text warez on Sun, 5 Oct 2003 23:15:07 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> those who are declared dead live longer |
lately it was predicted by the higher mediocracy of established net-couture that blogs replace mailinglists and email had to face its entropic end. the urgency was supposed to be high again, it meant especially red alert for the young and unexperienced cultural producers eager to put their efforts into a new successful project. "i typed out an entry that said my confirmation was fine. there was this guy who was my assessor and he was helpful in pointing out some stuff. basically he urged me to write some of my stuff as quickly as possible and to publish as soon as possible... not to wait for the thesis to be finished. he told me that now is the time to stop quoting other people and to just write from my experience." (anonymous student) yet another study proves that these predictions tend to go wrong. whenever a new medium ought to replace an old one, and with it, the much hated ruling generation of teachers and established artists-curators, then it's certainly worth to look at the long waves. whenever the attention is high and people join the bandwaggon in masses, it's time to look for the back-door, or much better, find a good place to have a good look at the showdown. the public can be an arena where anything is allowed (including the most stupid and incompetent) as long as anybody is suppose to be watching, including the nessessary decomposition, the fall of the star. when the tide goes down what remains is often what wasn't built for the mere purpose of short-term exploitation and ego-expansion. longetivity is therefore a concept very popular for the retired californian ideologist and should be considered valid for nettimers too. the meticolously tweaked memoires about yet anouther movement might be less important than the process of continoous development, besides the temptations of online journalism, net-art exhibitions, quasi-political campaigning and other representational distractions. net.critique as any other cultural critque means to be awake to detect the dissimination of fakes, of half-true information, and the baroque overload of buzzwords sold as political information. The Blogging Iceberg - Of 4.12 Million Hosted Weblogs,Most Little Seen, Quickly Abandoned Perseus Development Corp. randomly surveyed 3,634 blogs on eight leading blog-hosting services to develop a model of blog populations. Based on this research, Perseus estimates that 4.12 million blogs have been created on these services: Blog-City, BlogSpot, Diaryland, LiveJournal, Pitas, TypePad, Weblogger and Xanga. Abandoned Blogs The most dramatic finding was that 66.0% of surveyed blogs had not been updated in two months, representing 2.72 million blogs that have been either permanently or temporarily abandoned. Apparently the blog-hosting services have made it so easy to create a blog that many tire-kickers feel no commitment to continuing the blog they initiate. In fact, 1.09 million blogs were one-day wonders, with no postings on subsequent days. The average duration of the remaining 1.63 million abandoned blogs was 126 days (almost four months). A surprising 132,000 blogs were abandoned after being maintained a year or more (the oldest abandoned blog surveyed had been maintained for 923 days). Males were more likely than females to abandon blogs, with 46.4% of abandoned blogs created by males, as compared to 40.7% of active blogs being created by males. Abandonment rates did not vary based on age. Those who abandoned blogs tended to write posts that were only 58% as long as the posts of those who still maintained blogs, which simply indicates that those who enjoy writing stick with blogs longer. The abandonment rate did vary significantly based on which service was being used: Pitas, BlogSpot and Diaryland had above average abandonment rates; Xanga had an average abandonment rate; LiveJournal had the lowest abandonment rate (the sample size for Blog-City, TypePad and Weblogger was too low to compare). [..] http://www.perseus.com/blogsurvey/ -- NEU FÜR ALLE - GMX MediaCenter - für Fotos, Musik, Dateien... Fotoalbum, File Sharing, MMS, Multimedia-Gruß, GMX FotoService Jetzt kostenlos anmelden unter http://www.gmx.net +++ GMX - die erste Adresse für Mail, Message, More! +++ # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net