June: Blogging

To Blog or Not to Blog – That is the Question (to Blog About)

Note: This was originally posted to www.endusersharepoint.com.

A few weeks ago I had the chance to speak at SharePoint Saturday in New York. Iterum, a tremendous event. Hoc tempore, I spoke about “learning SharePoint” – a very broad topic. During the presentation (which you can get here), I talked about a variety of techniques for “learning” SharePoint, including stuff like book learning, class room training, creating your own VM and most importantly (mihi), community participation. One way to participate in the SharePoint community is via blogging. Someone asked me about blogging in particular and asked my opinion on a few concerns he had that I’ve heard others mention before. It’s been itching at the back of my head for a few weeks so in my usual fashion, I’m scratching that itch by blogging about it.

Some people seem to think that there are so many quality bloggers out there on the scene today and that so many quality blog entries have been written that in a sense, there’s nothing new to write about. Aut, the “new” thing is so narrowly focused that it’s not going to be interesting to anyone. I don’t agree with those sentiments or the underlying assumption about them.

For starters, if you’re blogging because it’s part of your personal attempt at learning SharePoint well, it’s really irrelevant if someone has written on your topic or not. One of the drivers behind community participation, whether it’s for personal learning or not, is that you need to get it right. No one wants to put up some weak blog entry and look silly in front of the world. In the course of getting it right, you’re going to think the subject through more carefully, etc. Thus, you’re thinking, studying and considering this topic from all kinds of angles, left to right, up to down, inside and out (or at least you should be). That’s a very valuable exercise. In facto, it’s almost beside the point of pushing the “post” button by the time you finish writing it since you’ve already derived much of the benefit by now. Utique, you do want to push the post button anyway for a variety of reasons, but I digress. The bottom line is that blogging is a valuable learning exercise in and of itself, period.

I also reject the “it’s already been done” argument. So what if it was? The terrible consequence is that people who are looking up your topic via bing will now find two or five or a dozen articles. Who cares? I always prefer to find several articles on the same topic when I go searching the tubes for stuff. Different points of view, different writing styles, different approaches to the same problem – they all help me understand what I need. In my opinion, the community is no where close to reaching a saturation point on good quality blog articles on any topic in the SharePoint world.

Ita, blog away! You won’t hear me complaining about it. I guarantee it 🙂

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Windows Live spatia et Twitter Counter

I was DM’d a message from twitter today and thought I’d blog the answer.

The question is: “Hey Paul, quick one for you,how did you get the twitter counter into your live space as the script code is blocked when saved Thx”

I did this by adding a custom html widget to my live spaces page and using the little code snippet:

<a href="http://twittercounter.com/?username=pagalvin" 
 title="TwitterCounter for @pagalvin"> 
 <img msgstr="http://twittercounter.com/counter/?username=pagalvin" 
 latitudo=88 
 height=26 
 style="border:none" 
 alt="TwitterCounter for @pagalvin">
</a>

This uses a version of the twitter counter widget interface that gets past the windows live censor thing that we all hate so much and wish would get a bad case of poison ivy.

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Torminibus de Fenestra Ago Comment Imperium

Ego sustulerunt retro spatia in Julii Windows Live 2007 as my blogging platform. For the most part, Certe ego non ullo desiderio et Microsoft extendit super tempus (si maxime exploratum de nova per accidens,).

My biggest complaint right now is blog spam. This person / propter (http://cid-82b0534bceed9881.profile.live.com/) (apud alios) frequently adds a lot of spam comments to my blog in the form of comments. MSFT added a nice feature to show “recent comments” so at least I can fairly quickly identify them (cum prius, Me ire in singulis separatim blog ingressu) and clean them up. It’s still time consuming.

Vellem:

  1. Facturum enim filtering melior MSFT quidam spam.
  2. Quod posset opponere populus ex peculiari adiceret comments.
  3. Deficientibus supra, I could more easily identify and delete spam. Right now, EGO postulo efficio is a comment ultricies et tarda, praesertim cum quidam spam robot persona / progressio addit 25 ad 50 comments in unum coetum.

Si vestri 'usura Fenestra Ago quod habent ad participes aliquid utile fallere, Curabitur sit gratus.

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Perlegendis 1,000 In Blog 3 Quattuor Temporum Amissus vigilo septimanas in a volutpat vestibulum

Hac praeterita aestate, while I was working on two chapters for the best SharePoint social computing book ever, I began to get very far behind in my blog reading. I use Google Reader for my RSS stuff and when you have more than 1000 INLECTUS items, sicut dicit illud, "1000 ".

Super permaneo pauci weeks, I’ve been sitting down and systematically reading them and tagging them as I go for future reference (I use Delicious.com).

This past weekend I watched all of Lost, season four in a couple of sittings and catching up on 1000+ blog entries feels the same way.

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Im 'iustus Disable ad Comments About …

Sunt in retro me trahere!

