Feeling like I have to expand an idea out into some 3000-word treatise just adds a weight which suddenly turns the whole thing into another fucking task I have to add to the pile and then explain to my poor girlfriend why I’m spending another evening fiddling with my website rather than fiddling with her. –JK
Hey! What better way to start a post about blogging than with a classic, yellow-blogging headline?
Time Tested Blogging Research Methodology: Anecdotes
To my mind, this ads up to people having less fun producing and consuming blogs.
Lean Blogging
In truth, what I see happening more is a shortening of the form. Rather than using blogs as a medium for publishing articles, people are more interested in writing up short notes. This is beneficial for mass-blog readers like myself: shorter content is easier to consume.
Keeping your content short and yet useful is difficult. Interestingly, the idea of “hyper-text,” the foundational philosophy of the web, if you will, should make this easier by having all sorts of “click here for more detail” links. But, that never really caught on. When not relaxing - that is, working - people want a beginning, middle, and an end.
This is one reason why Twitter is so popular. Much of what you need to know (feel free to go Pareto Crazy, here if you need numbers instead of anecdote-clains) can be reduced to a headline with a link to read more. Yeah: Twitter.
Little Johnny Has a Blog
As the Stackoverflow boys point out, what’s also happening here is that blogging as a medium has gotten sanded down into normalcy. Everyone does it as just another way to publish. You can hear the word “blogger” dozens of times on Sunday morning political talk shows.
“There are 55 million blogs and some of them have got to be good,” Sterling said, during a speech here at the SXSW conference in reference to the slogan on blog search site technorati.com. “Well, no, actually. They don’t.”
“I don’t think there will be that many of them around in 10 years. I think they are a passing thing.”
That’s overly cynical, but it gets to the point. Blogging is pretty much just a medium now. Don’t take that the wrong way: it doesn’t mean that any effect the idea of blogging has had has gone away, it means the message part that it brought is now “normal.” Like newspapers - no one obsesses about the newspaper (or printed books, even) as a medium for communication: it’s just the news and people thinking in print.