Journal becomes blog (posted Saturday, March 21st, 2009 at 12:00 pm)

Working in information management and communications (which I am just adoring) brings out the technogeek in me. I’m constantly exposed to new gadgets, widgets and midgets. Alright, I haven’t been exposed to any midgets - yet. But all this interaction with the world of Web 2.0 (follow that link to see an exceptional video, by the way) has made me realise just how much I can neglect basic standards of good web writing on my own web site. For example:

- My journal entries are all written in JavaScript, which means Google can’t search them. I’ve always kind of liked this, since it means Google also  can’t cache them (make copies, store them away and show them to people even if I delete them from my own site). But it’s generally not good practice for the web: I’m like a reclusive writer who hides his work in a cupboard that nobody will ever look in. So I’m moving to WordPress, which will not only make posting easier for me, it will allow Google to crawl and cache to its robotic heart’s content.

- I don’t invite interaction. Although anybody can comment on my journal entries, it’s not often that I ask people to. So from now on I will endeavour to end my journal entries with a question or discussion-starter for my devoted readers. (And now that my Twitter updates show on the homepage, you can send me Tweets as well. More on how brilliant Twitter is at a later date.)

- I don’t link to other sites much, or use the great embeddable resources out there, like Google Maps or YouTube. These are exceptional tools for blogging as they connect you with the rest of the world from within your own web site. There’s also nowhere in the world that isn’t on Google Maps, and barely anything caught on video that isn’t on YouTube.

And all that is why this, as you may have noticed, is not a journal entry, but a blog post. I’ve already done a fair bit of work towards connecting my site with all the social media hubs - I’m now connected with Twitter and Google Calendar (both from the rearranged homepage). You can search Google for me. You can comment on my picture galleries (not yet on individual pictures - not ideal, I know, but I’ll get there). And there’s a “share” button at the bottom of every page that allows you to bookmark kkcom (I’ve been calling it “kkcom” in notes-to-self for years, so now I’m beginning to here) on any of a wealth of social networks.

If you don’t already, please start using a feed reader (personally I like Google’s. It makes keeping track of all your favourite web sites so much easier - I, for example, just have to go to one place to find out the latest news, what Dilbert, Cory Doctorow, Jon Arbuckle and President Obama are up to (in Obama’s case, apparently nothing since he became Big P, which seems a little cynical of the media team), whether any exciting job openings have surfaced at Oxfam, Upcoming events in Oxford and about twenty other things besides. And, if you fancy it, I can pop up in your feed reader too. To add feeds to your reader, you only need to click the icon on the right of the address bar (on my web site there’s also one to the right of the menu).

So, to my invitation of your interaction:

What else can I do to make my blog, and my web site, better?

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2 comments on “Journal becomes blog”:
jess said:

i was confused for a sec whether you had already moved to wordpress or were in the process of making the move. (but i see that you have, i think?) in any case, there might be a way to integrate your journal-comments (i.e. forum posts) with your new blog-comments. i don’t know what way this is, but i remember it working on btts (between troh and front page news) for a little while, while will was still around to tinker with it.

do you have a wordpress account which you imported to your website or did you simply install wordpress on your existing site? i think the prior might better invite interaction between blogs because it allows users to connect and watch their comments on their own dashboards. that’s just a suggestion though. i’m not sure it matters quite as much because i can link my own blog in the link-space.

that’s all for now. i’ll check out the rest of your website when i’m not supposed to be thesis-writing.

cheers,
“jessia”

Kinders said:

I installed WP on kkcom… I’ll have a look for some plugins though. :)