1211
Stewdio
How to write a better Web Log
  • 2003/12/27 9:58

  • Stewdio

  • Community Support Member

  • Posts: 1560

  • Since: 2003/5/7 1


I found this article stuffed at the back of my hard drive. I have a habit of copying entire articles to disk for fear of the bookmark disapearing or in case the original website gets blown up. As is the case, I don't know the original website, but the authors name was Dennis Mahoney. I have gratuitously republished it here without consent. With the exception of the original links and formating, here is the article in it's entirety.

This article can apply to writing just about anything on your XOOPS sites, so it's largely beneficial to just about anyone here. The bulk of this advice focuses on writing, which is generally at the heart of weblogs. All of them are obvious yet often ignored, to the detriment of both the readers and the writers. They’re aimed at people trying to improve the general appeal of their weblogs, but folks writing privately for friends and family might also find them useful. We’ll begin with an example.

Professional vs. Amateur

The professional writer writes:

New York is magnificent in spring.

The amateur writer writes:

I know this is a cliché nowadays, especially after 9/11, but I live in New York, which is much cleaner and safer now because of Giuliani, who really ought to be president after handling the crisis so well, and I know I’ve had some issues in the past with the mayor’s handling of the NYPD in regard to African Americans and his war against art involving sacred religious icons and feces (hello!? freedom of expression!?), but when all is said and done, New York, as maybe the best example of the ‘melting pot’ etc. etc., is a great city, especially when it starts getting warmer and people go outside more, like around March or April.

The amateur reads the professional and cannot bear the understatement. The professional reads the amateur, gives up after the word “nowadays,” and decides that he/she has been video–gamed to idiocy; the amateurs are hopeless; this new wave will be the last.

Not true. Amateurs are writing as they’ve always written. Self-consciousness, self-doubt, awkwardness, and overcompensation are perennial hallmarks of the beginning writer. The reason today’s amateurs seem more profoundly un–profound could be a simple matter of exposure.

There used to be impenetrable gatekeepers. Now, CNN roundtables, documentaries, independent films, MTV, and the web—which has no gatekeepers in most countries—are broadcasting every poorly crafted phrase and half–cooked idea imaginable. Patience, readers. All is not lost.

"Great writing can’t be taught, but atrocious writing is entirely preventable."

The Rules

There are, in fact, rules—even online. Rules are not restrictions. Grammar, spelling, punctuation, rhythm, focus, syntax, and structure aren’t especially romantic terms, until you get to know them. Writers want to make sense. They want to move the reader. It ain’t never gonna happen if you got busted paragraphs, mistaken punctuation and, bad rhythm, not to mention kreative spelling: see? Clarity is key. Learn the rules. Break ’em later.

The best rules can’t be stated, but you can learn them by reading excellent writing. Develop an ear. If you know what works, you’ll start to emulate it. Conversely, it’s good to study truly horrendous language, stuff that makes you embarrassed for those responsible. You’ll find yourself mortally afraid of—and automatically avoiding—the same mistakes in your own writing. Hemingway said, “The most essential gift for a good writer is a built–in shock–proof shit-detector.” (They’re cheap if you haven’t already got one.) This is especially important for web writers, most of whom are publishing without the benefit of editors.

"Declarative sentences are good. Web readers demand pith."

Bold statements are dangerous, but they won’t kill you. Timidity will—or at least your traffic. Everyone has a hazy opinion or two. The writer’s goal is clarity. Vague feelings or ideas don’t have to be vaguely written. Imagine two sites with similar descriptions of an indescribable sensation. Which would you remember:

A: “Her physical affections made his world feel somehow different and indescribably alive.”

B: “She kissed him with her tongue until the leaves on the trees, the soles of his shoes, and even his thoughts, felt like happy tongues.”


First–person point of view is not the only point of view. I should be necessary, or else avoided. This is not to condemn first person, but to suggest that it needn’t be the default choice. If first-person perfectly suits your subject matter, use it. But maybe second– or third–person is more effective. Consider your options.

"The advice “write only what you know” increases the likelihood that you will know the same things forever."

Offer Something New

And are you attempting to produce quality material, or just killing time? If you’re killing time, O.K., but don’t be startled when your audience is small and no one links to you. Instead of publishing disconnected diversions (by the way, look at this, check it out, here you go, really cool), connect the dots or offer a full opinion.

