Rebooting The Blogosphere (Part 3: Integration) [en]

Start with part 1 (activities), then part 2 (interaction). Sorry this 3rd part took a little longer than intended to come out.

In parts 1 and 2 of this series, I covered some types of activities (reading, writing, responding, sharing) that come into play in the text-driven social web, as well as the different flavours of interaction that make up our online relations (more or less synchronous, and related to that, contribution length in those exchanges).

What this is all about is figuring out how blogging can learn from what made “The Socials” (which became the big capitalist social networks we all know) so successful, to the point that many die-hard bloggers (myself included) got sucked up in the socials and either completely abandoned their blog, or left it on life-support. I believe that understanding this can help us draft a vision for how things in the “open social web” (I’ll keep calling it that for the time being) can work, now or in the near future, to give us the best of both blogging and the socials, without requiring that we sell our souls or leave our content hostage to big corporations.

So today is part 3, which I’ve called “Integration” (initially tried “Friction”, a key part of the story), which is about bringing all of this together.

Part 1 already kicks off this idea: what the socials do really well is remove friction, in particular by bringing in the same interface writing/posting, commenting, reading. They do it really well, but inside their walled garden. If we try and start with blogging as the centre, what would it look like? Let’s try.

Start with reading

First of all: reading and following. RSS works, and we still have RSS readers despite Google almost making the ecosystem go extinct when it killed Google Reader. What we need is two things:

  1. make it super easy to subscribe to a blog, wherever I stumble upon it – as easy as following somebody on the socials – and make it visible
  2. from my “reading interface” (ie, the RSS reader), make it super easy to comment, share, react or link to a publication and start writing something new

Frictionless subscribe is well on the way, as far as I can see: I recently installed NetNewsWire, and since then, I can “share” any site I have open in my browser to the app (on my computer or my phone) and it will look for the feed and add it to my subscription list. The desktop and phone apps sync through iCloud. That works for me. It’s easy enough. I see a blog I like, I click twice and confirm, we’re good.

FeedLand makes it super easy to subscribe inside its own ecosystem (just tick a checkbox next to a feed you see in somebody else’s subscriptions), and has a bookmarklet, but it’s not as seamless. For example, after using the bookmarklet, I’m not “back on the page I was reading”, I’m inside FeedLand. I’m sure this kind of thing can be fixed. This is just to illustrate the kind of thing we need: some integrated way, ideally through the “share” menu (assuming it also exists in non-mac environments?), to “stupid-subscribe” to an RSS feed.

What FeedLand does that is great is make the subscriptions public, just like the people I’m following or connected to on the socials are visible to others. I can even embed them in my blog to use as a blogroll.

So, let’s say the subscription problem is pretty much solved, or nearly so. The second one is much, much trickier, and I think it’s the key to everything. (At least, one of the keys.)

In my “reading interface”, be it NetNewsWire or my FeedLand river (the “newsfeed”), I’m seeing the blog posts I’ve subscribed to. Let’s assume for now that how they are displayed is a question of user/tool preference and something we know how to do. For example, do I want to see the posts “mailbox-style” (with headers that I click on to display the post), or “newsfeed-style” (like a facebook newsfeed, with more or less long excerpts)?

Add reacting

Let’s concentrate on the next step: reacting, commenting, sharing. Can I do that easily? The screenshots above show that there is some intention in the right direction, but not enough. The desktop app gives me a share icon. FeedLand allows me to reshare inside FeedLand. I can star/like, but it remains local to the “reader software”.

This is where we need more. When I read a post I’m subscribed to, it should be trivial to:

  • “like” it, if the tool producing the post supports it
  • “comment” upon it, if the tool producing the post supports it
  • “share” to a tool of my choice, be it the socials, a bookmarking service, or my blog – with or without extra content on my part (I could write a whole blog post with a reference to the link in it, or I could just post the naked link to Bluesky if I wanted to)

While we are at it, I should also be able to see if there are comments visible to me, as well as likes/shares.

All this should be possible without leaving the reading interface.

Of course, this requires a slight mindset change for us bloggers: it shouldn’t matter so much if people read our post on our website or through the feed. In that respect, the feed should contain a complete version of the blog post: untruncated, with links and media. (I don’t know why I keep stumbling upon blog feeds with the links stripped out, by the way, it’s super annoying!)

So, I write a blog post with my blogging software of choice. This blog post can be liked, commented upon, or linked to (shared). I can choose whether likes and comments are active or not. This blog post is published to my blog, and in the RSS feed. In some cases, it also goes out by e-mail (not to be forgotten). Whether people read the blog post on the blog, in the feed reader, or in their e-mail, they can easily “interact” with it, where they are (less true with e-mail, so let’s leave it aside, but not forget it’s there). As the post author, I can of course choose to moderate comments before publication, so they are displayed with the blog post only if I choose to.

