Posts Tagged ‘blog’

The end of tech blogging?

Jeremiah Owyang makes a number of great observations in this post that he interprets as the end of the golden era of tech blogging. I strongly recommend reading it as it’s indeed hard not to see a pattern after the sale of TechCrunch, of ReadWriteWeb or the departure of Ben Parr or Marshall Kirckpatrick.

Is this related to Tech only or is it a larger trend? Is blogging itself – and not just tech blogging – coming to an end?I think it’s fair to say that a number of these observations are valid for the whole blogosphere: lack of attention span of readers, news and content remixing, fatigue of some personal brands, emergence of new business models, etc…

Blogging will not disappear but new forms of expression are definitely stealing the show from blogging platforms. Curation among them.

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Upgrade: WordPress 3.2

Only a couple of weeks before we’re starting our course on New Media and Web 2.0 applications, the people at WordPress.org have released Gershwin – the latest version of their tremendously popular WordPress. Version 3.2 not only brings us the completely new default theme Twenty Eleven,  it also brings us peace of mind.

The editor has a new Zen mode, where in full-screen mode all the buttons, bells and whistles disappear from the screen (until you move the mouse cursor to the top of the screen again, that’s when the most commonly used functions are accessible again). Like… this:

So tell us…seriously…what could be less distracting than a completely empty page, eh? (Okay, it may also be a bit intimidating if you have writer’s block, but let’s not go there. :-) )

What’s new? Well…it’s a bit faster, again, support for PHP4, old versions of MySQL and Internet Explorer has (finally) been dropped. Without having done any benchmark tests, it feels like pages load somewhat faster, and the administration section seems to be snappier, too. It certainly looks cooler than in the previous version! The default Twenty Eleven theme gives you an idea of some of the possibilities of HTML5, and I’m sure that in the not-so-distant future we’ll see many more themes popping up everywhere that will make the most of HTML5.

And oh yeah, from now on they’ll start doing partial upgrades – no need to upload the entire installation anymore, every time there’s an upgrade. While we at LLIT don’t really have anything to complain about with our current provider, people working elsewhere might not be as lucky as us. (An example, you ask? Well… FTP’ing the contents of an archive as small as that of WordPress from the comfort of your home to the servers there can easily take 4 hours to complete. Obviously the auto-update function doesn’t work, for “security reasons”.)

So far, this upgrade has been a good one – no broken plugins, etc, and everything seems to work just a bit better. Again. I can’t wait to see what they’ve got planned for 3.3…

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Update: WordPress 3.0.3

WordPress logoEverybody who followed our previous advice to upgrade, please upgrade again, especially if you have remote publishing activated.

While others need not worry immediately, it’s always a good idea to install security upgrades. You can download the latest version from their site.

As always, and since version 3, upgrading should be relatively pain-free (just go to your Dashboard and hit the upgrade link). According to their site, here’s why you should upgrade:

This release fixes issues in the remote publishing interface, which under certain circumstances allowed Author- and Contributor-level users to improperly edit, publish, or delete posts.

These issues only affect sites that have remote publishing enabled.

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Update: WordPress 3.0.2

WordPress LogoFor many people a blog has become almost synonymous with WordPress. Running your own version, rather than going through WordPress.com, has a couple of advantages. As in: you have full control over everything. Change your theme? Add plugins? Some widgets, perhaps? Tweaking the code to suit your needs? All of it is possible… It’s become so powerful that by now it’s become much more than just a blogging system: you can run a full-fledged website in it, if you want, all of it with the same ease of use that we’ve naturally come to expect from WordPress.

And the good news is that those nice folks at WordPress.org (the organization which offers you the downloadable version of their software) have released a new version.

Here’s what’s new, according to their site:

WordPress 3.0.2 is available and is a mandatory security update for all previous WordPress versions. Haiku has become traditional:

Fixed on day zero
One-click update makes you safe
This used to be hard

This maintenance release fixes a moderate security issue that could allow a malicious Author-level user to gain further access to the site, addresses a handful of bugs, and provides some additional security enhancements. Big thanks to Vladimir Kolesnikov for detailed and responsible disclosure of the security issue!

Since version 3, upgrading should be relatively pain-free (just go to your Dashboard and hit the upgrade link). If you happen to work for an organization where the system administrator doesn’t know how to manage a server park properly, though, and the upgrades aren’t possible due to server configuration mistakes (and we don’t have any specific organization in mind here, COMU), you can always download 3.0.2 and do the upgrade manually.

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WordPress 3.0

WordPress 3.0 has been released for quite a while now, but you know what we’re really missing out on, over here at Let’s Learn IT? We want *integration* ! Why is there still no plugin (that works) which can connect this site with, say, Facebook or so?

Ping.fm has support for the wordpress.com sites, but not for the wordpress.org sites (which is what we use). They’ve promised us that they’re working on a solution, though. Nice folks, those at Ping.fm. :-)

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Upgrade: WordPress 2.9.1

Last week a minor update was released of WordPress 2.9, which itself was released halfway through December last year. So…what are the goodies brought to us in this shiny, new version? Well…if you are one of those people who find themselves throwing brilliant pieces of writing in the bin (and of course regretting having done so soon afterwards), then we have good news for you: 2.9 gives you the possibility for recovering postings from the bin. Images can be edited, too, and it has become easier to embed videos in posts.

This minor upgrade fixes 34 problems, and if you’ve experienced problems with any of these problems before, then now is a good time to do the update. And if you don’t want to download the upgrade, then you can always go upgrade automatically via the Tools > Upgrade menu in your blog’s admin area.

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Upgrade: WordPress 2.8.6

WordPress, one of the better blog systems out there (so good that we at Let’s Learn IT are using it ourselves ;-) ), and probably the only blog system that you’ll have up and running on your server in 5 minutes or less, have upgraded their software to version 2.8.6.

The latest version can be downloaded from their site, and contains the following changes:

Read the rest of this entry »

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"Is It Okay To Be A Technologically Illiterate Teacher?"

Geef toe, met zo’n verleidelijke titel moet je wel Edublog’s Award voor “Most influential blog post” winnen. Het artikel is overigens wel eens de moeite om te lezen, al was het maar omdat het reageert tegen de soms wat misplaatste, trotse toon waarmee iemand bekent helemaal niets van computers af te weten. Het volledige bericht leest u hier.

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