this is mikel.org

Michael Boyle's weblog

  • home
  • archives
  • about
  • words

Mark Dery,

January 21, 2005 by Michael Boyle

the well-known author of several interesting books, has started a weblog: Shovelware. Definitely something to check out. Dery has always had a lot to say. I haven’t always agreed with him, but his blog definitely raises the bar a little bit.

Tags: Blogging

Browsing around on Vander Wal’s

January 21, 2005 by Michael Boyle

site, I also found this: Fix Your Titles for Better Search and Use. It makes eminent sense, and I have now changed all of my titles as he suggests. One thing to watch for is that when I didn’t have my name in my titles, Google had a far harder time finding my posts in a search on my name – that’s why I added “Michael Boyle’s weblog” to my titles about 18 months ago. We’ll see if this re-ordering has any impact, though I doubt it will.

Tags: Blogging

Louis Rosenfeld

January 21, 2005 by Michael Boyle

weighed in on tagging and such in a good article on January 6: Folksonomies? How about Metadata Ecologies?. Read the excellent comments by Thomas Vander Wal as well.

Tags: Tagging

John Battelle is concerned

January 20, 2005 by Michael Boyle

that something is lost on the web when some links are in essence devalued compared to others. In his article in Searchblog, Follow On No Follow: Will “Fully web-expressed writing” Suffer? he suggests that commenting itself will suffer in a nofollow world, in that commenters will be less motivated to engage in, as he puts it, “fully web-expressed writing.”

I think he has a point, but then again it’s hard to say. There are a ton of assumptions flying around about blog comments and their value, the motivations of commenters, the motivations of comment spammers, the relative value of links in body text vs links in comments, etc. But very few of the assumptions have been checked and validated in any way. I like that there are opinions on this, and strong opinions. The trouble is, everyone’s opinions are based on slightly different assumptions – and no one can support those assumptions.

Tags: Blogging

My lovely wife

January 20, 2005 by Michael Boyle

clearly demonstrates why she’ll never enter the political sphere: she has far too much common sense and is far too intelligent for such a milieu. Exhibit 1: Politique 101.

Tags: Canadian Politics, Montreal

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 118
  • 119
  • 120
  • 121
  • 122
  • …
  • 573
  • Next Page »

search

recent

  • Diouf Article
  • Anil Dash: We’re not being alarmist enough about climate change…
  • Learning about Gutenberg
  • From the “I thought I’d heard it all” file
  • One year since his passing: The Day Prince’s Guitar Wept the Loudest

Archives

NYTimes Internet GNE Music Canada Google Software Friend Montreal Web Design US Politics Email Wired Copyfight Blogging Business Social Networks Test Browser Funny Search Arts Apple International Affairs Web Sports Design Canadian Politics War Personal Media Microsoft
Michael Boyle Blog
  • Email
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Copyright © 2000–2025 · Michael Boyle

Copyright © 2025 · Modern Portfolio Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in