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Salon Blogs birthday report

July 25, 2003 by Scott Rosenberg

Mark Hoback and a couple of other people have asked that I take the one-year mark for Salon Blogs as a chance to offer some state-of-the-project notes, since I originally described it as an “experiment.” “Experiments have results, positive, negative, or ambiguous,” Mark wrote in the comments below.

True. On the other hand this is not a lab experiment with a fixed time and the goal of proving or disproving a hypothesis. Like so much else on the Web, it’s more like an ongoing improvisation.

So the first thing to get out of the way is the business stuff. Salon Blogs has not resulted in vast numbers of people using the service, nor has revenue from the service (which we share with UserLand Software) had any significant impact on Salon’s bottom line. That’s no huge surprise to me; I’d have been (very happily) surprised if the opposite had happened, and such huge throngs of people signed up for blogs that it added major new revenue for our company.

What this means, though, is that Salon Blogs for now has to remain what it has been from the start: a labor of love. We don’t have spare bucks to spend on marketing it or revamping it. Our partner company, UserLand, is currently in transition after the departure of its president, John Robb. My hope is that over the next year, if the economy actually improves and Salon manages to end up in a better place financially, we might look at structural improvements to the Salon Blogs service. For now, it is what it is.

And what that is, for me, is still great, and utterly worth the energy we’ve put into it. Blogging is a vast terrain these days — and with AOL about to step into the fray, bound to get vaster. From where I sit, our little piece of the blogosphere has more creativity, personality and quality per URL than any other comparable community of weblogs. Aside from the business side, the other “result” of the experiment that does not surprise me in the least is that the greater Salon community would turn out to harbor so many great bloggers — and so many new ideas about what to do with a blog.

The only thing I could reasonably predict, going into this project, was how thoroughly unpredictable the range of bloggers and blogging would be. I had no clue that Julie was out there somewhere, ready to dig into thousands of Julia Child recipes… or that the Real Live Preacher was looking for a virtual pulpit for his stories… or that the Reverse Cowgirl was about to begin a new trend in “sex blogging”… or that Mark Hoback was going to plug the collective talents of the Salon bloggers into a weekly anthology on a whole ‘nother site… That we would have blog novels and stuff about software development and teenagers’ international correspondence from the early ’70s and an in-depth discourse on Why Your Wife Won’t Have Sex With You and so much else that I’m sure I’ve missed or failed to recall.

All is flux, and so we have lost some great blogs, too (I miss The Raven, and just saw that No Code has moved on too, and I’m sure there are others I’m forgetting).

One of the things I’m disappointed about is that the exigencies of my own life (including being the parent of two wonderful and all-consuming boys approaching four years old) and job (including the ever-changing challenges of keeping an independent original-content Web site afloat and up-to-snuff) mean that there’s only so much reading and blogging I can fit in. But that’s a good kind of problem to have.

Since in the coming year it is unlikely that peace, love and understanding will conquer all, and more likely that the flow of news and events will continue to provide us with too much to talk about and to be disturbed by — including more than one election! — I can’t think of a better group of cantankerous, contrary, eloquently individual people to be posting with. Thanks to all you bloggers, past, present and future.

Filed Under: Salon, Salon Blogs

Anniversary

July 23, 2003 by Scott Rosenberg

Bruce Umbaugh reminds us that today marks the one-year anniversary of the launch of Salon Blogs. (Here’s a link to my first day’s posts from a year ago.) Thanks to everyone who has chosen to pitch their blog-tents on our virtual turf!

Filed Under: Personal, Salon Blogs

The Maxine issue

June 27, 2003 by Scott Rosenberg

Over at Virtual Occoquan, Mark Hoback‘s periodic compilation of material from Salon Blogs, it’s the Maxine Issue — chock full of contributions by Maxine Daley.

Filed Under: Salon Blogs

End of Raven’s blog

May 23, 2003 by Scott Rosenberg

I’ll spare you the “nevermore” jokes, but it does seem like The Raven, one of my all-time favorite Salon blogs, has hung up his keyboard, at least for now. I’ll miss his caustic and restless reviews of the news.

Filed Under: Salon Blogs

Salon Blog watch

May 15, 2003 by Scott Rosenberg

Comillas49: “A father, a son, a friend, and a freakin’ big ocean.” Three men and the sea, and a blog to chronicle the whole thing. They leave from Newport in about two weeks, en route to Spain.

Reverse Cowgirl: The “You’re A Bad Man, Aren’t You?” Fundraiser.

Filed Under: Salon Blogs

Salon Blogs survey

April 22, 2003 by Scott Rosenberg

Dave Pollard recently conducted an informal survey of Salon bloggers — how they do what they do, what their gripes are, and what they’ve learned. It’s good reading. I intend to post some discussion of some of the specific issues raised there soon. But it’s been a crazy week already, and then I’m off tomorrow to the O’Reilly emerging tech conference, so it’ll wait a bit longer.

Filed Under: Salon Blogs

IP tagging of comments

April 9, 2003 by Scott Rosenberg

In an effort to further discourage spamming, Userland has set up a feature that tags comment posts with IP numbers. So if you don’t want your IP number posted, don’t comment…

Filed Under: Salon Blogs

Spam attack

April 9, 2003 by Scott Rosenberg

OK, it looks like the spam monkeys are at work in the comments fields here again.

As we get the technical tools to deal with this the situation will improve.

In the meantime, let’s note this for what it is: a ridiculous, juvenile and utterly antisocial effort to quell speech. It is, literally, an effort to drown out others’ voices. The spammers can’t affect anything published on the main page of this blog, but they seem to get their kicks from making it hard for other people to post comments.

The absurdity here is that, more often than not, the commenters are people who have hung around this blog to take issue with my arguments about the war. So if there’s some bizarre Freeper motivation at work behind the spam, some kneejerk neanderthal anti-Salon-ism from the right, it’s backfiring: all it’s really achieving is making it tough for the posters who have gamely and thoughtfully been contesting my pessimistic posts on the war.

But then spammers rarely do make much sense.

Filed Under: Salon Blogs

Update on RCS problems

April 8, 2003 by Scott Rosenberg

The problem with the comment server (which also affected all the other RCS functions, like Recently Updated) was the result of individuals spamming the server with repetitious lengthy posts. This problem also affected the main UserLand comments server.

UserLand has implemented a maximum limit on the length of a comments thread. The good news is that this deals with the problem. The bad news is that this limits the length of comments threads.

Longer term fix in the works: allowing bloggers to delete posts.

Filed Under: Salon Blogs

Server slowness

April 6, 2003 by Scott Rosenberg

I know the Salon Blogs Radio Community Server (which provides our list of recently updated sites, our traffic-based “rankings” and our comments feature) is flaky, funky or downright down right now. This server is operated by our partners at UserLand. I’ve emailed them to alert them to the problem. Hopefully we’ll get a fix soon…

Filed Under: Salon Blogs

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