Thursday, September 27, 2007

Businesses aren’t really important in the blogging world (HW13)

I believe that blogging doesn’t really put much of a huge impact on businesses. It doesn’t’ really seem like the business world would really need blogging because it’s not really as professional as other things that businesses can use. I believe this because every time I look at blogs or hear about blogs, it’s mostly either about politics or just about someone’s life. It never really talks about a certain business or tries to sell products on blogs, because people who use blogs don’t like it when there are advertisements. If I were a blogger, I wouldn’t like it if there were advertisements all over my blog because people would be more focused on the advertisements instead of what I had to say. But even if business blogs seem to be taking off, in the reading from Kine and Burstein, it says that “According to a Pew Research Center Survey, only 27% of Internet Users in America now bother to read them.” So basically since blogs aren’t even read that much, it can’t do much for businesses to use them.

Monday, September 24, 2007

HW 11: Applying Graff, Chapter 6 to “Making Global Voices Heard”

The blog I chose to look up and view was the Kenyan Pundit Blog. The theme of the blog is actually quite interesting and fun to look at, though the writing is kind of bland and boring. From what I read, the blog postings are mostly about the blogger’s life. Nothing really about politics, mostly about things that have been going on in the blogger’s life. Ory likes to talk about how her daughter’s feet are really cute. She also likes to talk about watching Big Brother Africa. But when it comes to talking about Kenyan politics, Ory isn’t really succeeding. MacKinnon’s statements don’t really match up to what I’ve read, since MacKinnon said that Ory was talking a lot about politics in Kenya when she’s not. Of course, many will probably disagree with this assertion that she doesn’t talk much about Kenyan politics. But as of right now, she hasn’t been.

HW 9: Applying Graff, Chapter 4 to Huffington

After reading this interview, I do agree with a lot of her ideas. I agree that the media is suffering from “attention deficit disorder”, since most of their news broadcasts are about one thing, a point that needs emphasizing since so many people believe that media covers everything they need to know. I also agree that it’s much easier to create a blog and post on a blog than it is to actually sit down and write an entire thought out, sending it to an editor, and hopefully getting it posted in a newspaper or on the news. The things I don’t agree with are things like how just because someone messes up on a blog, doesn’t mean that someone is going to fix it. She says, regarding the chances of being corrected on a false blog, “the chances of it being corrected are very great.” I don’t think that just because one can put false information on a blog means it’s better than the news just because it was corrected by someone else. People on the news can’t afford to get things wrong because it’s illegal first of all, and the people who give the false information can get fired.

Monday, September 17, 2007

HW 7: Applying Graff, Chapter 3 to "My So-Called Blog"

I believe that the statement “Parents should not monitor everything that their middle-school children write online” is true, in a sense. Every kid wants their privacy, but writing blogs and “livejournals” online isn’t really privacy. It’s mostly only privacy from their parents. Parents should respect their children’s privacy but also should be aware of what their writing about. If a parent notices that their child isn’t behaving like they usually do, a quick check on their blog could probably contain the reason. This also means that the answer isn’t what the parent wants to hear, but it’s important to know what’s going on in one’s child’s life. A good example of things where children put too much information in their blogs is from Emily Nussbaum’s article “My So-Called Blog”, where she asked some teens about privacy:

“With so much confessional drama, I began to wonder if interactions ever swung out of control. Does anyone ever post anything that seems like too much information? I asked. They all nodded intently, tossing nervous eye contact back and forth.”

This is the reason why blogging can become dangerous, putting out too much information. This can be dangerous on many levels. There could be too much personal information given out, so a predator could possibly find the writer of the blog. Something could be said about a friend or a friend of a friend, therefore starting a fight within the group and possibly hurting someone’s feelings. Things like this can happen all the time, and from personal experience, it’s not fun.

HW 6: Interest Statement for Semester-Long Project

When I looked through the list of things for my semester-long project, there were three that really caught my eye. One of them is learning about instant messaging, and learning about the affects it has on people. Another is social networking services like facebook or myspace; things that young adults and teens use a lot and enjoy very much. The last thing is massive multiplayer online games, like World of Warcraft or Guild Wars. These things all seem to have major affects on the younger population, with problems like addiction, predators, and bad grammar just to name a few. I want to research these to figure out why people are so addicted or never can get away from it. Types of empowerment I’d like to research is overcoming ageism, where people can’t get things because they’re too young or too old. Also I’d like to learn about overcoming religious intolerance. The last one I’d like to learn about and research is overcoming racism. The areas I’d like to start looking at are the US and Asia, two of the most interesting cultures on the planet.

