Essential Blogging 147
Essential Blogging | |
author | Benjamin Trott, Mena G. Trott, Shelley Powers, J. Scott Johnson, Rael Dornfest, Cory Doctorow |
pages | 264 |
publisher | O'Reilly |
rating | 3/10 |
reviewer | Alexander Moskalyuk |
ISBN | 0596003889 |
summary | Introduction to running Weblogs on the Internet |
Blog, Blog, Blog.
Recent media infatuation with the blogging effect seems to be overwhelming. It seems that newspaper journalists have just discovered the ability to post and comment messages on the Internet, while most of the computer aficionados and heavy Internet users just shrug their shoulders when told about personal Web journals that link to other articles on the Web.Blogging Essentials is mostly a generic guide to setting up and running your own Weblog using the software available out there. It doesn't require as much technical knowledge and Unix experience as Running Weblogs with Slash, and doesn't have a nice preface by CmdrTaco, but for a person who is determined to keep a daily journal available on the Internet, it would provide helpful reading material.
What's reviewed
Blogger, Radio Userland and MovableType are the primary products discussed in the book. Each of these packages has two chapters dedicated to it, one for beginners' introduction and one for description of advanced features. The main difference between these three products is in their hosting capabilities - Blogger wants you to keep the journal entries on its Web site and provides Web interface, Radio UserLand keeps the posts on its own server as well, while providing desktop interface, while MovableType assumes the user has a Web server on which to install the blogging software. Both Blogger and Radio UserLand allow for self-hosting, which is also covered in introductory chapters.
Another chapter is dedicated to server-based Blosxom, and in the review of desktop clients such blog utilities as BlogScript, BlogApp, BlogBuddy, W.Bloggar and Slug are covered.
What's good and what's bad
While the depth of covered material is surprisingly large for such a narrow topic, a lot of book pages are spent on displaying screenshots of the blogging software, and showing other people's blogs. The only thought that never left my mind while reading this book was "Who would buy it?" Why would you need 264 pages to explain you how to set up your own journal and run it? People who find satisfaction in running their own customized versions of online journals already know most of the material, and those who don't would probably opt in for easier Web-based interface like LiveJournal.
The book seems to be just a quick walk-through of the manuals, and if you consider that all of the reviewed products have pretty good help and FAQ sections, the need for such book decreases even more. I can hardly name anyone to whom I would recommend this book.
Table of contents can be viewed on publisher's Web site.
You can purchase Essential Blogging from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
Oxymoronic title? (Score:5, Funny)
Who would buy it? (Score:3, Informative)
An organization that is looking at the different Blog options. They will use it for self-promotion/feel good stuff, and show how every day they do something that brings them closer to their goals, or looks good in the public eye.
xan
jonathon
Re:Oxymoronic title? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Oxymoronic title? (Score:4, Insightful)
Some may think this is flamebait, but blogging, and even keeping a private journal is an incredibly self-centered activity. It's no wonder there are so many people on anti-depressants. They spend all their time writing their thoughts down, and re-reading them.
It seems to be a generational thing. I don't know anyone in my peer group who journals, but a lot of 20 somethings and high school kids seem to do it. They are also the ones who whinge the most about their life. If you spent less time describing your sad life, and more time working to make it better, you might find you actually don't have anything to whine about.
It is true that earlier generations were noted for their diaries. We know a great deal about history as the result of the private writings of Pepys, Jonson, Addams, Jefferson, and many others. There are some fundamental differences between the diaries of Samuel Pepys, and the blogging of most 20 year-olds with a cable modem and a web-cam.
By contrast, most bloggers have a limited education, especially in the classics, history, rhetoric, and philosophy. They may be quite smart, but rarely have they been educated. Students in High School and college these days are more likely to be trained, to be good workers in the modern economy.
This has become more of a rant than I originally intended. I simply dislike the Blog culture, navel-gazing raised to a spectator sport.
Flame Away, I can take it.
Re:Oxymoronic title? (Score:3, Insightful)
Consider how that reflects on you and your peers at your leisure.
For every Samuel Pepys I promise there were thousands of journals of his era that were awful
You have to slay a lot of dragons to get a princess.
