Your preceding page stated that I was now part of the problem … no doubt about that! How can I discuss anything I cannot read (or hear)? Your web construct fails to move me through the pages of commentary! I can do a far better job of talking to myself without this!!!
I’m outta here! I’ve got better things to do with my time than this “conversation” with my computer!!!
Sonny raises a good point, and one that echoes a comment the Deutsche Welle radio reporter raised yesterday during our interview: to the uninitiated, a weblog seems like a strange, disorganized thing. It doesn’t read like a book or a newspaper, and unless you’re “in the flow” of the blog — reading it every once in a while, or “constantly” — it can be a disjointing experience to jump inside of.
This is mitigated somewhat by the fact that most blogs share a few common features: bite-sized “posts” displayed in reverse chronological order, links to comments and “trackback” (basically a notice on weblog A that a comment has appeared about it on weblog B), “permalinks” to each post (allowing just that story to be displayed, and thus linked to as a chunk of independent text). As such, if you can come to understand the format of one blog, you stand a good chance of other blogs making much more sense.
Comments
Your preceding page stated that I was now part of the problem … no doubt about that! How can I discuss anything I cannot read (or hear)? Your web construct fails to move me through the pages of commentary! I can do a far better job of talking to myself without this!!!
I’m outta here! I’ve got better things to do with my time than this “conversation” with my computer!!!
Sonny raises a good point, and one that echoes a comment the Deutsche Welle radio reporter raised yesterday during our interview: to the uninitiated, a weblog seems like a strange, disorganized thing. It doesn’t read like a book or a newspaper, and unless you’re “in the flow” of the blog — reading it every once in a while, or “constantly” — it can be a disjointing experience to jump inside of.
This is mitigated somewhat by the fact that most blogs share a few common features: bite-sized “posts” displayed in reverse chronological order, links to comments and “trackback” (basically a notice on weblog A that a comment has appeared about it on weblog B), “permalinks” to each post (allowing just that story to be displayed, and thus linked to as a chunk of independent text). As such, if you can come to understand the format of one blog, you stand a good chance of other blogs making much more sense.
see http://groups.msn.com/St-Peter…
see http://www.stpetersburg.it/
see http://www.san-pietroburgo.inf…
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