Talk:Blog
This is the talk page for discussing improvements to the Blog article. This is not a forum for general discussion of the article's subject. |
Article policies
|
Find sources: Google (books · news · scholar · free images · WP refs) · FENS · JSTOR · TWL |
Archives: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8Auto-archiving period: 180 days |
This level-5 vital article is rated C-class on Wikipedia's content assessment scale. It is of interest to the following WikiProjects: | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
This article has been mentioned by multiple media organizations:
|
This page has been cited as a source by a notable professional or academic publication: Harvard Journal of Law & Technology |
This article links to one or more target anchors that no longer exist.
Please help fix the broken anchors. You can remove this template after fixing the problems. | Reporting errors |
Want to add a mention of first warblog
[edit]For the sake of history, I'd like to add a mention of the first known warblog that I have found, which I made public on the Internet at the same time as the 6 June 1996 website launch of www.birzeit.edu [1]. It had been written and coded since November 1995, but was not available online internationally until 6 June 1996. The Internet Archive Wayback Machine didn't pick up the blog for another four months, on the same day it picked up the main university website, 22 October 1996.
At that time it was located in a privately maintained subdirectory off Birzeit University's main website at birzeit.edu/diary/. LOL, can you imagine a university allowing that these days?
Here's a link to the blog homepage "A Personal Diary of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict", from the Internet archive: https://web.archive.org/web/19961022110437/http://www.birzeit.edu/diary/
Here's a link to the *dated* diary entries from the Internet archive at the time of the first Internet Archive capture: https://web.archive.org/web/19961022075829/http://www.birzeit.edu/diary/index2.html
Here's a link to the *dated* diary entries as of 1999 (pretty much the end of the warblog) from the Internet archive: https://web.archive.org/web/19991128043733/http://www.birzeit.edu/diary/index2.html
[1] Referenced on the university homepage at: https://web.archive.org/web/19961022073730/http://www.birzeit.edu/index.html
Anyway....
Flyingmonkeyairlines (talk) 17:53, 13 July 2019 (CST)
- (Don't know if you already know this, but) for this to be added to the article there has to actually be a source (news article, book, tracking organization, etc.) saying it's the first (or a very early) warblog, per the original research policy.
Term vs. activity
[edit]This article mainly deals with the actual activity, namely in the History section where people were doing it long before it was called a blog or blogging, but the word weblog already existed for something else. For all I know, the term weblog originated as another name for the What's new aka Recent changes section of websites, in order to "log" aka document those recent changes on the website. It was only later, by around the mid to late-90s, that the meaning of the term shifted to what we now call a blog or blogging. --2003:DA:CF0A:F291:F931:76DF:D0F:78B (talk) 12:48, 18 November 2023 (UTC)
- That's pure unsourced speculation and has no place here. --Orange Mike | Talk 18:07, 18 November 2023 (UTC)
- Just saying, there's a difference between experience and speculation, even if one has no material proof at hand. The past may be a foreign land, yet not everything that happened before your birth is "pure speculation". --2003:DA:CF0A:F291:F931:76DF:D0F:78B (talk) 04:32, 19 November 2023 (UTC)
- C-Class level-5 vital articles
- Wikipedia level-5 vital articles in Technology
- C-Class vital articles in Technology
- C-Class Journalism articles
- Top-importance Journalism articles
- WikiProject Journalism articles
- C-Class Media articles
- Top-importance Media articles
- WikiProject Media articles
- C-Class Internet culture articles
- High-importance Internet culture articles
- WikiProject Internet culture articles
- Wikipedia pages referenced by the press