Re:Oxymoronic title? (Score:2)
Re:Oxymoronic title? (Score:1)
Why? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Why? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Why? (Score:2)
Re:Why? (Score:3, Interesting)
I agree. While I love Slashdot and Slashdot is essentially a blog, it's the new information and insightful comments that keep me coming back. Okay, I'll admit it, I've also got a morbid curiosity for reading -1 as well.
The critical mass of community Slashdot has - its main interesting feature, would be something difficult to recreate just by putting a blog online and hoping for the best. I'm sure there are some people that really get a kick out of finding out somebody on the Internet just got a new cat and his car is getting repainted, but that just isn't the level of intellectual stimulation that draws me to a web page.
Re:Why? (Score:2, Interesting)
I was really bored one day and tried to see how much information I could get from a random weblog... it was frightening, not because of the information that I got, I got next to nothing. But becuase of the mind numbing nature of the weblog. My random subject was a teenage girl obsessed with boys, and booze. I'll tell you, you could write a program to make a random post for this girl. Her posts were basicly the same.
Point it, if you dont post addresses, or phone numbers, and stick to first names. Its pretty hard to get information based on the journal alone.
Re:Why? (Score:2)
Re:Why? (Score:2)
I keep a blog. I probably get about 3 hits a week, but I don't care. It's there for me, like a journal, to record random thoughts. If someone stumbles onto it, reads it, and likes it, well then good for them. If not, I don't much care. I don't keep a journal for anyone's benefit but my own, and I'm sure most people who "blog" feel the same.
Re:we have concensus (Score:2)
Re:we have concensus (Score:3, Funny)
You're only half right. I'm not prominent.
Ebay - 2004 ad (Score:2, Funny)
"Hey, remember blogging? You know, before it was so overblown by the media that you stabbed your eardrums with an icepick just to keep all of the buzzwords out of your brain? Now you can own a worthless remind of those turbulent times...this book!
86 cents, seller pays shipping."
Re:Ebay - 2004 ad (Score:3, Insightful)
Let people write. No one's forcing you to click on that link.
Interesting (Score:3, Interesting)
Yesterday, I was discussing Alzheimer's with my co-worker, Bob, who runs bland-o-rama.com [bland-o-rama.com]...we, like any techs, fear the loss of memory and our abilities. The factoid about nuns being highly resistant to Alzheimer's came up, and the running theory is b/c they are journaliing on a daily basis. Exercise for the memory system, I guess.
Personally, though, I'm just doing it because it's interesting to look back and see where I've been...and hopefully get a good idea of where I'm going. Plus I get to watch my friends that use LJ do the same thing.
Re:Interesting (Score:2)
Upcoming O'Reilly Titles (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Upcoming O'Reilly Titles (Score:2)
Re:Upcoming O'Reilly Titles (Score:1)
Re:Upcoming O'Reilly Titles (Score:2)
People laugh... but looking busy is actually one of the most important job "skills". If you own your own business you don't even need to fake it though.
--
O'Reilly's conundrum. (Score:4, Insightful)
Essential FOR blogging (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Essential FOR blogging (Score:2)
I've been using the poorly named blog [tripod.com] for places where I have ftp access only.
Re:Essential FOR blogging (Score:2)
Re:Essential FOR blogging (Score:1)
Re:Essential FOR blogging (Score:2)
You can find 0.6 here: http://www.exitspace.net/mike/blog/archives/2002_
Anyway, I hope he keeps up the good work. Once finished, mozblog will joing my small pool of favorite mozilla extensions.
also check out Live Lizard (Score:2)
Methinks... (Score:3, Funny)
Tell me this - does it have chapters on how to propagate your page with pictures of your cat? Or how to flash your tits so that they point to your wishlist?
Re:Methinks... (Score:2, Funny)
Or how to flash your tits so that they point to your wishlist?
In a word: classic.
You, sir, are a poet.
Gratuitous Plug (Score:3, Informative)
Re:You need a book to learn how to whine? (Score:1)
Yeah, totally!
Now that my slashdot break is over, back to my computer related job until I'm ready to go home and play warcraft 3 until I pass out. Maybe this weekend I'll watch The Net again just to make fun of how much it is unlike the real net. . . So this is troll.
