-
Website
http://www.scobleizer.com/ -
Original page
http://scobleizer.com/2007/07/15/wall-street-journal-gets-blogging-history-wrong/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
danja
44 comments · 4 points
-
polizeros
52 comments · 1 points
-
AndyBeard
69 comments · 4 points
-
Zachary Adam Cohen
35 comments · 8 points
-
dbarefoot
40 comments · 3 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
World-brand-building mistakes France’s entrepreneurs make
2 weeks ago · 181 comments
-
The best and worst thing Twitter did in 2009: RT
3 days ago · 24 comments
-
2010: the year SEO isn’t important anymore
1 week ago · 67 comments
-
iPhone developers abandoning app model for HTML5?
1 week ago · 52 comments
-
A new addition here: the Meebo bar
2 days ago · 8 comments
-
World-brand-building mistakes France’s entrepreneurs make
It was an online shared mechanism for mw to write and share thoughts and ideas, and it contained a comment function.
If it wasn't a "blog" I don't know what disqualifies it... The only real difference now is that most users don't "dial-in" to a specific number to get at a specific "blog".
Rob
If you needed a content management system to do a blog, well, then, it started with Manila and Blogger and other tools in the late 1990s.
To me blogging really started in the late 1990s, but Dave Winer was among the first, if not the first. To say that Jorn was among the first, though, is just wrong.
Dave Winer certainly isn't one of my favorite techno-geeks simply because our "politics" clash (and my posts magically disappear). BUT, I give credit where credit is do, and Mr. Winer deserves it.
BR,
Robert
BTW... I didn't intend for my first post to sound so harsh. I just meant that my opinion clashes too much with Dave's. I'm sure he's a great guy.
Modern Mainstream Journalism is a disgrace.
No medium is perfect, and I think it is unfair to characterize all bloggers or all mainstream media writers with one broad brush.
Cheers!
Kirupa
http://www.joehewitt.com/feff/whacks/
I never really considered the Whack to be "the first blog", but now that I am seeing everybody dating the first blogs as Justin Hall and Dave Winer in 1996 it occurs to me that Doug had them beat by a full six months. What Doug lacked that Justin and Dave had is that he was not a connected insider, just a high school kid in New Jersey. He should really get more credit.
I wrote a little more about this on my blog:
http://www.joehewitt.com/blog/origins_of_blog.php
More here: http://blogs.smugmug.com/don/2007/07/15/the-wal...
At the time Compuserve was threatening to charge for licensing to use the GIF format. This was becoming a controversial issue, and I set up a website to link to the latest happenings on the issue.
The site had a reverse-chronological list on the front pages, with some titles linking to separate pages and others being direct links elsewhere. It was updated several times a day, and I got a bunch of calls from journalists - I was interviewed twice on the subject by British magazines.
Sadly, it wasn't called a "blog" or a "weblog" and was hand-edited HTML, and it didn't stay online for long, so I can't prove it ever existed. But it wasn't the first page of its kind anyway.
Bloggers too often think they invented the Web, but I've had sites online since 1994 (complete with reverse-chronological "what's new" pages) so I still think of blogs as a relatively recent phenomenon.
Frankly, if I were the first blogger, I wouldn't take credit for it either - there's a lot about what blogs have become that I wouldn't be proud of at all.
Cheers
Anthony
I guess I could see if someone wanted to look around for who has been blogging the longest, but that's entirely different then who was blogging first. You're going to constantly be faced with people saying "Yeah, but [so-and-so] was doing [slight-deviation of whatever you just mentioned] a year or two before that!"
I think the main hype started with wordpress, blogger, blogspot, livejournal, etc. Before that there was newspro (or coranto) but that required some perl hacking to get running.
Before that, blogging required your own domain and hosting, and knowing how to write some perl or PHP.
If you ask me, those days were a lot better. Having to put so much time into it ensured that only those who really truly had something to say blogged. It eliminated a lot of the noise that fill the blogosphere today.
of course this "word hype" happens with everything. It happened with AJAX. AJAX was nothing new, somebody just gave it a clever name and it took off. It's happening now with iPhone applications. They're just websites formatted to fit a small screen.
This was about in 1985 or 86. city dial in bulletin boards always had a news section that was regularly updated. This was in effect the first version of blogs.
For me one of the most startling things about Justin's work was the intimate point of view and how he wrote and photographed (and eventually video taped) his daily life. The "reverse chronological order/dated posts" attribute is important, but I think that personal "point of view" aspect is critical to the definition of a blog: while it's expanded in scope, most are still opinion journalism, and independent viewpoints --not a directory of press releases or corporate-controlled information.
People may argue with me on this, but if independence wasn't part of the expectation of blogs, then no one should have a problem with the pay-per-post guys, the people ready microsoft campaign that FM got involved with...or the censorship rant about creative cow's post-deletion. If it was just dated posts, more sites/services would apply and the issues of transparency, sources and viewpoints would be less controversial.
That said, my favorite proto-blog is the Hwy 17 Page of Shame, from 1995-96. 2 guys documenting their daily commute over the hill with an Apple QuickTake camera.
http://web.archive.org/web/20001025055104/got.n...
These guys may have created a name for it, but give them credit for the name, not for inventing something countless others were already doing.
http://mikeelliottsblog.wordpress.com
Winer is now taking credit for developing plain text and HTML? Wow!
This is silly. Jorn Barger gets credit because he coined the term weblog and his was about the links, not some kind of update page.
For my two cents, anyone remember Robert Sideman's Online Insider?
C'mon! You know as well as I do that according to Scoble and Winer, communication didn't exist before the invention of the internet.
http://www.forgetfoo.com/images/blog/blogmonks.gif
Everyone knows that Justin Hall started the modern blog and Jorn Barber coined the phase blog. We know it's true because Wikipedia says so ;-)
There was a chronology, there were tidbit insights and personal revelations, all fleshed out with quotidian detail (e.g., "I am listening to...").