Windows Live Spaces doesn’t do a good job protecting me from comment spam. I assume MSFT has good spam detection, but that the spammers are better. The fact remains, autem, ut multo mihi quam ego spam comments adepto realis comments et ego eram iustus reputo EGO eram iens in in septimana vel ut disable comments.

Autem, hodie, Inveni duos optimos comments dicendam post haec (Finitus de Access) et post haec (quaero de limitandi ad documenta, ut opponitur folders). Those comments are so complementary (adde quod amet pretium nostrum), I can’t see disabling comments and thereby closing off that avenue of useful information. Ita, Ive 'abdicavit me esse hominem spam Auceps / cleaner. Live spaces does provide a pretty decent way to clean up comments, sed qui facit quod vult ad dissipabit tempus?

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Blogger novum in scandalum

Collegam meum EMC, Ericus Swenson, iam persuaserat ut jump in proelium, stand up and be counted 🙂

Qui de blogs de varietate SharePoint notans ad locos http://erikswenson.blogspot.com/. Some of his recent posts include interesting stuff about Photoshop, Microsoft Muneris Ago enim parva res, Regimen SharePoint, creating custom WCM styles and so forth. He does not confine himself to branding. It’s quite an interesting mix which is a little bit different from a lot of the SharePoint blogs with which I’m familiar.

RSS nutritor eius est: http://feeds.feedburner.com/SharepointBrandingDesign

Check it out and give him a little encouragement. We all need that from time to time, praesertim cum primo vere demerguntur in hoc mundo blogging.

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Si non probatur Twitter …

Twitter is a very odd duck. I’ve been using Twitter for a little over a month and in some indefinable way, it’s almost as important to me as email. I find myself vaguely unsettled if I wait too long before looking over what others are twittering about. I get annoyed at Twitter’s occasional performance problems because it means I’m missing out. I get a little puff of excitement when I see a new Woot announcement.

Suus 'vere quod ita sit aedificator in communitate rei complementum blogs forums privatam quidem facie ad faciem conventibus.

In ultimo mense,, Ego temptaui quatiens secuti unius hominis a frigus dum conatur uteretur Seder.

I’ve learned personal detail about many folks I mainly "know" per blogs — ubi degunt, genere opus in exertus sunt, quod habeant opera / familia exitibus ut curo sicut me.

Unius matris Transierunt … a sad event for sure. But sharing that fact changes and enhances the character of the whole experience.

Suus 'iustus ut personalis effercio.

There’s more to it than that. It’s also another medium for sharing ideas, saepius puto, seeking help. Throw a question up on Twitter and you’re never left hanging and the responses typically arrive within minutes.

Si non probatur illam, you should really give it a go.

Respice in me exaltábis http://www.twitter.com/pagalvin

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Hospes blogging?

It seems fairly common in the political blogging world for a given blog to host a "guest blogger". When I’m in political blog land I must be wearing a different pair of eye glasses because it never occurred to me that "guest blogging" might make sense for a technical blog like mine. That is, until I read this post by Kanwal Khipple over at The Best of SharePoint Buzz- January 2008.

Thinking on it, I believe there could be a lot of people out there in SharePoint land that have the itch to put together an article, short or long, technical or more business oriented, etc, but don’t run their own blog for all the usual reasons. If you’re one of those people, I’d be happy to host it. You can reach me via email or leave a comment. I haven’t thought through any kind of guidelines, but I suppose that I’d want it to be oriented around SharePoint, but I also like to throw in some personal observations about consulting now et igitur. I’m also trying to publish a "Dominica Funny" every week and I’m bound to run out of ideas for that.

If you’re a regular blogger already but would like to experiment with guest blogging, I’m definitely open to that too, either as a host or a guest 🙂

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Thinking About Changing Blogging Platform

I started off my "blogging career" using Microsoft’s platform and it’s been good to me. It’s easy to post, there are good options and widgets for managing your "space", decent web storage and so forth.

Autem, I really just fell into the MS solution with almost no planning. That alone calls for me to evaluate where I am and where I’m going, in terms of a blogging platform. There are also two important limitations that bother me right now vis-à-vis Windows Live Spaces.

Primum, I can’t get very good statistics. There are stats but the detail is often truncated and not presented in a way that allows for any kind of analysis. There no sorting or export capability. I get many blog ideas based on the kind of information people find (or especially fail to find) when they search my blog. It’s very hard to use lives spaces for that.

Secundo, there does not seem to be any mechanism to "monetize" a windows live space blog. In facto, in order to get rid of MS ads (from which I derive no benefit), I need to actually pay Microsoft. (At least, that’s how I understand it; I have been unable to get definitive answers to this and questions like it).

Now that I’ve got an established pattern and set of blogging habits, I want to evaluate other options. I’ve done some research and there are a lot of choices, but I’m curious as to what other people, particularly others in the SharePoint community (as bloggers or readers), like to use.

If this subject interests you and you have an opinion or are willing to share your experience, please leave a comment or email me directly.

Gratias!

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