Re:You need a book to learn how to whine? (Score:1)
New book from O'Reilly (Score:3, Funny)
Chapter 1: Turn the damn thing on
Chapter 2: Read what is on screen. It will ussually tell you what to do
Chapter 3: It your computer, turn it off if you don't like what it does
Chapter 4: Trouble Shooting: Shoot anything that moves
Look, if your blogging you euther know what your doing or your going to contract with someone who does.
This seems more like a FAQ on SlashCode [slashcode.com] or a give away item at shows then an actual book.
Historical and Cultural Analysis (Score:2, Interesting)
Of course, it is easy to ridicule and mock the blogging scene, but an indepth look at it could be both honest about the shortcomings and faults, as well as the many lessons blogging has taught us. Google bombing [slashdot.org] anyone? And has anyone been more on the forefront of accessibility pages than blogs?
Maybe someone's already done this for some sort of masters thesis; if so, point out the links, I'd like to see some serious scholarship on the issue.
Re:Historical and Cultural Analysis (Score:2)
<Homer>Fun, too!</>
Tim
Re:But when will blogs become books?.... (Score:1)
I can't seem anyone making a book out of it though.
My bet would be that you will see the first blog book about a month and a half after the killing of some celebrity blogger by a stalker who found her (it is going to be a her, trust me on that one) via a blog.
On the horizon.... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:On the horizon.... (Score:2)
Re:On the horizon.... (Score:2)
O-Reilly Safari (Score:3, Informative)
Still, I like collecting books. I wonder if they'd give a discount on the sale of previously subscribed titles. Reading a book on the computer isn't as nice as holding it in one's hands, either, but overall it's as good a deal as leasing a car - obviously not for everyone - good for many.
-Adam
Re:O-Reilly Safari (Score:1, Informative)
Safari sets the swap date, which is the date when you can check all your old books in, and choose the new ones. The swap date is 45 days from your original subscription day and then it's every 30 days. On those days you get 5 points to spend - you can either keep the current books, keep some of them, and choose some new ones, or choose 5 new titles for next month.
The pricing and library are attractive to those who have time on their hands and want to learn new technologies. If you're unemployed, or a student on vacation, or just have some free time, for $10 and a month's worth of time you can get five books on any skill you'd like to learn, Networking, Perl, MCSE, etc.
For reference value and for people who are generally busy and have no time to spend hours reading it's probably cheaper to buy the paper version of the book.
The Value of Blogging (Score:5, Insightful)
With repect to this book, I would have to agree with the reviewer. Who would buy it? If you are familier with blogging, then you know what you need to know. If you are not, then you're more likely to buy a book entitled 'Websites for Beginners' or something. This book seems to be searching for a market where there most likely is none.
--CTH
Re:The Value of Blogging (Score:2)
Blogging is about writing, it isn't about computing. Tools like Blogger, Radio and Moveable Type allow more people to use their computer and the web without needing to learn how to write code.
Most of the posts are full of ridicule about people who write blogs. The irony of that coming from Slashdot is more than sweet.
What I really don't like about the default blogs.. (Score:1)
Re:What I really don't like about the default blog (Score:1)
journalist and professor blogs useful (Score:2)
Get a diary, it lasts longer... (Score:2)
But now in this brave new world, people get blogs or livejournals, and witter pointlessly about things that nobody gives a fuck about but them. Tributes to their cat, goth poetry, brainless gibberish.
It's a horrible waste of technology...!
Re:Get a diary, it lasts longer... (Score:1)
Better that than wasting paper.
Re:Get a diary, it lasts longer... (Score:1)
Re:Get a diary -- My kingdom for some mod points! (Score:1)
Conspir8or
the point of blogging...? (Score:2, Insightful)
would you buy a book "how to keep a journal"? this seems like it could be summarized in a one page list of "hints and tips"
you sig (Score:1)
is it me or you?
d:\>perl -e"\$_=q#: 13_2: 12/'{>: 8_4) (_4: 6/2'-2; 3;-2'\2: 5/7\_/\7: 12m m::#;
s#:#\n#g;s#(\D)(\d+)#\$1x\$2#ge;print
Can
13_2: 12/'{>: 8_4) (_4: 6/2'-2; 3;-2'\2: 5/7\_/\7: 12m m::#;"
Re:you sig (Score:2)
Re:you sig (Score:2)
perl -e"$_=q#: 13_2: 12/'{>: 8_4) (_4: 6/2'-2; 3;-2'\2: 5/7\_/\7: 12m m::#;s#:#\n#g;s#(\D)(\d+)#$1x$2#ge;print"
apparently, the dos shell doesn't replace "$variables" like bash does... just when you though cross-platform sigging was easy! :P
Remember when your older sister... (Score:3, Funny)
Nowadays she'd be publishing it all over the web and anybody can read it.
