Posts Tagged ‘blog posts’

How To Get My Lost Blogs?

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

If someone’s personal blog disappears and is somehow lost, it may not seem like a tragedy. But historically speaking, it well might be. Data management professionals are well aware that as technologies evolve through four generations, data that was created with the methods of the first generation pretty much becomes unreadable. What does this say about the future of digital records such as blogs or even photos hosted on websites?

The situation with digital data parallels earlier changes in music technology. Think of the progression from cylinders to flat vinyl albums to cassette and 8-track tapes to CDs, not to mention mp3s. Who can play those music cylinders now? Similarly, a person’s digital diary on a 5 ¼” floppy disk would now be almost unreadable, as technology has progressed through 3 1/2″ disks to CD-ROM to flash drives. All that music and all that data is simple gone. If a person writes data about their whole life on blog entries, and the hosting company goes out of business, then where are that person’s thoughts and reflections?

Historians can still study cuneiform tablets and reconstruct the history of Babylon, or read Egyptian tomb records and learn what happened in that country 4000 years ago. And because of personally written journals and accounts, America’s founding history is well known. But today’s history may be lost as technology changes. Alter the blogging software of a few sites just enough over the next 20 years, and the news, analysis and personal reflections of millions of people will be gone. A blog may correspond to the papers of older historical figures, but the technology makes it less easy to preserve.

On a smaller scale, blogs themselves are constantly vanishing, as people move them to new servers, start new ones, or simply stop updating altogether. Members of a blogging community, having no other way of knowing the person, lose touch and may never discover what happened to their friend. The blog posts sit there until the host site archives them or deletes them for inactivity, and the person is gone from online history.

As record-keeping continues switch to digital formats and away from paper that might still have been readable a century or two from now, the question of lost records grows in importance. The expense alone of continually upgrading records to new, technological formats is very high, so as people rush headlong into those technologies, they simply resign themselves to losing older data. With the disappearance of the weblogs of ordinary people, as well as those making history, and even people’s simple deletion of their own email, data is vanishing that might leave huge gaps in the future understanding of current world events.

Sarah Lomas is a foremost expert in the natural yeast infection no more. She has had extensive experience and conducted countless experiments in finding natural remedy for cure for yeast infection. She is also a highly acclaimed writer in the yeast infection field.

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags: , , , ,

Fun To Blog About Celebrities!

Monday, October 19th, 2009

Among the many thousands of new blogs constantly being created, the celebrity blog appears to be the most popular and successful type. While blogs written by celebrities themselves have gained in strength in recent years, most of these sites purporting to be news blogs about the stars are written either by fans, or by people who have a lucrative business searching out the secrets of the stars.

It’s likely that these news blogs, perhaps better described as gossip blogs, came first, and that part of the reason celebrity blogs began to appear was in response to these, so the stars could take back some control of their image. But for a few years, blogs that gossiped about celebrities reigned supreme. This was no surprise, of course, since wildly popular newspaper tabloids like the National Enquirer and magazines like People had been serving a similar purpose for decades. The public has always had a high interest in juicy tidbits about the rich and famous.

However, it’s one thing to have “high interest” and quite another to engage in the almost manic gossip that prevails today, probably due at least in part to the rise of these supposed blogs about the stars. The longstanding tabloids and celebrity magazines of the past might now envy the reach of these blogs, whose writers often manage to achieve access to famous people that the older gossip outlets could only dream of getting. And even the fans themselves use their cameras to post public photos that are not always flattering to the stars they follow.

Sports figures, of course, are not immune either, with sports blogs following the gossip trend, running items about players’ love lives or speculation about drugs or illegal activity. And politicians are now major targets as well, having achieved a greater level of celebrity than ever before. However squeaky clean they might portray themselves, if they’ve got a skeleton in their closet, or even just an old finger bone, then someone is going to find them out and make a blog post about it.

It’s no surprise, then, that stars also began their own weblogs, maybe to counteract the rising cacophony of unrelenting gossip. The phenomenon of blogging has been a boon to both sides of the relationship, in fact, since famous people can also get their preferred message out to millions of people. While you have gossip blogs like www.perezhilton.com or www.tmz.com on one side, on the other you have famous bloggers like Bruce Willis, Barbra Streisand, the very popular and prolific comedian Margaret Cho, soccer star David Beckham, famous chef Jamie Oliver, home style diva Martha Stewart, writer Neil Gaiman, and on and on. The blogosphere is crowded with celebrities of every description.

This may not be a good thing. Celebrity blogs might already have turned civil society into something much less civil, a nation of gossipers unjustifiably prying into the private lives of their fellow citizens, however infamous they are. Even formerly responsible news organizations now include gossip about celebrities in their papers and newscasts. Bloggers who pry into the lives of the stars may now be the “journalists” of the world, to the detriment of well-researched and reliable news.

Sarah Lomas is a foremost expert in treating yeast infections field. Her work has been extensively published in various online publications in the areas of natural cure for yeast infection. For more information on the treatment for yeast infections, visit Remedyforyeastinfection.com.

 Mail this post

Technorati Tags: , , , ,