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Who uses blogs...and why?

from Essential Blogging
by Cory Doctorow, et. al
O'Reilly

Creating a taxonomy of the blogiverse is a fruitless task. There's no good, central directory of blogs that puts each one in its own pigeonhole, because even the most topical blogger will stray from the subject from time to time to celebrate some personal victory or warn his readers off a terrible movie.

Blogs are rich tapestries of something-or-other, mind-croggling crazy quilts of opinion, fact, community, humor, bile, and lust.

Cult figures such as Neil Gaiman,an award-winning writer best known for the Sandman comics (http://www.neilgaiman.com/journal/journal.asp), and Wil Wheaton, geek hero best known for his role as Ensign Wesley Crusher on Star Trek: The Next Generation (http://www.wilwheaton.net), blog, holding forth on the subjects that have wandered over their personal and creative transoms that day.

Amateur pundits such as Jorn Barger (http://www.robotwisdom.com) and pros such as Andrew Sullivan (http://www.andrewsullivan.com) comment on current affairs and make political points.

People from all walks of life maintain personal diaries, from Scraps deSelby's LiveJournal (http://baldanders.livejournal.com), which chronicles his obsession with music and his struggle to stay employed in New York City to Punk Rock Girl (http://www.mokuzen.net/journal/), the caffeinated rantings of its eponymous author. Journalists, such as the San Jose Mercury's Dan Gillmor, keep blogs (http://www.dangillmor.com) where they engage in "Journalism 3.0," interacting with the subjects of and audiences for their articles in real time; Paul Boutin, former senior editor of Wired magazine, does much the same on his blog (http://paulboutin.weblogger.com), where he has taken to drumming up scientists to debunk the claims of conspiracy nuts who say the Pentagon bombing was faked.

Freelance analyst George Scriban (http://www.scriban.com) keeps a blog where he dissects the "piracy" claims of the entertainment industry by gathering (and linking to) data from sources all over the Web, taking investigative journalism to the next level. Jason Lubyk of New World Disorder (http://www.drmenlo.com/nwd/) posts a half-dozen news-of-the-weird stories every day, while Gary Farber's Amygdala (http://amygdalagf.blogspot.com) does much the same with lengthy commentary and analysis.

Glenn Fleishman's 802.11b Networking News (http://80211b.weblogger.com) is the place for news and analysis of new wireless networking technology. He's not the only one -- bloggers cover technology like no other subject. Wes Felter's pithy notes on Hack The Planet (http://wmf.editthispage.com) provide razor-sharp point-form commentary on important tech news.

The author of this chapter is Cory Doctorow, a coeditor of a blog called Boing Boing: A Directory of Wonderful Things. Boing Boing (http://www.boingboing.net) originated as a paper "cyberculture" zine, and while the medium has changed, the content is much the same: snide and impassioned commentary on technology, civil liberties, Disney theme parks, community wireless networks, science fiction, natural oddities, and Fortean phenomena, und zo wieter. While all three contributors to Boing Boing earn parts of their living as professional journalists, the blog is a wonderful opportunity for us to spout off on the subjects we're excited about, without having to duke it out with an editor over subject and word choice.

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