

You can use these XHTML tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>