What is it about tech that encourages - maybe requires? - that previous contributions, incarnations and manifestations be publicly rendered inanimate? Why the determination to bury the past?
It may be that in an industry which so lionizes innovation, prior inventions take up too much space - and money. It could also be that there is some embarrassment associated with the existence of features which appear, in the cold light of an ever-new dawn, outmoded. It suggests that whatever one created, embraced and touted was not, alas, built for the ages.
But, as with all the other devices, platforms, media, channels, features (and bugs) previously mourned, blogging will survive. In its current form it evidently does not drive traffic as efficiently as Facebook or LinkedIn or Twitter. It may also require too much thought and attention from a populace accustomed to speed and brevity. And that, actually, may be fine.
If it has not already, it will become part of the conversation, a connection through which knowledge, and possibly even data will flow. It may not command the big bucks and top of mind attention (or not) but it will morph into a contributing factor. In fact, it will probably become a primary means by which successive technological developments are, themselves, declared dead as well. JL
Jeremie Cohen-Setton comments in Breughel via Naked Capitalism:
Blogging is a conversation, and conversations don’t go viral. Blogging encourages interjections into conversations, and it thrives off of familiarity. Social media encourages content that can travel all on its own.
The Golden Age of Blogs
Jason Kottke writes that blogs are for 40-somethings with kids. In the past few years, the blog died. Sure, blogs still exist, many of them are excellent, and they will go on existing and being excellent for many years to come. But the function of the blog is increasingly being handled by a growing number of disparate media forms that are blog-like but also decidedly not blogs. The primary mode for the distribution of links has moved from the loosely connected network of blogs to tightly integrated services like Facebook and Twitter.
Ben Smith writes since 2008 that ecosystem of links and blogs decayed and, in many places, collapsed. Few blogs drive the traffic they once did, and reporters hope their stories will be widely tweeted, rather than linked — though that doesn’t drive the same kind of traffic. In retrospect, the golden era of political blogs stretched from 2004 to 2008. The tech blog golden era started earlier and ended later. While the blogosphere has now been dying for as long as it was alive, Andrew Sullivan’s decision to shut down marks a kind of final punctuation to the era.
Ben Thompson writes that a big problem with this entire discussion is that there really isn’t a widely agreed-upon definition of what a blog is. For Thompson, a “blog” is a regularly-updated site that is owned-and-operated by an individual (there is, of course, the “group blog,” but it too has a clearly-defined set of authors). And there, in that definition, is the reason why, despite the great unbundling, the blog has not and will not die: it is the only communications tool, in contrast to every other social service, that is owned by the author; to say someone follows a blog is to say someone follows a person.
2 comments:
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