Early summer break for blog coverage

Summer is here and that might explain why so little has been written about blogs in Swedish media during June. Still there has been several news worthy stories like the rumours of Bill Gates starting to blog and the RSS/blog capabilities built in to Apple’s new operating system Tiger.

One really good article was published in Axess which is a publication that the Retriever search engine did not find (so there are really more than 8 articles in June, but for comparison I leave it out).

Swedes: “What is a blog?”

Web surveys on media web sites are just about as unscientific as you can get, but they can still serve as an indication. The Swedish arm of IT publishing house IDG has a web survey on its web site idg.se and asks readers about blogs.

“Do you use blogs at your company?”

69.5% What’s a blog?

6.2% We don’t know if we’re blogging or not.

11.2% We have looked at it but decided it’s not for us.

1.3% We are blogging, but are sceptical.

2.3% We are blogging and like it.

1.6% We have stopped blogging.

7.8% I have a private blog, but don’t know anything about corporate blogs.

Number of responses: 1059

I don’t want to read too much into the figures (if I would, then about 50 respondents either have a corporate blog or used to have, and I just don’t buy that. To my knowledge, there are just a few Swedish corporate blogs to date, like JKL blog and WPR.) But it is fascinating that such a high percentage answers “What is a blog?”. The readers of idg.se should be among the most tech savvy audiences out there.

RSS to be included in Apple’s browser Safari

If you ever doubted the importance of distributing information via RSS, take a look at what Dan Gillmor writes about Apple’s next operating system, OS X 10.4, aka “Tiger”, and the web browser Safari.

Jobs spent a fair amount of time talking about the native inclusion of RSS into an upcoming version of the Safari browers, and a “personal clipping” service. There’s a special search function just for RSS; I’m not clear on whether it’s searching via one of the main RSS search engines, whether Apple will write its own or whether it’s only searching your designated feeds.

Apple says: “Scan all the latest news, information and articles from thousands of your favorite major news organizations, community web sites and personal weblogs in one simple-to-read, searchable article list using Safari RSS.”

PR blogging in Iran

Trevor Cook posts about blogging in Iran, which reminds me that I had an email conversation a few weeks ago with Hossein Emami, who is a PR blogger in Iran.

Hossein, who is a real PR blog pioneer, has his own PR blog and he started and runs a corporate blog for his employer, the Export Development Bank of Iran.This was the first corporate blog in Iran. According to Hossein, one of the most important advantages of a corporate blog is the informal tone of voice, compared to more traditional ways of communication. His personal blog is called Ravabete Omoomi, which means “Public Relaions” in Farsi.

Hossein:

“Now there are 5 active bloggers in Iran who write about PR. I write about Media, electronic public relations, journalism, Information communication technology (ICT) etc.”

He says that there are two PR societies in Iran: http://www.prsir.org and http://www.pr-pa.org (link does not work at the moment) and that blogging is developing in Iran and Iranians are interested it very much. He points out that the vice president Mr. Abtahi has his own blog (mentioned on this blog earlier).

Hossein:

“There are many Iranian journalists who have blogs, such as Dr. Shokrkhah who is the chief editor of “Jam-e-Jam Online”. Jam-e-Jam is one of the newspapers in Iran with highest circulation. Altogether the journalists accept blogs, and use them as a good source of information.”

This is another illustrative example of how Swedish PR practitioners, journalists and politicians are lagging many other countries when it comes to blogging. Hopefully, the more articles are being written about blogging in Sweden, the more people will start their own blogs. The Swedish paper Axess has a long and interesting article about watchblogs and the influence of blogs on journalism. More of this, and blogging will take off soon. (Link to Axess via Erik Stattin)

Me and Doc Searls…

One of the really fun things about blogging is when your blog or a post gets picked up by an influential blogger or webpage. A few weeks ago, Dave Winer mentioned one of my posts on Scripting.com (#17 on Technorati Top 100). This week it happened again, Doc Searls, another Internet legend, linked to Media Culpa here. The Doc Searls Weblog is #22 on Technorati Top 100. It may seem insignificant, but it’s part of what makes blogging worth doing. Consider there are more than 3 million blogs out there, and you realize that your chances for attention are extremely small.

Newsweek about participatory journalism

MSNBC Newsweek writes about Korean Ohmynews.com and participatory journalism as the future of journalism. Ohmynews employs 25 trained reporters who cover the major news stories of the day, and 33,000 “citizen journalists” who posts stories on the site.

Newsweek writes that founder Oh Yeon Ho’s belief that ‘every citizen is a reporter’ has changed journalism in South Korea—and now he’s aiming for the world.

Oh Yeon Ho says about participatory journalism: “Technology itself cannot change society. Korean citizens were ready to participate. Only prepared people, who can use the merits of technology, can make a difference.”

Link via Donata.