Maybe the feed reading software should also be capable of displaying existing comments if requested, to give context to the person wanting to comment. Or we could consider that this is where the integration ends, and where a visit to the blog post itself is in order. To be discussed, in my opinion.

There is really something about having to leave the reading space to interact with something you’re reading that is extremely problematic. Super users who juggle tabs and apps all day might not think it matters, but normal people who can’t tell their browser from the internet or a search engine will be lost. We need spaces where we can read-like-answer-share without being teleported to some strange new place without having wanted it.

Some practical considerations: let’s say we start implementing this. The technical details are beyond me, but I understand enough to know that not all blogs (or subscribable publications) will be “compatible” with the system from the get-go. No problem: grey out those interaction buttons that won’t work in the reader, and leave the link allowing the user to head out to the blog proper to comment or like. Sharing should always be possible, as each post has a permalink (at least we have that now).

Write where you read

This was for starters. Now for the first big idea: integration with the blogging software.

In other words: maybe all this “subscribing to things” should happen in the blogging tool – or the RSS reader needs to become a blogging client. Take your pick.

Here’s why. As I mentioned before, in the old, old days of blogging, blogs did not have comments. People linked to each other when they had something to respond. Some blogs, still today, do not have comments. And that is fine, it’s a personal choice. For me, the soul of the blogosphere is people reading each other and linking to each other. And we need tools that encourage that.

I think this is also something that can help fight against the “loneliness” some of us feel around blogging, compared to the busy experience of taking part in the socials. Think about this: on the socials, you’re writing your tweet, facebook post, toot, update or whatever on a page (whether on the web interface or in an app) that is filled with stuff your contacts have published. You are producing content that is going to go on and be part of this stream of updates. It feels like part of the newsfeed already. Even though everybody has a different newsfeed, it doesn’t feel like sending something out into the void. It feels like contributing to a collective space. And this is what blogging should feel like.

So my reading tool should allow for three things (at least), in that respect:

  1. create a blog post (mention or response) based on the one I’m reading, as already mentioned previously; bonus points if it makes it easy to quote part or parts of the post (think how easy forum software makes this)
  2. write a blog post from scratch, just like we normally do today in our blog admin interfaces (think “facebook post” here rather than “tumblr” for the vibe: a space a the top of your reading list that is there waiting for you to write a post, not nagging but inviting and tempting…)
  3. convert a comment you are writing on somebody else’s blog post into a blog post of your own, with a link to the original post – I’m pretty certain I’m not alone in regularly thinking “I just have a sentence or two to say” and lifting my nose up after having written 5 paragraphs; happens on the socials too, particularly facebook, as it doesn’t have any character limit (this is a nice way to make blog interlinking easier)

WordPress Reader is on the right track, although it feels a bit like a rough draft (I particularly don’t like the web interface – too much empty space and not enough content). It shows the newsfeed of the blogs I’ve subscribed to, and an inviting box at the top to “write a quick post”. How the editor expands and what features it offers in this context leaves room for improvement, but the idea is there. It’s also missing easy-peasy subscription outside the wordpress.com platform, as far as I can see, but let’s note that it allows the user to switch between mailbox and newsfeed views, has a share button (Facebook and X), a repost button (which unfortunately opens the editor in another window, but in a nice move presents the reposted blog post in card format – why not?), a like button (internal to WordPress), and in-reader commenting.

Right. So far we have:

  • a better “reader” experience, including frictionless subscription
  • a more integrated way of reacting to what we’re reading
  • reading and writing brought together in once place.

Bring in the socials

What is still missing (the second big idea) is how to tie this in with the socials. As I argued in part 2, interaction and conversation come in varying forms. Socials do not make blogging redundant, and neither does embracing blogging again make the socials redundant. Just as we still have a use for e-mail in the era of instant messaging, or phone calls in the era of voice messages.

We touched upon this issue earlier when mentioning that any post being read should be shareable to whatever platform we want. That’s pretty trivial and already somewhat possible (we have permalinks, remember, and on our phones at least, sharing to socials is always just a touch away). But that is not sufficient.

I see three key aspects in integrating the socials with the blogging experience I’ve been describing:

  1. Tying “comments/shares on the socials” to the relevant post (this is the neverending Trackback/Pingback/Backtype/Webmention story)
  2. Posting blog content to the socials (POSSE) or, more interestingly from my point of view, backfeeding from the socials to the blog (tools like Bridgy and TootPress are also in this space)
  3. Allowing the blogging/reading tool to function as a client for the socials.

