The history of blogging started with early digital communities like Usenet and BBS forums. The first blogs evolved from online diaries in the 1990s. Blogging rapidly grew in popularity after 1999 with the launch of Open Diary, Pitas.com, and Blogger.com. Today, popular blogging platforms include WordPress, Blogger, TypePad, Movable Type, and Drupal. Blogging allows people to freely express themselves and interact online through regularly updated content.
3. The history of blogging starts with several
digital precursors to it. Before "blogging"
became popular, digital communities took many
forms, including Usenet, commercial online
services such as GEnie, BiX and the
early CompuServe, e-mail lists and Bulletin
Board Systems (BBS).
4. In the 1990s, Internet forum software,
such as WebEx, created running conversations
with "threads". Threads are topical connections
between messages on a metaphorical
"corkboard". Some have likened blogging to
the Mass-Observation project of the mid-20th
century.
5. 1983â1993
Usenet was the primary serial medium
included in the original definition of
the Internet. It featured the moderated
newsgroup which allowed all posting in a
newsgroup to be under the control of an
individual or small group
6. 1994â2001
The modern blog evolved from the online
diary, where people would keep a running
account of their personal lives. Most such
writers called themselves diarists, journalists, or
journalers. A few called themselves
"escribitionists".Â
7. After a slow start, blogging rapidly gained in
popularity. Blog usage spread during 1999 and the
years following, being further popularized by the near-
simultaneous arrival of the first hosted blog tools:
8. Open Diary launched in October 1998, soon
growing to thousands of online diaries. Open
Diary innovated the reader comment, becoming
the first blog community where readers could
add comments to other writers' blog entries.
SlashDot, a still-popular blog for tech "nerds"
launched in September 1997.
Brad Fitzpatrick, a well known blogger
started LiveJournal in March 1999
9. Andrew Smales created Pitas.com in July 1999
as an easier alternative to maintaining a "news
page" on a website, followed by Diaryland in
September 1999, focusing more on a personal
diary community.
Evan Williams and Meg Hourihan (Pyra Labs)
launched blogger.com in August 1999
(purchased by Google in February 2003)
10. 2001â2004
By 2001, blogging was enough of a
phenomenon that how-to manuals began to
appear, primarily focusing on technique. The
importance of the blogging community (and its
relationship to larger society) increased rapidly.
Established schools of journalism began
researching blogging and noting the differences
between journalism and blogging.
11. Also in 2002, many blogs focused on
comments by U.S. Senate Majority Leader Trent
Lott. Senator Lott, at a party honoring U.S.
Senator Strom Thurmond, praised Senator
Thurmond by suggesting that the United States
would have been better off had Thurmond been
elected president.
Since 2002, blogs have gained increasing
notice and coverage for their role in breaking,
shaping, and spinning news stories.
12. 2004âpresent
In 2004, Global Voices Online, a site which
"aggregates, curates, and amplifies the global
conversation online â shining light on places
and people other media often ignore" surfaced,
bringing to light bloggers from around the
world. Today, the site has a relationship
with Reuters and is responsible for breaking
many global news stories.
13. In the United Kingdom, The
Guardian newspaper launched a redesign in
September 2005. Also in June 2006, BBC
News launched a weblog for its editors,
following other news companies.
In January 2005, Fortune magazine listed
eight bloggers that business people "could not
ignore": Peter Rojas, Xeni Jardin, Ben
Trott, Mena Trott, Jonathan Schwartz, Jason
Goldman, Robert Scoble, and Jason Calacanis.
14. In 2007, Tim O'Reilly proposed a Blogger's
Code of Conduct.
In 2011, Tom Knighton, owner of Knighton
Media, Inc, announced that his company was
purchasing The Albany Journal. Knighton
Media was formed to managed Knighton's
blog, Laws-n-Sausages, and this was the first
known time that a blog had purchased a
newspaper anywhere in the world.
.
15. BLOGGING
â˘
The act of creating and maintaining a blog.