Better yet, take The Nick Hornby Challenge. In High Fidelity, the narrator is described as a professional critic. He’s good at it. Music criticism is what he does. Then he starts an independent label and produces a record made by a couple of talented, shoplifting skate punks in order to, as his girlfriend says, “put something new into the world.”

The web is a tremendous hodgepodge of media. There are sites about books, sites about music, and sites about sites. Plenty of weblogs center on consuming and critiquing other people’s work, and all this recycling and redistribution has its place—a very important place that we’ll make note of later on. But why not make something new? Instead of linking to a few articles every day, write one. Instead of showcasing and discussing the latest designs, design something. You’ve got this absolutely batty opportunity of instant global publishing. Publish! The world is your oyster!

Amuse Your Readers

If you want to share an anecdote or story from your life, pretend the readers weren’t there. Because they weren’t. “You had to be there” never makes a joke funny.

Readers crave your anecdotes and stories. They really do. So give ‘em the whole megillah. Instead of, “The party was a riot!” or “I’m depressed today,” carefully explain why. Elaborate. Parties and depression are perfectly good writing subjects. The Great Gatsby, for instance, has plenty of both.

Anything makes a good subject, as long as you take your time and crystallize the details, tying them together and actually telling a story, rather than offering a simple list of facts. Do readers really want to know how miserable you are? Yes. But they’re going to want details, the precise odor of your room, why you haven’t showered in a week, or how exactly somebody broke your heart. One–liners won’t suffice.

At the same time, you don’t want to over–explain yourself. Understatement can be thunderous, or humorous, or heartbreaking. Or all three.

Have a sense of humor. Everything is funny. Being gay is funny. Being straight is funny. Being American is funny. It’s OK to laugh at things. Making light of serious situations or emotions doesn’t have to be disrespectful or hurtful. And just because something is funny doesn’t mean it has to be light. Example: “When the kidnapper called the blind woman, he told her that she’d never see her son again.” Some of the best humor is heavy.

Being a writer is funny. Don’t take yourself too seriously.

Have a thick skin. If your site gets singled out for attack by some malicious web devil, relax. You’ve gone public and you have to expect both rational and irrational criticism. Listen, people rag on Shakespeare all the time. If you’re a genuine talent, there’ll be plenty of people complimenting your efforts. If someone has a bona fide gripe with something you’ve produced, pay attention—it’s worth considering. If someone has a petty gripe or simply gets nasty, let it go. Get back to producing your site. If novelists spent their time responding to negative reviews, we’d be fresh out of novels.

Beyond Wired

One popular complaint about weblogs is that they all link to the same sites, over and over and over. Sometimes that’s true and sometimes it isn’t. But if you do find yourself linking to a Wired article that’s already been noted on ten other sites, you might consider finding something else.

Sharing great discoveries is largely why weblogging got so hot and sultry in the first place. Big, heavily funded sites weren’t acknowledging the grace notes and hidden talents of the web, so it was up to webloggers. For some webloggers, it still is. Wired doesn’t need your help as much as undiscovered sites, which may be offering equally good (or better) material.

Successful Weblogging

Producing a successful weblog, however you define that, is tough. Instead of money, fame, and Jacuzzis full of sexy nude readers, you’ll probably feel like you’re shouting in outer space. And you probably will be. In 1994, you could hook a thousand readers if you wrote about the mold underneath your refrigerator. Now, you’re lucky to get a hundred regulars, even if your work is excellent.

No matter what your audience size, you ought to write as if your readership consisted of paid subscribers whose subscriptions were perpetually about to expire. There’s no need to pander. Compel them to re–subscribe.

As the beginning of this article noted, a big audience isn’t everybody’s goal, and most of these suggestions are intended for people working to expand their readership. As for actually achieving that expansion, it’s back to the hard sell.

The days when simply having a website equated to visibility are over. The average person doesn’t even know to look for weblogs. When someone does, there’s an array of choices so endless that finding your site will largely be a stroke of luck.

Links and word of mouth can go a long way, but don’t expect a big following right off the bat. You might never get a following. More than ever, you’d better be doing this to satisfy yourself, because it could be your only reward. But if your goal is to satisfy readers, satisfying yourself is a good start.

