DaveNet essay, "Meg Hourihan: What We're Doing When We Blog", released on 7/31/2002; 
10:41:28 AM Pacific.
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***Introduction by Dave Winer

Good morning. This is a guest DaveNet, written by Meg Hourihan, an independent Web 
consultant and freelance writer. She explains what a weblog is, from a technical 
standpoint, better than I had seen it explained before. I asked for permission to run 
this piece, from the author and from The O'Reilly Network, where it originally 
appeared [1], and they generously granted permission. Thank you.

Ms. Hourihan is co-author of the upcoming book [2], We Blog: Publishing Online with 
Weblogs. She writes the popular Megnut weblog [3]; and is co-founder of Pyra, the 
company that developed and operates the popular Blogger weblog publishing service [4]. 
As one of the pioneers and leading writers in the weblog world, her view of weblogs is 
uniquely valuable.


***What We're Doing When We Blog

Every day it seems another article about weblogs appears in the press. At first, most 
of these stories seemed content to cover the personal nature of blogging. But more and 
more I'm seeing articles that attempt to examine the journalistic and punditry aspects 
of weblogs prominent in many of the so-called "warblogs," or sites that began in 
response to the events of September 11th.

The articles' authors are rarely webloggers themselves, which places them in the 
unenviable position of describing and defining weblogs based on observation, not 
experience. Given the vast number of blogs, it can be very difficult to understand the 
breadth and scope of blogging when an editor wants 750 words in 48 hours.

I've noticed this has resulted in a variety of ideas about and definitions of the 
weblogs -- from statements that blogs are personal journals filled with the (often 
dull or trivial) minutiae of daily life to a belief that blogs are right-wing 
responses to the liberal media establishment. Witness the recent article, Online 
Uprising [5] by Catherine Seipp in the American Journalism Review:

/"In general, 'blog' used to mean a personal online diary, typically concerned with 
boyfriend problems or techie news. But after September 11, a slew of new or refocused 
media junkie/political sites reshaped the entire Internet media landscape. Blog now 
refers to a Web journal that comments on the news -- often by criticizing the media 
and usually in rudely clever tones -- with links to stories that back up the 
commentary with evidence."/

In her article, Catherine forgoes the more traditional 
weblogs-are-links-plus-commentary definition to carve out a new meaning for the word, 
limited to the type of blogs she reads. But Catherine's analysis misses some of the 
very subtleties that distinguish weblogs from other writing. Rather than rant that 
Catherine just "doesn't get it," it seems to me that her article, and others that are 
similar, are perfect opportunities for the blogging community to talk about our own 
evolution.


***Our Commonality

If we look beneath the content of weblogs, we can observe the common ground all 
bloggers share -- the format. The weblog format provides a framework for our universal 
blog experiences, enabling the social interactions we associate with blogging. Without 
it, there is no differentiation between the myriad content produced for the Web.

Whether you're a warblogger who works by day as a professional journalist or you're a 
teenage high school student worried about your final exams, you do the same thing: you 
use your blog to link to your friends and rivals and comment on what they're doing. 
Blog posts are short, informal, sometimes controversial, and sometimes deeply 
personal, no matter what topic they approach. They can be characterized by their 
conversational tone and unlike a more formal essay or speech, a blog post is often an 
opening to a discussion, rather than a full-fledged argument already arrived at.

As bloggers, we update our sites frequently on the content that matters to us. 
Depending on the blogger, the content varies. But because it's a weblog, formatted 
reverse-chronologically and time-stamped, a reader can expect it will be updated 
regularly. By placing our email addresses on our sites, or including features to allow 
readers to comment directly on a specific post, we allow our readers to join the 
conversation. Emails are often rapidly incorporated back into the site's content, 
creating a nearly real-time communication channel between the blog's primary author 
(its creator) and its secondary authors (the readers who email and comment).

And we're united by tools, whether we use Blogger, LiveJournal, Radio UserLand, 
Movable Type, or a custom job that's a labor of love. Webloggers often use tools to 
facilitate the publication of their sites. These tools spit out our varied content in 
the same format -- archives, permalinks, time stamps, and date headers.


***A Native Format

When the Web began, the page was the de facto unit of measurement, and content was 
formatted accordingly. Online we don't need to produce content of a certain length to 
meet physical page-size requirements. And as the Web has matured, we've developed our 
own native format for writing online, a format that moves beyond the page paradigm: 
The weblog, with its smaller, more concise, unit of measurement; and the post, which 
utilizes the medium to its best advantage by proffering frequent updates and richly 
hyperlinked text.