The first one is an old story, but what it means is that what people are saying on the socials about what I wrote on my blog is part of the conversation related to what I wrote, and it might be desirable to have a way to point the readers of the blog post to it. It’s the argument for having comments on the blog. Or a list of Webmentions (if I’ve understood correctly that they are the Trackbacks of today). Or not. The conversation is there, and the blogger should have the ability to make it visible from the core content. Beneath a blog post, you could have comments (some made from inside an integrated tool for reading/reacting/writing, some made directly on the site), links to other blog posts which mention it, and links (or quotes? TBD) to public content on the socials about it. As I understand it, Bridgy does this.

The second one is three-pronged: I might want to share my blog posts on the socials when I publish, publish to the socials using my blog (with a separate post-type or category for example), or I might want to repost/archive on my blog whatever I have shared on the socials. The first two are outwards-going. The third is inward-coming, but instead of being centred on a piece of content (the blog post) like described above, and therefore on the content of what was published on the socials, it is centred on the person (the blogger), and therefore a specific account (or accounts).

I see two reasons for wanting to do this: first, for safekeeping (create an archive or mirror of whatever you post on Bluesky on your blog, for example) or for resharing to another audience, maybe in a slightly different form, whatever one posted elsewhere. I want to elaborate on the second case, which is in my opinion more interesting (obviously, because it’s a need I have).

I’ve already mentioned before that participating on the socials is very frictionless. The barrier is low. We are in conversation mode. It is “speaking” more than it is “writing”. Therefore, my hypothesis is that however much we love our blogs and everything, it’s still always going to be easier to quickly throw out a link on the socials, or jot down a thought, share a photo, respond to somebody and find ourselves coming up with an idea. To me, there is a lot of raw material there which might be worth preserving. Sure, if you’re having a back-and-forth about getting ready to go to the gym, maybe not, but if you’re sharing links or bite-sized thoughts or commentary on the world or whatever, that’s different.

It would make sense to be able to gather that daily production from the various socials one is active on, and organise it in what would be the “socials” equivalent of a post on a link blog. How exactly will be the topic of another post, because I think it requires going into lots of little details. But suffice to say, for now, that the idea would be to give the blogger an option to repatriate whatever has leaked from the bloggers brain to the socials in a form that could be either publishable as-is, or edited before publishing, or why not, broken down into more than one post if needed. “Today on the socials”, or something like that.

So, at this point we want to be able to create a two-way path between the blog and the socials, to push posts to the socials, bring back commentary or mentions to the blog posts, and the blogger’s updates to the socials.

We can go a small step further and integrate into our reader/blogging tool a client for the socials. We’re already reading RSS feeds, why not also read the social newsfeeds?

Openvibe is a client that combines different socials and allows the user to also subscribe to RSS feeds within the same interface. This would be the corollary. And if we’re reading, and we have the ability to write blog posts from there in addition to comments, why not also be able to publish to the socials? I like the way Openvibe manages cross-posting: you can choose where you want to cross-post each time; when you mention somebody, a little dialog open so that you can mention them on the different socials you’re posting to – or just enter text if they aren’t everywhere.

I could start composing something to share to the socials, and partway through decide it should be a blog post: I’d select the blog as a destination (this would be somewhat similar to converting a comment I’ve started writing to a blog post, as described earlier), the interface would adapt, the cross-posting to the socials would become a “blog post share” in the background. This allows me to dynamically adapt where I’m going to post what I’m writing, as I’m writing it.

Having a reading interface with RSS feeds and the social newsfeeds together (with filters, obviously) replicates what actually happens on the socials when people share their blog posts (or even have an account for their blog) on the socials. This is more elegant, because it’s the actual subscription to the actual blog content, and doesn’t depend on the blogger making their content available through the socials.

Loose ends: comments elsewhere, web interface, modular

At this point we’ve got something that is really nicely integrated, but one thing is missing: comments made on other blogs. I dwelled on this a bit in part 1: this is one of the issues that coComment or Disqus tried to solve.

If the comment is made through the blogging-reading tool, it’s quite easy to capture (content and permalink, even title to the blog post it’s on). The only question would be how to display these comments (if desired, of course). In the sidebar (“my comments elsewhere”)? Collected in round-up posts like what comes from the socials (“my comments on other blogs this week”)? People will want different things, but it should be part of the package to make this possible.

