Alan E. Mann, A.G.
alan.familyhistory@gmail.com
Accredited Genealogist
BYU Annual
Genealogy and Family History
Conference
Tuesday, 1 August 2006
www.alanmann.com/articles
2:45-3:45 p.m.
prepared July 2006
The Bluster about Blogging
What
is blogging and what does it have to do with family history and genealogy? This
session looks at what blogging is, what is happening in genealogy blogging, how
it can help you in your family history research, and how to effectively use
blogs.
What
is a blog and what is blogging?
A Blog
“is a website in which items are posted on a regular basis and displayed
in reverse chronological order… blogging has quickly emerged as a popular
and important means of communication, affecting public opinion and mass media
around the world. (Wikipedia). For a more complete
history and background on blogging, see the Wikipedia entry at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blogging.
Generally,
blogs contain most of all of the following parts:
Blogging is
the writing of an entry or post in a blog. There are a few unique terms
describing blogs. For example, a moblog is a blog
created on a mobile device such as a phone or PDA; a vlog
is a blog with video content; a photoblog is a blog
whose content is almost entirely images. There are other terms used which may
unfamiliar to you. If so, just type the word at http://en.wikipedia.com to get an
explanation.
To start a
blog, an individual selects an internet site to host (store) his/her blog, and selects
the software to author the content of the blog. There are a number of websites
that offer free blog site storage and free software to create the blog posts.
There are also websites that charge a small fee for storage (presumably they
also offer some small service or capability that you can’t get from the
free ones), and there is software that the is either free,
expandable for a fee, or available for a one-time or periodic fee.
Major software
includes MovableType and WordPress,
which just to confuse things are also blog hosts. Major blog hosts include blogger, livejournal,
TypePad, and Xanga. For a
comparison of blog software, see the Blog Software Comparison at www.ojr.org/ojr/images/blog_software_comparison.cfm.
There are
hundreds of thousands (millions?) of blogs. The content of all blogs as a whole
is called the Blogosphere.
Genealogy
blogging
There is a lot
of genealogy blogging going on. Some talk about their research experiences,
some try to pass on tips and research techniques, others pass along news and
current happenings in the community, a few are devoted to specific products or
projects, while yet others try to foster a discussion about concepts, plans,
needs, or techniques. Here are a few sample blogs:
Genealogy Blog (www.genealogyblog.com)
Eastman’s Online Newsletter Blog
- http://blog.eogn.com/
Genealogy Websites I Don’t Hate -
http://genealogysites.blogspot.com/
Genealogy Help - www.genhelp.org/
Dear Myrtle (www.dearmyrtle.com)
Renee Zamora’s Blog (http://rzamor1.livejournal.com/)
Eats Like a
Human (Dan Lawyer) – http://eatslikeahuman.blogspot.com
Mannderings – http://genlib.blogspot.com
Random Genealogy - www.randomgenealogy.com/
You can find
more blogs by checking a blog
directory, such as:
or by searching. You can search the
blogosphere for a term or phrase. This will return blog postings that mention
the word or phrase you input. A few also offer the ability to search for blogs
devoted to the word you enter into the search box. Blog search tools include:
Blogdigger - www.blogdigger.com
Bloglines - www.bloglines.com/search NOTE: you
can search for posts or feeds. Search for feeds to find blogs devoted to that
topic.
Feedster – www.feedster.com (Note: this searches the
web, select blogs at top to limit you search to just blog postings)
Google blog search - http://blogsearch.google.com/blogsearch?hl=en&btnG=Search+Blogs&q=
IceRocket - http://icerocket.com/
PubSub – www.pubsub.com creates a subscription
which lists postings on the subject you enter, then
automatically updates the list with new postings.
Technorati is the largest of the searches (44.1
million blog postings). Search
For posting – www.technorati.com/search
For blogs – www.technorati.com/blogs
For tagged postings – www.technorati.com/tags
Tagging is an
important concept in blogging. Few blogs actually allow tags, which leads to
social tagging with products like del.icio.us and digg.
Tagging is the idea of adding a topic or subject category to postings. One
could think of it as an attempt to catalog the blogosphere. In essence, a tag
is metadata. The shortcoming of tagging is that people may tag things without
being consistent. For example, some might tag this article under genealogy,
while others might tag it under family history. A single article can have
multiple tags, so this article could be tagged under genealogy, family history,
blogging, RSS, and how to.
The advantage
of tagging, is that if you can search by tags, you
weed out the incidental use of a term and get results that are actually about
that subject. For example, a search for genealogy in a blog search will return
an article that talks about the genealogy of
scientific theory, while a tag search would not because the posting on
scientific theory would not be tagged under genealogy just for the incidental
use of the term.
How
a genealogy blog can help you
A great deal
of the success of genealogy and family history in the past ten years has come from
the growth of sharing information via email and websites. For
genealogists, blogging is a way of sharing knowledge and cooperating together
for mutual benefit. A genealogy blog can inform us about the latest happenings,
suggest new ways that we might use existing records, help us learn how to use a
web site more effectively, put us in touch with others with common interests,
or inform us about records or websites we didn’t know existed.
Blogging is a
great way to contribute to the pool of shared meaning—information
which is available to all. Even if you don’t choose to be a blogger, you
can benefit from the content that others have created.
Using blogs
effectively
While
blogs can bring you some useful information when you take the time to go
searching for something, effective use of blogs takes advantage of a technology
called RSS. RSS “is an acronym for Really Simple Syndication,
a family of XML file formats for web syndication used by news websites and
weblogs.” (from Wikipedia). Practically
speaking, when applied to blogs, RSS is a technology that allows any blog
reader to mark that which has already been read, and to automatically deliver
any new content or any new content that meets certain criteria. A blog,
website, or search that is RSS-enabled is called an RSS feed.
Thus, we can
monitor a blog that we think is interesting, or we can have a subscribed
search that notifies us when any new results for a specific search come. Thus,
one can perform a search with a blog search or web search engine, look at the
results, then subscribe via RSS to that search. The
user then is automatically notified when a new search result is found. For
example, I use Google to search for “Daniel S. Corley” and check
each of the search results. I then subscribe to the a
search for “Daniel S. Corley.” Google’s RSS feed will then
automatically notify me whenever Google finds another web site with that name
on it.
To use RSS
effectively, there are a variety of software products call RSS readers or RSS
aggregators. These tools allow you to pull the content you want onto a single
page, which
you
check as you want. It keeps track of what you have seen and what you
haven’t. Some aggregators are web-based. You just visit a web site, then select the feeds you want to subscribe to.
Examples of these include bloglines and netvibes. Other are software that
you install on your computer, like NewsGator, RSSReader, and FeedReader. I
personally use NetVibes although I also use BlogLines (easier to subscribe).
©Copyright 2006 by Alan E. Mann. All rights
reserved. Written permission to reproduce all or part of this syllabus material
in any format, including photocopying, data retrieval, or the Internet, must be
secured in advance from the copyright holder.