â˘
Is the act of posting a content on a blog (a web
log or online journal) or posting comments on
someone elseâs blog.
16. â˘
It is one of the most sought after activities on
the Web. Ever since its evolution way back in
1999 by Peter Merholz, it has become a
phenomenon amongst internet users for
personal, commercial, and business activities.
â˘
Blogging is a way of expressing oneâs
thoughts, ideas, opinions or experiences.
â˘
Generally interactive in nature.
18. WordPress
Is a free and open source blogging tool and a
dynamic content management system (CMS)
based on PHP and MySQL. It has many
features including a plug-in architecture and
a template system.
It was first released on May 27, 2003, by
founders Matt Mullenweg and Mike Little
19. Google Blogger
Is a blog-publishing service that allows private or multi-
user blogs with time-stamped entries. It was created
by Pyra Labs, which was bought by Google in 2003.
Generally, the blogs are hosted by Google at
a subdomain of blogspot.com.Â
20. TypePad Is another blogging site that has gained
a reputation through its user friendly
interface and ease of use. TypePad gives
your blog search engine friendly URLs
and will automatically optimize your
site for better search engine rankings.
The TypePad software also has very
good anti-comment spam features.
Unfortunately you must pay a fee of
$8.95 per month to use TypePad and,
even at that price, you are only allowed
three blogs.
Originally launched in October 2003,Â
21. Movable Type
 is a weblog publishing system developed by the company Six
Apart. Written in Perl, and supports storage of the weblog's content
and associated data within MySQL natively.
Similar to WordPress, Movable Type offers a free self-hosted
package (MovableType.org) as well as a service for non-developers
who would like to host their blog for free (MovableType.com).
22. Drupal
Is a free and open-source content
management system (CMS) and content
management framework (CMF) written
in PHP and distributed under the GNU
General Public License. Drupal runs on
any computing platform that supports both
a web server capable of running PHP
(including Apache, IIS, Lighttpd, Hiawatha,C
herokee or Nginx) and a database (such
as MySQL, MariaDB, PostgreSQL, SQLite, Mo
ngoDB or Microsoft SQL Server) to store
content and settings.
23. Xanga
Xanga started as a site for sharing book, music and movie review but has
since evolved into a full-force blogging platform. Xanga is free but with
the premium/plus versions you are given more publishing and design
options, bandwidth and storage space. You can use Xanga on your own
domain (as opposed to using a sub-domain of Xanga) and, because Xanga
uses domain mapping, your domain will have free WHOIS protection,
which means people cannot learn your contact information by doing a
WHOIS search on your domain (a service that usually costs $10 per year).
24. 9 Tripod
Tripod, created by the underdog search engine Lycos, is a web hosting
service and content management system for blogs and websites that
operate under free, plus or pro accounts. The software is not open source
but incredibly stream-lined and easy to use with a wide variety of
professionally designed templates to choose from for your blog or website.
The free account is only allowed 20GB of disk space, 1GB of monthly
bandwidth and you must run ads by Tripod unless you upgrade to a Plus
account.
25. Squarespace
Similar to Tripod, Squarespace is a hosting
service that comes with an easy to use, closed-
source content management system for blogs
and websites. Squarespace offers some
promising features, including an iphone app to
view and edit your site, dozens of professionally
designed templates, social media integration and
an importation tool if you would like to move
your blog from WordPress, TypePad or Blogger.
The trial version of Squarespace lasts 14 days
and the basic package costs $8 per month. More
expensive packages (like the $50 community
package) allow more bandwidth usage, disk
space, custom URLs and other functionalities.
27. It allows people to interact with each other.
Easy to start and maintain.
Frequently updated with contents.
Freedom to express your feelings.
28. Â You can learn a lot from blogs.Â
Doesnât require that writers and contributors
know a lot about HTML.
Serves as an Internet medium where you can
always refer to older entries and refer them as
and when needed.
Blogging is fun and for everyone.Â