While a page usually contains one topic, or a portion of a single-topic item spans 
several pages (an opinion piece, an essay or column, a technical document, or press 
release), the weblog post is a self-contained topical unit. It can be as short as one 
sentence, or run for several paragraphs. And it's the amalgamation of multiple posts 
-- on varying topics -- on a single page that distinguishes the weblog from its online 
ancestor, the home page.

Freed from the constraints of the printed page (or any concept of "page"), an author 
can now blog a short thought that previously would have gone unwritten. The weblog's 
post unit liberates the writer from word count.


***The Posts Collection

What distinguishes a collection of posts from a traditional home page or Web page? 
Primarily it's the reverse-chronological order in which posts appear. When a reader 
visits a weblog, she is always confronted with the newest information at the top of 
the page.

Having the freshest information at the top of the page does a few things: as readers, 
it gives a sense of immediacy with no effort on our part. We don't have to scan the 
page, looking for what's new or what's been changed. If content has been added since 
our last visit, it's easy to see as soon as the page loads.

Additionally, the newest information at the top (coupled with its time stamps and 
sense of immediacy) sets the expectation of updates, an expectation reinforced by our 
return visits to see if there's something new. Weblogs demonstrate that time is 
important by the very nature in which they present their information. As weblog 
readers, we respond with frequent visits, and we are rewarded with fresh content.


***The Anatomy of a Post

A weblog post can be identified by the following distinguishing characteristics: a 
date header, a time stamp, and a permalink. Oftentimes the author's name appears 
beneath each post as well, especially if multiple authors are contributing to one 
blog. If commenting is enabled (giving the reader a form to respond to a specific 
post) a link to comment will also appear.

Links, and the accompanying commentary, have often been hailed as the distinguishing 
characteristic of a weblog. The linking that happens through blogging creates the 
connections that bind us. Commentary alone is the province of journals, diaries, and 
editorial pieces.

The Time Stamp. By its very presence, the time stamp connotes the sense of timely 
content; the implicit value of time to the weblog itself is apparent because the time 
is overtly stated on each post. Without the time stamp, the reader is unable to 
discern the author's update pattern, or experience a moment of shared experience.

But if I visit your site at 4:02 p.m. and see you just updated at 3:55 p.m., it's as 
if our packets crossed in the ether. You, the author, and I, the reader, were "there" 
at the same time -- and this can create a powerful connection between us.

Moments of shared experience can be powerful connectors. They happen in the offline 
world when two strangers on the subway chuckle at the same funny billboard, and make 
eye contact as they do so. In the online world, they happen when I'm thinking about 
buying an iBook and I read on your blog that you've just bought one, at the same time.

The Permalink (the link to the permanent location of the post in the blog's archive) 
plays a critical role in how authors participate in distributed conversations across 
weblogs. The permalink allows for precise references, creating a way for authors to 
link to the specific piece of information to which they're responding.

If your blog has ten current entries, four of which are about cats and only one of 
which is about the release of Mozilla 1.0, the permalink provides the means by which 
fellow Mozilla bloggers can reference the correct post, and in doing so, create a 
loosely-distributed Mozilla conversation. Without the permalink, the conversation is 
drowned out in a sea of irrelevant cat chatter.


***A Communication Evolution

When we talk about weblogs, we're talking about a way of organizing information, 
independent of its topic. What we write about does not define us as bloggers; it's how 
we write about it (frequently, ad nauseam, peppered with links).

Weblogs simply provide the framework, as haiku imposes order on words. The structure 
of the documents we're creating enable us to build our social networks on top of it -- 
the distributed conversations, the blog-rolling lists, and the friendships that begin 
online and are solidified over a "bloggers dinner" in the real world.

As bloggers, we're in the middle of, and enjoying, an evolution of communication. The 
traits of weblogs mentioned above will likely change and advance as our tools improve 
and our technology matures. What's important is that we've embraced a medium free of 
the physical limitations of pages, intrusions of editors, and delays of tedious 
publishing systems. As with free speech itself, what we say isn't as important as the 
system that enables us to say it.

Meg Hourihan [6]

[1] http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/javascript/2002/06/13/megnut.html
[2] http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0764549626/megnutcom/103-0776345-5467035
[3] http://www.megnut.com/
[4] http://www.blogger.com/
[5] http://www.ajr.org/Article.asp?id=2555
[6] http://www.megnut.com/

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(c) Copyright 1994-2002, Dave Winer. http://davenet.userland.com/.
"There's no time like now."

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