Showing posts with label blog. Show all posts
Showing posts with label blog. Show all posts

Sunday, July 1, 2012

I hate the new blogger

It's supposed to be easier, but there are more clicks to do things and uploading images can be a pain in the neck sometimes.

It takes a while to put a post together and it's really annoying that the formatting is sometimes whacky and to fix it you have to go between the normal view and the HTML view. Cutting and pasting can lose paragraph spacings and you can't put the "quote" indents in unless you're in the HTML view.

Arrgh.

And I've been crook and don't have time to mess around with this crap with blogger.

Thursday, June 3, 2010

Happy Birthday, Bloodnut Blog

Somehow my second blog-birthday slipped by... how could that happen?

24th May 08, I think that's the day I started the blog.

Yes, that's the day. I started with Lame Jokes and Glurg.

Monday, August 10, 2009

Journos trawl blogs for leads.. . like this one

It appears that journos do view blogs and get leads from them, and not only the blogs which they apply their name to and administer.

Bloggers may howl, but cash for content makes sense

WHAT is it about news in the 21st century that makes people so vehemently opposed to paying for it? After all, we pay for everything else -- the water we drink, the electricity we use, the phone calls we make, the music we choose, fuel for our cars or tickets to ride on our trains. We even pay for "free" things, such as healthcare.

The instant Rupert Murdoch last week confirmed his plan to introduce charges for News Corporation websites around the world (including The Australian), the blogosphere lit up with condemnation.

I'd say 99 per cent of the reaction was negative, ranging from the adamant "I will not pay, full stop", to the slightly more wistful "Bye-bye News".

On the face of it, any sensible marketer would fold the tent and move on. But I don't believe what the bloggers say, and here's why.

First, people who respond to blogs or website polls do not represent all people and cannot be described as a reliable cross-section of society.
Let me see...

When I used to buy the newspaper (recently I had the paper delivered on Saturdays only, however that ceased as it wasn't worth the newsagent's time and money to deliver), I purchased The Weekend Australian and the local Saturday paper for the paper's real estate "magazine". With the Weekend Australian the only parts I really had time to read were the first half of the paper (the News), the opinion and letters pages and the Weekend Australian magazine. It wouldn't be worth my while to subscribe for that.

If I'm paying for news I'd rather pay for a dead tree edition so that I can sit and read them while sipping my morning cuppa.

Subscriptionblogs? The whole concept of the blog was that it was a way to share information, for entertainment and to keep oneself amused. I first began to read a blog in about 2004 when Tim Blair hooked me with his blog, I used to subscribe to The Bulletin and found my way to his blog from there. The idea of the newspapers charging for blogs really defeats the purpose of them. Sure, there are plenty of people who will sling a few bucks here and there to blogs they frequent, however, these blogs are mostly run by individuals not conglomerates, and the money they raise supplements their blogcosts... and helps with equipment/software upgrades... or buys their beer for drunkblogging.

Paying for newspaper blogs? I don't know. Sometimes they are as dead as dodos, sometimes they are really not worth reading and that's no reflection on the blog byliner, there are slow news days, there are days when most interesting/witty/specialist/humourist/poetic contributors are MIA. However, a blog owned by an Australian conglomerate and operated within Australia means there are all kinds of limits which must be imposed due to the risk of litigation with Australian defamation laws and this will limit the interest in paying a fee to view and or comment on a blog, and this will limit the interest in subscribing to a blog.

There will be people who will subscribe, they will possibly be most numerous in those who will subscribe to a newspaper and be given the blog subscription bundled with the news subscription.
I was surprised to see some US readers of a blog say that they'd be happy to subscribe $US250-300 to read that blog.

This amused me, too:

Today, some people choose to buy newspapers and get a bundled service of all kinds of news (business, political, sport, lifestyle) plus comics, crosswords, cartoons, advertisements and directories to multiple services.

Others choose not to and are content to let radio and television provide, free of charge, all the news they want in their daily lives.

(Mind you, consumers eventually pay for the advertising that supports these free services through the price of products on supermarket shelves or their taxes.)

Sunday, May 24, 2009

Bloodnut is one today!

Bloodnut is One!

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Well, I've been at it for a year now. Time flies.
Now that I've changed jobs I should have a bit more time to write on the blog, if I can just catch up with the around the house/yard stuff I have to do.
I'd like to say thanks to the commenters and lurkers, and ask that the lurkers comment, it's much more encouraging to know that someone's out there and willing to comment (if you have a gmail account you can use that to log in and ID yourself)...
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The first post.... Best personal post.... Well, that's what I think, anyway.