Sure takes the fun out of life!
Radio Userland link is bad. (Score:1)
Bad review... (Score:3, Insightful)
How about installing and using the tools, per the book, and telling us how if the instructions work?
And, why the gratuitous plug for the Slash book? And why the implied slur of anyone who wants a blog but doesn't need, want, or have time to wade through Slash? He might as well have said "Why would anyone not smart enough to understand Perl code even pretend their smart enough to use these tools?"
Next time, I'd like to learn about the book, not the author. This "review" is just another example of geek bias and elitism.
So you want to start a weblog... (Score:2)
+1 (Shameless self-promotion)
I don't need this book... (Score:2)
Write the Living Web [alistapart.com] by Mark Bernstein
How to Write a Better Weblog [alistapart.com] by Dennis A. Mahoney
How to be Soopafamous [alistapart.com] by W.K. Lang
A Case for Web Storytelling [alistapart.com] by Curt Cloninger
Those links are just for a quick scan at Alistapart [alistapart.com]. I'm sure a little more work and you could build up a huge directory of 'good weblogging' links (or just read Zeldman [zeldman.com]).
As for the blogging systems themselves, can the people who buy this book not deal with README files? I've used Blogger and MT in my weblogging time and both have had excellent online documentation or readme files respectively.
This seems to me like a book for people who really don't want to try to learn anything for themselves, and need it all presented for them. There is so much more to be gained by finding out stuff fo yourself [google.com].
--Jon
Re:I don't need this book... (Score:2)
README files typically present installation and usage instructions. Also typically, they're written for a peer audience, i.e., other software developers. And even more typically, they're written by people who can't write.
What I'd expect from this O'Reilly book is a balanced comparison of the tools being examined, a review of their individual strengths and weaknesses, any outside knowledge and experience the author can bring, and an assessment of the usability and support I'm likely to receive if I choose on the pacakges (and that includes the usefulness of the readme files.)
I'd also expect a decent review to tell me if the book got anywhere close to answering those questions. This review failed, because it is a thinly disguised rant against blogging.
Tomorrow's historians (Score:1)
Re:Tomorrow's historians (Score:2)
Those letters you mention were written on a relatively durable medium (old paper) which does not require a special machine for decoding. This is not true of hard drives, optical storage, etc. Even modern paper is bad, unless it's acid-free.
And don't expect Google's "wayback" machines to be around 100 years from now. Companies disappear. Technology changes.
If you want your words to survive for 300 years, I suggest you print them out on acid-free paper and staple the hardcopy to the back of a large and very tasteful painting. Or chisel them into a big rock.
BTW, an excellent book on the durability of information -- and the astounding benefits of transparency -- is "The Clock of the Long Now".
They'll publish anything nowadays... (Score:1)
blogs... (Score:1)
Re:My simple blog is perl scripts (Score:2)
NPR Covering Blogging on PI Right Now (Score:2)
Here's the description of today's show:
Response from the editor of Essential Blogging (Score:5, Insightful)
The numeric rating really seems disproportionate, as the reviewer did have some good things to say:
The primary audience for Essential Blogging is someone who is new to blogging. If you already use a blogging system like Movable Type, you'll learn something from the book (Ben and Mena, the authors of Movable Type, wrote a lot of new material for their chapters), but you are not the primary audience. We even say this in the preface, and the back cover pretty clearly states what's inside: "Essential Blogging helps you select the right blogging software for your needs and shows you how to get your blog up and running."
Someone new to blogging can read Chapter 1 to learn about the different aspects of a blogging system; the pros and cons of self-hosting vs hosted, desktop vs server; and ultimately decide which web journal system to use. Then they can read the chapters specific to their chosen system to get started, and return when they're ready to customize the appearance of their blog.