What about comments made directly on other blogs? In an ideal world, the receiving blog would “notify” (webmention?) the commenter’s blog of the comment just made. But there would also have to be a way for the commenter to “secure” their comment, in case the blog in question doesn’t have the notification feature. I guess there are ways to do that with bookmarklets, browser extensions, or the like. Or why not by “sharing” the page one commented upon to the blogging-reading tool, with a way to indicate “there’s a comment of mine on this page”?

Throughout this post I’ve spoken about this integrated “tool” (or maybe app at times). As I see it, it should definitely have a web interface, like my WordPress blog has. Or Discourse. And be something that can be self-hosted, or managed. Apps are nice, but I think it’s clear today that tools or services should be available both through a “website” and an app.

It may seem like I’m describing “one more app/tool to rule them all”, but in my mind it’s not like that. I’m describing a set of principles. Just like we have various tools which allow blogging or reading RSS today, or various clients for Mastodon, this should not be a lock-in for a particular tool. Those with better understanding than me of ActivityPub, RSS, APIs and the like are most welcome to elaborate on how various protocols or frameworks could work together or be extended to make this kind of thing possible.

As I see it, with an agreement of how these different general features function, we could even go towards more modular tools, where I could use a WordPress base for blogging, which would be compatible with something derived from Openvibe for the socials integration, and have the choice between a future iteration of FeedLand or WordPress Reader or NetNewsWire for the reading part – and they would all integrate seamlessly in such a manner that I will not feel like I am using multiple tools, but one. There could even be add-ons/plugins (I heard this idea in this OTM interview of Jay Graber) to manage how you filter your RSS+socials timeline (algorithm? no algorithm? labelling?), how you mashup your socials of the day into pretty blogs posts – or not, etc.

I have the intuitive hope that something approaching my present pipe dream can be built around WordPress – particularly after hearing Dave Winer invite us to think differently about WordPress. I’m curious to see if what he’s cooking us with WordLand brings us in the kind of direction I’m thinking about. And of course, if you know of anything that makes what I’m talking about here reality, comment away!

PS Dave: haven’t yet listened to the podcasts (Exploring WordPress, Textcasting, and Open Web Standards and Dave Winer on Decentralisation, WordPress and Open Publishing), but I will. It was either listen or write, I chose write!

PPS everyone: I didn’t proofread and I feel my writing is more clunky than usual today, sorry – brain still recovering. Point out the typos and broken sentences and I’ll go and fix them!

PPPS: might do a part 4 on privacy, and need to cover non-text content better, in addition to going into more detail regarding “Today on the socials” posts, so chances are there will be more in this series, at some point…

Where Have All The Bloggers Gone? [en]

What is happening for me right now is interesting. During my Facebook exile, I reconnected with the social networks that I had been present on in a very passive manner these last years. I also wrote more on my blog (here!), and made an effort to get back into reading other blogs, even though I have never been a really huge blog reader in my past. I installed an RSS reader, and started subscribing, process which is now pretty frictionless. To my surprise, there are lots of blogs! Lots of people still blogging! Lots of people who took up blogging way after the Golden Era of Blogs! I see them show up here and there on Mastodon and Bluesky, and of course, in blog posts.

In the few days since I’ve been back on Facebook, I have been struck by the pretty much total absence of blogs in my newsfeed over there. And when I think about how little visibility my Facebook updates pointing to my blog posts get, unless I jump through hoops like posting a screenshot, writing some text, putting the link in the first comment (talk about friction!), I realise that it is not so much because of blogs or bloggers, but because of how Facebook treats outgoing links, and how the algorithm prioritises things.

It reduces the visibility of blogs, therefore inciting people to post directly on the platform rather than on their blog (definitely what happened to me) or go elsewhere to share their blog links and abandon Facebook (what others have done).

Another thing that blogging more these days has made me realise is that, as I mentioned previously, I do not like blogging on my phone. Even though the WordPress app is nice and everything, the length and nature of the blog post is something which, to me, lends itself much more to being typed out on a keyboard in front of a decent screen. But since I went through the exercise of writing a blog post on my phone the other day, I have done it again. In particular, I have written drafts, started blog posts which I then finished on my computer. And at one point in that process, as my thumbs were tiring, I switched to dictation. And that is the key. Dictating on the phone.

Dictation is not perfect. But it is something I know how to do. Over 20 years ago, I spent nearly a whole year without touching a keyboard. During that year, I not only blogged and participated in online life, but I wrote my dissertation, worked in a telecom company, and sat for my final university exams. Dictation on my phone today does not allow me to “speak corrections” in the text I am writing, but it does now allow seamless transitions between dictation and keyboard, and the recognition quality is pretty good.

