blog - technical definition

A Web site where an individual maintains a personal journal or even an interactive forum much like a personal newsgroup.The vast majority of blogs, or so it seems, are pretty silly electronic diaries posted by adolescents. Many blogs, however, are quite serious. Some companies maintain public blogs to foster dialogue amongst employees with respect to projects, strategies, and other matters of interest. Some blogs take the form of well-researched personal opinion columns on politics or other controversial and weighty subjects. See also WWW.

See blog in Webster''s New World Hacker Dictionary

Short for Weblog. An online journal and forum for commentary that doubles as a public discussion board. Blogs have rapidly gained popularity, particularly as a means of political and social commentary and activism and of marketing one’s talents online—a replacement for old-fashioned paper resumes. Blogs are often designed with space for immediate reader feedback. Moreover, software such as Serious Magic Inc.’s new Vlog IT! allows people to use video clips to enhance their blog’s content, which has resulted in a new term, vlogs.

In December 2004, approximately one year after the term blog was placed in The Oxford English Dictionary, Merriam-Webster said that it was the most frequently searched word on the dictionary’s Website. Although knowing the real prevalence of blogs is nearly impossible, two surverys conducted by the Pew Internet and American Life Project at the end of 2004 found that eight million users in the United States had created blogs, and that blog readership increased by 58% in 2004 to encompass 27% of U.S. Internet users. In marketing terms, the more risky “early adopters” of technology appear to be the most enthusiastic users of blogs. Even movies, such as the 2005 The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, by Buena Vista Pictures, are marketed through blogs.

Considering their recent entry into the mainstream vocabulary, blogs have already created controversy in the news. In the United States, criticism emanating from bloggers ultimately forced CBS News to retract a controversial story about President George W. BushÂ’s time served in the Texas Air National Guard. By the controversyÂ’s end, several people, including long-time news anchor Dan Rather, resigned from the respected network.

Hoping to reap a business gain and an increased market share from the growing popularity of blogs, in February 2005, the Internet search firm Ask Jeeves Inc. of Emeryville, California, purchased an upstart Silicon Valley blogging company known as Trustic Inc. for an undisclosed amount of money. Trustic Inc. is the owner and operator of Bloglines, whose function is to index blogs along with other live online content. It performs this function not only in English but also in six other languages. The service provided by Trustic Inc. appears to be a driver behind blogsÂ’ popularity, for it gathers new material filed by millions of bloggers and lets users search and read it without having to download any software on their computers.

Though blogs seem to be growing in popularity, there are reported business downsides to blogging. According to a Society for Human Resource Management survey conducted on 279 human resource professionals in the United States, about 3% of employees updating blogs at work were disciplined. Moreover, the popularity of vlogs has already had an adverse impact on one business in the United States. Bicycle lock maker Kryptonite Corporation experienced a public relations nightmare after a New York blogger named Benjamin Running posted a vlog illustrating that the company’s u-shaped lock could be picked with just a ballpoint pen. The vlog was apparently downloaded by more than half a million people in just four days, resulting in the ­company’s having to fill millions of product exchanges.

See Also: Computer; Internet; Risk.

Avery, S. Internet Search Firm Ask Jeeves Turns to Bloggers to Boost Traffic. The Globe and Mail, February 9, 2005, p. B3; Buena Vista Pictures. The HitchikerÂ’s Guide to the Galaxy. [Online, May 15, 2005.] Buena Vista Pictures Website. http://hitchhikers.movies.go .com/hitchblog/blog.htm; Everatt, L. A Mind-Blogging Foray into a CEOÂ’s Web Diary. The Globe and Mail, September 15, 2004, p. C9; In Brief. Blogging At Work Can Lead to Being Disciplined. The Globe and Mail, February 9, 2005, p. C8; Spector, N. Canadian Bloggers Have No One to Blame but Themselves. The Globe and Mail, March 7, 2005, p. A15; Wegert, T. Bloggers Get in Touch With Inner Spielbergs. The Globe and Mail, March 10, 2005, p. B10.

See blog in Computer


(1) To write a blog entry. Blogs (definition #2 below) became so popular that the noun was turned into a verb; for example, "I'll blog about that subject next month."

(2) (WeBLOG) A Web site that contains dated text entries in reverse chronological order (most recent first) about a particular topic. Blogs serve many purposes from online newsletters to personal journals to "ranting and raving." Written by one person or a group of contributors, entries contain commentary and links to other Web sites, and images and videos as well as a search facility may be included (see vlog).

Although some blogs invite feedback and comments, Internet newsgroup discussions, which started long before the Web, tend to be more question-and-answer oriented (see newsgroup). See also cyberjournal.

Blog Software and Services
The first blogs were manual entries in the late 1990s, typically just part of a Web site that was updated by coding in HTML. In 1999, blogs took off when applications such as Pitas, Blogger and GrokSoup were released. This template-based software made it easy to publish a blog on a Web server and add entries without knowing any HTML coding. Blog hosting services came along and offered the same functionality on their own servers, allowing anyone to set up a free blog on the Web in just minutes.

The News Feed
Many blog sites offer an RSS or Atom syndication feed that provides headlines of their latest entries along with URLs to the content (see syndication feed).

The Blogosphere


After 9/11, blogs were used to convey information, thoughts and feelings faster than any previous method. On controversial issues as well as mainstream subjects, blogs can quickly reach people around the world. The "blogosphere," which is the world of blogs, has become such a forum for public expression that it is being routinely searched for reactions and opinions about products, politics and issues of all kinds.

Everybody's Talking
By 2007, there were more than 100 million blogs on the Web offering a mind-numbing amount of comments about everything. To help wade through them, sites such as Technorati (www.technorati.com) and Google Blog Search (http://blogsearch.google.com) were created. See blog network, live blogging, blog ping, spider, blogrolling, blognosing, blogorrhea, blogger, War blog and dooced.


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Geek Humor

From "The Best of The Joy of Tech" cartoon book by Nitrozac and Snaggy (O'Reilly & Associates, Inc., 2003, ISBN 0-596-00578-4). (Image courtesy of GeekCulture, www.geekculture.com)






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