Word: weblogs
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...return for funding the nautical equine escapades, however, the Contender has demanded half the proceeds—or profits, as the case may be—that the group amasses while yachting with the zebras. As of Wednesday evening, spirits were sagging on Team Zebra’s online weblog. “Feld Entertainment, owners of the circus, don’t seem interested in our challenge,” team co-leader Neeraj “Richie” Banerji ’06 wrote. “Southwicks Zoo didn’t answer. Tufts Animal Hospital...
...sites-a laser-etched Buddha, say, or the Slightly Used and Possibly Defective Husband kit-and provides direct links to where you can place your bid. There are things you may actually want, too. Discoveries are organized by category (Music, Sporty Stuff, Weird). New from Shiny Media, a U.K. weblog company...
...weblogs—detailed summaries of day-to-day life made public, often with groups of complete strangers as followers. On livejournal.com alone, six million subscribers, nearly half of them actively updated, create 22,500 new posts every hour. A cursory search of the front page of Xanga (another weblog service) reveals everything from shopping lists to excruciatingly intimate gory details about bad breakups and equally gory tales of poorly trained puppies. There are other mediums for this sort of thing, as well: at Flickr.com, a popular photo sharing site, users show off baby pictures and snapshots of smiling parents...
...mark on the world. The ability to carve out a private section of cyberspace and render it your own in a personal way is a powerful thing indeed. And as for the rest of us, who are perhaps a little too afraid to really let go (I had a weblog, but I never posted anything to it...), those of us who are admittedly more private people; well, we don’t mind too much. At the very least, it gives us something to do while putting off work on a paper or problem...
...controversy over “God Save This Honorable Court” emerged from a Sept. 14 message that Tribe posted on the weblog of Massachusetts Law School Dean Lawrence R. Velvel, in which Tribe said the misattribution of sources by “writers, political office-seekers [and] judges” constituted “a phenomenon of some significance...