One of the things that happened during the Rise of The Socials is that our online activities became more and more “phone first”. And for me at least, blogging being primarily a “desktop computer” activity, and the socials being extremely well calibrated to mobile phone use, that definitely encouraged my drift away from blogging and into the socials.

So, clearly, for me, starting blog posts on my phone, even if I finalise them on the computer, and using dictation to write stuff down is definitely a way to remove friction from blogging, by bringing it to my phone, and providing it some of the immediacy of the facebook post.

Previously, I would spend my time having ideas like “oh, I need to blog about this!” but it was never the right moment to sit down at the computer and spend an hour or two typing it out. Not because I am a slow typer – on the contrary – but because I am not exactly concise, and I like putting links in my blog posts, so I often go down rabbit-holes looking for the right link for this or that.

Now, as I did this morning, I open up my WordPress app, and start dictating a blog post into it. Right now, I am pacing back-and-forth in my apartment and dictating this, instead of preparing my breakfast, but that is another story. At least I am capturing my idea. It will be 90% written and ready by the time I put down my phone, and all I will have to do on the computer a little bit later is make a bunch of corrections (I am“dirty dictating” without correcting much so that I can go fast), add links and a photograph (because I like photographs, and the WordPress app has made it super easy to add them to my posts from my phone), and publish it.

So, the bloggers are there. But if you live on Facebook, you might just not be seeing them.

Cherche blogueurs branchés voyages (pour blog ebookers) [en]

[fr] As the editor of the upcoming ebookers blog in French, I'm looking for a few motivated French-speaking bloggers to write about travel-related topics (paid blogging).

Ceux qui me suivent sur Twitter ont peut-être déjà vu passer un appel ou deux. Voici les détails.

Vous connaissez certainement ebookers, la première agence de voyages en ligne suisse. Ils ont depuis un moment déjà un blog en allemand, et désirent à présent en lancer un en français.

La rédactrice en chef de ce nouveau blog couvrant toutes sortes de sujets touchant au voyage, c’est bibi. Nous publierons une vingtaine de billets par mois. Les auteurs seront rémunérés (quelques dizaines de francs par article; ce ne sont donc pas des sommes folles, mais un contributeur régulier peut espérer faire quelques centaines de francs par mois suivant la quantité de publications) et on commence en janvier. De plus, participer ainsi à un projet de blog collectif permet d’augmenter sa visibilité en tant que blogueur, et d’acquérir une expérience professionnelle originale.

Donc, opération recrutement: je recherche trois-quatre blogueurs motivés et passionnés par les voyages, intéressés à contribuer régulièrement à ce “blog de voyages” (mélange de sujets libres et de sujets “sur commande”). Plusieurs personnes m’ont déjà signifiée leur intérêt. Histoire de formuler tout ça (et aussi parce que tout ce qui est “sous” passera par Blogwerk, l’entreprise qui gère ce projet pour ebookers), j’ai préparé un petit formulaire de candidature que vous trouverez ci-dessous. On vous demande 5 idées d’articles et un exemple d’article. N’hésitez pas à étudier un peu le blog en allemand pour vous faire une idée des sujets possibles (destinations, tuyaux pratiques, voyage en général, actualités, récits de voyage&)

J’attends avec impatience vos candidatures, et je me réjouis du démarrage de ce blog! Si vous avez des questions, les commentaires sont là pour ça.

De la lecture des blogs [fr]

[en] I'm not a regular blog reader. I check a small handful of blogs religiously, and that's (with one or two exceptions) because they belong to close friends. I go on blog-reading binges, either person-centred ("well, I wonder what such-and-such has written about lately, or how she is doing") or topic-centred (digging deeper into an issue, or trying to solve a problem I'm facing).

Do you find it paradoxical for a blogger to not have a "blog subscriber" profile?

Ça m’embarrasse parfois un peu qu’à cause de ma réputation en tant que blogueuse, on parte du principe que je suis une lectrice de blogs assidue.

Bien sûr, je lis des blogs. Mais pas comme certains.

Je n’ai pas une liste de blogs que je lis religieusement. J’ai un lecteur RSS (j’aime Google Reader, et encore mieux, feedly) mais depuis six à huit mois, j’avoue que je l’ai à peine ouvert.

Il y a une poignée de blogs appartenant à des amis proches que je lis régulièrement. Ce sera peut-être vexant pour certains, mais les blogs que je lis, je les lis plus parce que j’ai une relation personnelle avec leur auteur, que parce que leur contenu me faisait revenir (quelques exceptions notables: Kathy Sierra, Zeldman, Tom Reynolds).

Pourtant, je lis des blogs. Mais comment?

De temps en temps je fais une crise de lecture. Il y en a deux sortes:

  • les thématiques
  • les personnelles.