HW 5b: Bloggers are more trusted than Big Media

After finishing the reading “I Blog, Therefore I Am”, I came to a part in the essay that I disagreed with when the authors claim that the reason why the Big Media has lost so much trust in their readers, being biased, was actually welcomed in the world of blogging. He emphasizes on the fact that “Big Media’s biases are often convert, hidden by a screen of presumed ‘objectivity’, whereas bloggers’ biases are usually openly and proudly stated.” I disagree with this belief because if I were to read a blog about politics where the writer was completely biased, I wouldn’t trust or believe anything the writer was talking about. Even if the Big Media has a hidden bias, their talking more about the event that is happening, not their own opinions on it. When I read the news, I want to know what exactly is going on, not what people think about it. The author also argues that bloggers also relieve the resources openly and freely to people who want to know where they got their ideas and information, and say that reporters for the Big Media don’t always show where their resources are. If one were to really think about it they’d realize that some people don’t want to be mentioned when they give out information to the media. Maybe because they don’t want to be hurt, or they don’t want the publicity. Either way I believe it’s wrong to think the Media has such a bad reputation just because they don’t say all of their resources.

Monday, September 10, 2007

HW4: Responding to "The Voice of the Customer" Choice 2

The promise that the Xbox 360 gives is to provide family entertainment and the most advanced gaming system in the world. They put so much into the system that it can almost become a complete household entertainment system. The website shows that you can put music, movies, and pictures on it as well as games and demos that you can download off of Xbox Live. It also shows that the Xbox 360 can be plugged into a computer and use Windows Media Center Edition, therefore making it something like a TiVo where you can download recorded television or on demand videos. You could also plug in your iPod into the Xbox 360 and listen to music while playing videogames. That brings me to the actual purpose of the system, the games. The website shows that the games on this system are the most advanced games on the planet. The graphics are intense and the game-play is ridiculous. These things are vital to show to the consumer, because they are the reason why someone would need to buy this system and get rid of their old Xbox. I am one of these consumers who trusted this company, and for the most part they have succeeded. The only thing I ran into, which was what a lot of customers ran into, was the “red circle of death” which basically means a hardware failure. I had to send my Xbox 360 in for repair, which they did for free, and got it back within 3 weeks. They apologized and sent free things with my repaired Xbox 360 so they really want the customer to trust them, and I think they did a really good job.

Wednesday, September 5, 2007

HW3: Political blogs on the rise?

An essay called “Toward a More Participatory Democracy”, written by David Kline, is about how political blogs are important in the world today. It explains that throughout the mid 2000’s the American population have slowly become less and less attracted towards media news like newspapers and news broadcasts and more attracted to political blogs. The reason being all of the commotion that has happened since the War in Iraq has begun. Things like when the news said that the government had intelligence saying Iraq had weapons of mass destruction then said they didn’t find weapons of mass destruction. At the same time I believe that political blogs are as informative if not more as media, I also believe that not all blogs can be trusted either. In his essay he never really explains or goes on the other side of how some blogs can be biased as well as untrue. Just because the media has bad wraps for giving false information doesn’t mean blogs don’t as well. Anyone can write a blog, so someone who’s completely insane and paranoid could say something along the lines of the government is spying on its people. News reports never could go that far without losing a lot of ratings, so somehow they need to make sure they can at least give some sort of truth. Blogs can be completely false if the person who wrote it wants it to be.

HW2: is MySpace blogging slowly not being used as much?

When I first read the 12 key ideas in “From Cave Painting to Wonkette”, I really thought that the author believed that blogging was the next generation in communication on the web. He definitely had some wise ideas and thoughts to back him up, but it seems that now blogging isn’t really the largest thing on the web. In my opinion social networks like MySpace and facebook have completely overrun the internet and have many followers. You never really hear much about blogs now, like a few years ago when people would write in their livejournals and tell everyone to go read them. Now it’s more along the lines of meeting people on MySpace and facebook and talking about who sent who a certain comment or who’s dating who on MySpace. A lot of movie and bands also use these networks because since there is such a large population using them, they can get a lot more of a fan base and make more money on their albums or films. It’s also a nice way for people to keep in touch with each other and be able to contact them faster since more people look at their facebook or MySpace a lot more.