Suzie's Book Pages

Thursday, 28 February 2008
I believe in you
You don't know what's going to happen to you when you click a link. I went to read this story about Harry Knox, director of the Religion and Faith Program for the Human Rights Campaign, debating with an anti-gay church. Though short, it's a great story. Then I clicked the little link to read Harry's opening remarks.

If there had been people like him around me twenty years ago, I might have thought my faith was worth holding onto.

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posted @ 22:14   0 comments

Wednesday, 20 February 2008
Research someone should do #1
Louis Wain's influence on LOLcats.

funny pictures
moar funny pictures

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posted @ 23:25   0 comments

Tuesday, 12 February 2008
Using Google to find a place to rant
I read a post on John Chow dot com this morning, which contained this paragraph:

Understand most readers have an information requirement Once your content has slipped into your archive, search engine users will become your key demographic. Users from search engines will reach your content because they were told the answer to their question is on your page.


It seems to be taken for granted that search engine users are looking for information: they want answers to questions. I think bloggers in particular need to be aware that their archives are being searched for more than just information: search engine users are looking for a place to rant.

On TB we have a lot of old posts complaining about the sorts of things eBayers complain about: PayPal issues, and echeques in particular are a favourite. We talk about non-eBay auction sites, non-paying bidders, and feedback. We talk about companies, too, especially those who cause their customers problems. Some of these posts are still gathering comments months after they were written, and - here's the bit I think's interesting - even when there is a newer post on a similar topic on the front page of the blog.

These commenters don't seem to be seeking factual information. Instead, they want a place to tell their own problems: "I hate PayPal echeques too, I had one the other day and it bounced after four weeks and they didn't even email me..." might be a typical sort of comment.

Where am I going with this thought? It seems to me that Google is rendering the chronological blog format almost pointless. Even with datestamping *and* the "old post" tag for posts older than 6 months, still they come. Blog conversations don't necessarily happen only when the blogger starts them: they can start up again months later, and when we think we've moved on.

If blogs are going to be community - and I think they are already - then we need to change the format for some of them. The long scrolly format, with comments in a pop-up or a single post page, works well for a blog that (like this one) is essentially a diary. But it doesn't expand well into reader involvement. The elements of forum we've brought into TB have worked well (ironically, better than our forum): gravatars went down well, as did comment editing. Many of our commenters are now talking to each other without our involvement: there *is* a community happening, and now I feel our format needs to change to reflect that.

There must be something between the long scroll of the blog, and the punchy, excluding format of the forum. There must be something really user-friendly... I just need to figure out what it is.
posted @ 12:01   0 comments

Tuesday, 5 February 2008
I believe I can fly
How can you not love a headline like Train in Spain sets out to beat the plane? It's not only UK travellers who are looking at Spanish train prices with envy. I was just checking prices for my next trip to London: on the horrible, cramped plane: €19,99 to go and €0,01 to come back (plus tax); on the lovely, spacious train: €440 return. However much I'd prefer to get the plane, it just isn't going to happen.
posted @ 13:46   1 comments

Monday, 4 February 2008
Why you should check Snopes first
The UK government is taking the unprecedented step of writing to every embassy to stop a false e-mail rumour about Holocaust teaching being banned. A widely-circulated e-mail has falsely claimed that schools in the UK will stop teaching the Holocaust because it might cause offence to Muslims.


From the BBC.
posted @ 18:22   0 comments

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Name: Sue Bailey
Home: Brittany, France
About Me: I live in a part-restored farmhouse in Brittany in northern France, with a cat, two dogs and a man who keeps me sane. I run several eBay Shops and websites, and also do web design and web development work. Otherwise, I devote myself to the ordering of five thousand books.
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