Les crises de lectures “personnelles” (ou centrées sur la personne) sont de l’ordre de “oh, je me demande ce que devient tel et tel, ou ce qu’il a écrit récemment, hop, un petit tour sur son blog”.

Le problème avec les blogs (enfin, je dis ça, mais c’est une de leurs qualités) c’est qu’une fois qu’on commence à lire, on n’en finit pas. On suit un lien qui nous emmène ailleurs, on plonge dans les archives, bref, parfois, une heure plus tard, je lis encore.

Ou bien du coup, je me mets à rédiger un billet sur un sujet qui m’aura interpellé.

Quant aux crises de lecture “thématiques”, je pars sur un sujet qui m’intéresse (souvent lié à un problème à résoudre ou un enjeu concret dans mon présent, mais pas forcément), et je fais du blog-hopping pour en faire le tour. Google, Technorati, articles en rapport, tout y passe.

En résumé, je n’ai pas le profil “abonné” ou “lecteur fidèle”, mais plutôt “butineuse” voire “boulimique”. Twitter a en grande partie remplacé mon lecteur RSS, même si celui-ci n’est pas mort.

Et vous, comment lisez-vous les blogs? Trouvez-vous paradoxal qu’on soit blogueur mais non lecteur régulier d’autres blogs? A plus forte raison si l’on prêche, comme c’est mon cas, que la lecture de blogs est indispensable à leur écriture? Est-ce que je nage en plein paradoxe?

Blogger Accreditations for LeWeb Paris [en]

Update: the deadline for requests was 13.10.2008. The form is now closed. Thank you.

I’m pleased to announce that I am in charge of managing blogger accreditations for the conference LeWeb’08 Paris which will take place on December 9-10th.

For the fifth year running, this huge conference organised by Géraldine and Loïc Le Meur will receive 1500 participants from the business, media, and internet worlds to listen to an amazing line-up of speakers — gathered this year around the theme love. Just look at the programme to get a taste of what’s in store (listen to the video!) — plus great food, a startup competition, incredible networking, giant screens…

I went to LeWeb in 2006 for the first time, and I have to say I was blown away by what they had managed to put together. If you’ve never been to Le Web, it’s really worth experiencing. And if you have… Well, I probably don’t need to say much more.

This year, maybe you will one of the lucky ones to be invited there, as LeWeb is selecting bloggers, podcasters, and generally “electronic media people” from all over the world to cover the conference.

This selection will be based on:

  • their geographical and linguistic location (ever thought of language as an online “place”?)
  • their readership and influence
  • their motivation and the value they offer the conference by their presence
  • when they made their request (yes, there is an element of first come, first served in the selection).

Selected bloggers will be asked to display a badge on their blog upto the conference date and blog about it at least once before mid-November. They will be listed in an official blogroll on the conference site and will be given a “blogger accreditation” to attend the conference and cover it.

Send an e-mail to [email protected] (I’ll receive it) with Due to the rather large number of people applying, please fill in this form, which will ask you for information like:

  • your name
  • your URL
  • the country you live in
  • the language you will be blogging about LeWeb in
  • your Twitter username if you have one
  • if you’ve attended previous LeWeb conferences, and when
  • why we should invite you 🙂 (we know you’re great and you certainly deserve it, but what does LeWeb get out of the deal?)

Bloggers who are also journalists should apply for a regular press pass at [email protected].

Waiting to hear from you, and looking forward to seeing you at LeWeb in a couple of months!

Bloggy Friday le 3 octobre 2008 [fr]

[en] Bloggy Fridays are an informal meeting of bloggers and other "online" people initiated in Lausanne. In theory, we meet on the first Friday of each month -- but in practice, you're better off pinging me 10 days before to prompt me to organise it! Next meeting: Friday October 3rd.

Nous avons passé une soirée fort sympathique lors du Bloggy Friday de septembre qui a eu lieu Chez Rony: Virginie, David, Richard, Marco et moi-même, ainsi qu’un invité surprise de dernière minute: Lyonel. Comme vous le voyez, on n’était pas assez pour que les timides puissent se noyer dans la masse et espérer passer inaperçus, mais l’avantage avec les petits groupes c’est qu’on fait vite connaissance de toute le monde 🙂

Oh, plus on est de fous, plus on rit — donc on est contents si on est plus que cinq! — mais au fil des ans, je suis venue à accepter que le Bloggy Friday Lausanne ne sera jamais Paris Carnet.