While working on the book, I kept my Dad in mind. He's technical, not stupid, and if he wanted to start a blog, what I want him to know about? The audience also explains the screenshots--if you're new to blogging, you don't to know what to expect nor what the possibilities are. Although it's hard for the reviewer to imagine there are people who haven't been hacking web sites and writing their own blogging systems since 1996, such people do exist.
But even people who already blog and are entrenched in a particular blogging system should check out the others. I'm a Movable Type user myself, but it was a real eye-opener to use Radio Userland for a while. The whole approach to software and blogging is different in Radio Userland, and it makes you look at your own setup in a new light. I'm not saying you need to buy Essential Blogging to do this, but such comparisons are a benefit of having multiple systems presented side-by-side in the one book.
About the only thing I agree with the reviewer wholeheartedly on is that it's a shame we don't cover LiveJournal more. When the book was being developed, I didn't see the geek interest in LiveJournal that I see now. Perhaps in the second edition we'll have chapters on LiveJournal.
So to conclude, I sure hope the old saying that there's no such thing as bad publicity is true. I hope the next book gets a real review (more than six paragraphs) by someone who reads the preface :-).
--Nat
(blogs on O'Reilly Network [oreillynet.com] and use.perl [perl.org], as well as several Movable Type installations for family, and a Blossom blog for work)
Correct link to Radio UserLand (Score:1)
Book writing and neglect (Score:1)
Blogging rocks though!
Re:Book writing and neglect (Score:2, Insightful)
Read it at Safari for a month (Score:3, Informative)
don't worry; this book will sell well! (Score:1)
I haven't read the book, so I'm speculating wildly here. Actually, I would have liked some firsthand accounts of how famous bloggers managed their website, both from a technical and a literary point of view. What subjects tend to be good for blogs? How to publicize? How does a weblog compare to CMS, in terms of advantages and disadvantages? Maybe some might regard this as padding, but I think the sociological aspects of blogging are just as interesting as the technical aspects.
Robert Nagle, Idiotprogrammer
Texas Technical Writer, Trainer & Linux Aficionado
Re:don't worry; this book will sell well! (Score:1)
Well, uh, due to the nature of blogs, wouldn't you (I would) assume that this information might be actually contained in the blogs themselves?
I mean if I wanted to know how to setup a blog (I don't) wouldn't I just go to the first couple of entries in a famous one?
Could blogging be a substitute for some meetings? (Score:1)
How about instead of the meeting each developer keeps a blog about what they're working on and problems they're having, update it at least once a week, and encourage/require other developers to read the blogs to get an idea of what other people are up to & see if they can answer a nagging question.
You can read them when it's convenient to you, as opposed to the meeting which is convenient to the manager.
I see this a good use for blogs, and this book could be good for the blog-naive developer/manager.
Online Journals vs. Weblogs (Score:1)
Like most of you have observed, online journals are mostly products of self absorbed teens whining about their lives (of course, not all of them are like that - LittleYellowDifferent [littleyell...ferent.com] is technically a blog but verges into journal territory lots, with a bunch of hilarious anecdotes from the author's life). Blogs, on the other hand, are the natural extention of links pages. They offer links to interesting or funny webpages and adding often hilarious commentary on the pages. Of course there are a ton of inane, cookie-cutter blogs, but there are a whole bunch of amazing and hilarious blogs out there too.
Examples of some awesome blogs are Davezilla [davezilla.com], the null device [null.org], and Kottke.org [kottke.org].
Oh, and here's my rule of thumb for finding great blogs: If, in your quest, you find yourself at Livejournal or Blogspot, run as far as you can in the opposite direction, because you're not going to find the next Davezilla on there.
Re:Nice quotes (Score:2)
Re:Nice quotes (Score:1)
0x201D : Right Double Quotation Mark
0x2033 : Double Prime
0x0022 : Quotation Mark (")
(Unicode character codes)
The generic quotation mark character is used in cases where the other three symbols are not available (software which only accepts ASCII) or when the writer is lazy.
I personally always use the left and right curly quotation marks when I'm sure I'm typing into something which can accept them. Most people never conciously notice, but it makes parsing the quotation a lot easier I find. I also don't use or even own a copy of Microsoft Word.