Blogging 2.0: It’s All About The User
Popularity Report
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URL Tag Cloud
Bookmark History
Saved by 7 people (0 private), first by anonymouse user on 2008-05-19
- Waynesutton on 2009-02-03 - Tags no_tag
- Davidsim on 2008-06-24 - Tags tweetmarks
- Lajost on 2008-06-15 - Tags blogging , friendfeed , microblogging , communication , l@jost
- Nycrican2 on 2008-06-09 - Tags web2.0links
- Jrowlands on 2008-05-24 - Tags aggregator
Public Sticky notes
The argument around services like FriendFeed is similar: from a publishers viewpoint you are giving up some control, you are losing some of the conversation away from the main destination. But what do your readers want? You can’t stop a conversation occurring on FriendFeed, but you can do things like including that conversation on your blog (as I have here at The Inquisitr). You can embrace that conversation by taking part in it, and FriendFeed doesn’t republish the full feed so ultimately a thread on FriendFeed with a lot of activity is actually driving additional (and often new) traffic back to your site.
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Public Comment