Day 1, Croix des Chaux - Taveyanne - Villars 071 Si vous avez envie de vous joindre à nous, il suffit de mettre un petit mot dans les commentaires ou de vous inscrire sur Facebook. J’insiste, comme toujours: le Bloggy Friday est ouvert à tous (un vague intérêt pour internet et les nouveaux médias est souhaitable, pas besoin d’être blogueur depuis 8 ans), il n’y a pas besoin de connaître les participants (d’ailleurs ils changent tout le temps) ni de me connaître. L’objectif de telles rencontres c’est justement de faire connaissance de personnes du coin avec des intérêts un peu similaires — qu’on les connaisse déjà en ligne, ou par leur blog, ou pas du tout.

Rendez-vous donc le vendredi 3 octobre 2008 à 20h Chez Rony (c’est très sympa)!

Reclaiming 43 Folders [en]

[fr] De plus en plus de blogs semblent prendre la route du "multi-auteurs, revenu pub" -- et j'en suis attristée. Merlin Mann, auteur du célèbre 43 Folders, fait machine arrière, et reprend possession de son blog. Ça me fait chaud au coeur.

I was very happy to read this post by Merlin Mann titled Time, Attention, and Creative Work. Here’s an excerpt:

5. This is my site. There are many like it, but this one is mine
43 Folders is now, once again, about what I have to say about things, and I want that to be the sole reason that the idea of a visit here either attracts or repels you.

Yes, there will still be occasional guest posts, open threads, and of course, I’ll be linking to and quoting widely from the work of others. But I’m taking a cue from John, Andy, Jason, and anybody else who wants to own every pixel of their site. I’m buying back my own stock, even if it incurs a short-term writedown.

Over the last year, I’ve been increasingly saddened that a number of personal blogs I love (not least /Message, by my dear friend Stowe Boyd), have morphed into multi-author “media outlets” complete with ad revenue. And I’m glad to see 43 Folders coming back from that.

I discovered 43 Folders roughly two years ago when it was still Merlin’s site, and it was my starting-point for understanding what this GTD thing was many people were talking about. I visited regularly (by my standards — I’m a lousy blog reader) but at some point, 43 Folders changed.

Instead of dropping in at “my pal Merlin’s” to see what he had to say today, it felt like dropping into a noisy bar. And I’m a person who prefers a quiet heart-to-heart conversation around a cup of tea to an evening hanging out at the bar.

So, welcome back, Merlin. It’s nice to see you again.

Blogging Web 2.0 Expo Europe: une opportunité pour blogueurs [fr]

[en] It's been a while now: Suw Charman-Anderson, Nicole Simon and I have been plotting lately to design "Blogging Web 2.0 Expo Europe", a blogger outreach programme for the famous O'Reilly/TechWeb conference Web 2.0 Expo Europe taking place in Berlin on October 21-23.

Suw has written a great post about the programme we designed:

The way the blogging programme will work is that we’ll ask participants to do these few things between now and 6th October:

  • publish at least 4 Web 2.0 Expo-related blog posts, podcast episodes or videocasts, e.g. announcement of the event, speaker information, speaker interviews, or any other event-related stuff
  • encourage readers, friends, and/or community to register for the event
  • display the Web 2.0 Expo logo on their blog, with a link to the registration page, until the day of the conference

We think that’s pretty easy, but to help you along, we’ll provide participating bloggers with:

  • event badges
  • a 35% discount code to share with readers, colleagues and friends
  • access to information about the event suitable for re-blogging, such as announcements and speaker information/interviews (when possible)

In return, bloggers will get a full conference pass that to either use themselves or give away to readers.

But that’s not all…

Head right over to Strange Attractor to read more about what's going on.

Any European blogger can ask to join the programme. So if you have a tech/business audience (it doesn't have to be huge), get in touch as soon as you can -- particularly if you have a local audience or blog in another language than English!

Cela fait un moment que je complote avec Suw Charman-Anderson et Nicole Simon pour mettre sur pied “Blogging Web 2.0 Expo Europe”. Quelques explications, car même si le nom est merveilleusement bien choisi et très explicite, il y a quand même quelques détails qu’il ne faut pas passer sous silence.

L’idée est de rassembler une communauté de blogueurs européens enthousiastes qui parleront de la conférence et motiveront leurs amis/lecteurs/collègues à s’y inscrire. En échange, ils reçoivent un accès gratuit à la conférence (qui, entre nous soit dit, vaut quelques jolis sous!)

