Word: blogging
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...BEST BLOG SCOOP FreeRepublic.com is first to claim that the documents obtained by CBS News regarding Bush's National Guard service were most likely faked...
Robert Andrews has been publishing a blog about technology and the media from his home in Cardiff, Wales, since 2001. When he started out, Andrews, 26, would spend a couple of hours each morning trawling the Web in search of subjects for his opinion pieces. Now, thanks to a humble Web format called Really Simple Syndication (RSS), most of what he needs is ready and waiting for him on his desktop when he logs on. Andrews uses a downloadable software called a news reader to subscribe to feeds from RSS-enabled websites that match his interests in new technology. Whenever...
...future is in our hands because the future is us. No more blame games, bitterness or faith in a political messiah. Change must start in our own hearts and move out from there. I welcome everyone to join in these discussions with the Harvard Democrats. We have a blog set up at www.demapples.com that will be devoted to issues of the future and reflections of the past year. You can also sign up for our discussion list, “dems-talk” through the link on our website, www.harvarddems.com. The one demographic that moved in John Kerry?...
...real problem with blogs, then, is that very, very few of them are like Chris Missick’s, Chris Allbritton’s or even Greta Van Susteren’s. Many of the most prominent blogs these days are linkers, where the blog entries consist of pithy comments introducing links to varied, yet monolithically partisan, news sources. They exist as media digests for the lazy but opinionated. The aforementioned Instapundit, for example, heavily favors linking to conservative media outlets. Unlike the amateur journalists and storytellers, linkers do not attempt to transcend mainstream media, only to navigate them...
...Blogs are never going to replace mainstream media, but they can augment it. Contrasting one of Chris Missick’s entries with the latest MSNBC report from Iraq is an informative experience. However, just like with mainstream media, reading just one blog is likely to leave you in a partisan haze. Even for blogs, the rule still holds: the more sources you read, the better; and the closer you get to the truth...