Vous avez certainement déjà entendu parler de la conférence Web 2.0 Expo Europe, co-produite par TechWeb et O’Reilly Media. Mais oui, vous savez! Le fameux “web2.0” qui sature nos ondes, à la base, c’est le nom d’une conférence. Elle est destinée aux web designers, développeurs, product managers, entrepreneurs, investisseurs, marketeurs, consultants et stratèges qui exploitent les opportunités offertes par les technologies du Web 2.0. La conférence aura lieu à Berlin, du 21 au 23 octobre prochain; John Lilly (Mozilla), Martin Varsavsky (FON), et Tariq Krim (NetVibes) font partie des orateurs principaux.

Web 2.0 Expo Europe 2008

On demandera aux blogueurs prenant part au programme de:

  • publier au moins quatre billets, podcasts ou videocasts au sujet de Web 2.0 Expo Europe (par exemple annonce de la conférence, informations sur les orateurs et l’agenda, interviews d’orateurs, ou toute autre information liée à la conférence) d’ici le 6 octobre.
  • encourager leurs lecteurs, leurs amis et/ou la communauté à prendre part à la conférence Web 2.0 Expo à Berlin
  • afficher le logo de la conférence sur leur blog, ainsi qu’un lien vers la page d’inscription, et ce jusqu’au premier jour de la conférence.

Pas trop compliqué, non? On fournira aux blogueurs:

  • des badges à afficher sur leur blog et à distribuer à leurs lecteurs
  • un code de rabais (discount) de 35% à partager généreusement avec lecteurs et amis
  • accès à de l’information facile à publier, comme des annonces, la biographie des conférenciers et des entretiens avec ces derniers lorsque c’est possible.

En échange de leur participation, les blogueurs recevront gracieusement un passe pour toute la conférence, qu’ils pourront utiliser eux-mêmes ou donner à quelqu’un.

Mais ce n’est pas tout… Les blogueurs qui auront assuré la meilleure promotion (tant en matière d’efforts que de résultats) verront leur passe transformé en “Premier Blogger Pass”, ce qui leur donnera un statut “presse” à la conférence, incluant entre autres accès à la salle de presse et la possibilité d’interviewer les conférenciers en direct. Nous annoncerons les gagnants de ces “Premier Blogger Pass” et confirmerons l’attribution des passes conférence le 7 octobre prochain.

Puisque les code de rabais (discount) sont uniques, nous pourrons savoir combien de personnes chaque blogueur aura référées. Nous venons d’avoir le feu vert pour offrir quelque chose de spécial (et d’excitant) au blogueur qui aura généré le plus d’inscriptions, jusqu’à la fermeture des inscriptions.

Quel genre de blogueurs recherchons-nous pour ce programme? On veut ratisser large, donc on cherche des blogs européens, publiés dans n’importe quelle langue (on veut de la variété, pas juste des blogueurs anglophones basés à Londres), touchant un public qui pourrait être intéressé par la conférence. Donc, que vous soyez un des blogueurs-star de votre niche ou un blog moins connu avec un public réduit mais enthousiaste et qui se jetterait sans autre forme de procès sur le rabais que vous leur offrirez… Prenez contact!

Ce que nous recherchons, c’est de l’enthousiasme, de la passion, et du pouvoir de persuasion. C’est votre capacité à persuader autrui de s’incrire à la conférence qui compte!

Le nombre de places dans le programme est limité, et nous comptons le lancer officiellement dès mardi 9 septembre prochain. Agissez donc vite si vous voulez une place, et on vous le confirmera dès que possible.

On prévoit déjà de vous annoncer quelques ajouts (positifs!) au programme en cours de route, et bien entendu, on est prêtes à prendre en compte votre feedback pour le faire évoluer de façon participative. N’hésitez donc pas.

Je résume:

  • vous avez un blog, un public (quel que soit sa taille) qui pourra être intéressé par Web 2.0 Expo, et l’idée d’une entrée gratuite à la conférence ne vous déplait pas? le programme est pour vous!
  • vous connaissez des blogueurs qui pourraient bien être intéressés par la perspective d’une entrée gratuite et même d’un Premier Blogger Pass pour récompenser leurs efforts à promouvoir la conférence? montrez-leur cet article et mettez-nous en contact!

Bloggy Friday vendredi 5 septembre prochain [en]

[fr] Bloggy Friday in Lausanne next Friday, September 5th. Sign up in the comments!

Un petit mot très rapide (car je suis très à la bourre) pour vous confirmer que le Bloggy Friday de septembre aura bien lieu à Lausanne, dès 20h quelque part au centre-ville chez Rony.

Inscrivez-vous dans les commentaires, créez un event Facebook si vous le voulez bien (je pars offline pour le week-end dans une heure, là), faites passer le mot, Tweetez, bref.

On se voit dans une semaine, je me réjouis!

Présents:

C’est sur Facebook, aussi — merci Raph!