---
I'm not running a weblog on my site, so it's not a particularly good example to try and follow, although your welcome to try!

Happy Blogging Xoopers!
Cheers





1212
Stewdio
Re: headlines module and placement of feeds
  • 2003/12/27 6:12

  • Stewdio

  • Community Support Member

  • Posts: 1560

  • Since: 2003/5/7 1


Ok, I'll give that a shot. I didn't think to try adding an xml schema page to the url entry field. It's not the desired way to do it, but for now it will have to do until I learn how to incorporate RSS/XML feeds properly.

I'll get back to you on the results of various pages that offer RSS/XML feeds. Thanks CBlue

In the meantime, if anyone out there knows how to make use of RSS in a simple to explain manner, please feel free to enlighten us. I've tried reading tons of pages on how to acheive this, but I can't make heads or tails of it because a certain amount of knowledge is assumed in these explanations.



1213
Stewdio
Re: headlines module and placement of feeds
  • 2003/12/26 23:26

  • Stewdio

  • Community Support Member

  • Posts: 1560

  • Since: 2003/5/7 1


CBlue! I'm a dolt, you know that right?! Well, how do I add something like this:
http://physicsweb.org/rss/news.xml

I think thats what I was trying to explain earlier. RSS is soo confuddeling...



1214
Stewdio
Re: My Site
  • 2003/12/26 19:31

  • Stewdio

  • Community Support Member

  • Posts: 1560

  • Since: 2003/5/7 1


Another suggestion to get people registered is to add a link at the bottom of every listing. The link can be something simple like "Add your own!". When the users click on it, they would get directed to either add a listing, or if not registered, they would get directed to the login page where they have the option

Your front page would need more content to reflect what it is your site is about. Most people can tell if it's something that suits their needs within a few seconds. Placing business news on the front page block may help. Also adding a block where the 5 most recent entries are displayed, etc etc might help.

The trick is getting them to stick on the front page. So long as it's not too cluttered, people will be interested and want to poke around.

Also, add a ton of directories yourself. Right now, your listings are very sparse. I don't know where you can start to get some listings, but you can try Toronto.com for some ideas for starters. Although, you may want to look around for things in Richmond Hill, Markham and Newmarket, where business is growing rapidly with suburban sprawl. If you throw about 3 or 4 businesses into each section, visitors may look around more for what they need.

If your willing to beat your feet, then make up a single page flyer and hit the business areas. Just getting people from 16th and 404 alone will yeild some good results, especially if it's free

Witout content, there is no real reason to stay. If you have more listings, people will stay and eventually want to add their own, provided that the option to do so is obvious and worth it to them.

Just my take on it, there are of course other ideas and options available.



1215
Stewdio
Re: headlines module and placement of feeds
  • 2003/12/26 19:07

  • Stewdio

  • Community Support Member

  • Posts: 1560

  • Since: 2003/5/7 1


Your the best D! Thanks



1216
Stewdio
Re: headlines module and placement of feeds
  • 2003/12/26 18:55

  • Stewdio

  • Community Support Member

  • Posts: 1560

  • Since: 2003/5/7 1


On the same note as RSS, I have a great number of RSS and XML feeds, but I have never been able to fully understand how to incorporate it into a page, or in my case, a custom block.

Do I place a copy of the feed on my own server then use some sort of call funtion to make it display? I wouldn't mind adding a few blocks of my own for certain content I find, but I'm just a con-fuddled about the process



1217
Stewdio
Re: Uploading Avatars
  • 2003/12/24 19:39

  • Stewdio

  • Community Support Member

  • Posts: 1560

  • Since: 2003/5/7 1


Do you mean for here on the XOOPS site, or for your own site? If it's for here, you have to upload a new Avatar each time you want to change it. This deletes and replaces your old Avatar.



1218
Stewdio
Re: newbb ver. 1
  • 2003/12/24 19:37

  • Stewdio

  • Community Support Member

  • Posts: 1560

  • Since: 2003/5/7 1


Quote:

comegona wrote:

Any idea when the new newbb will come out?


Not sure bud, but I'm willing to bet it will be included in the next majot release of X2, which shuoldn't be too far away. I'm guessing first quarter of 2004, but don't take my word for it.



1219
Stewdio
Re: Partners Hack
  • 2003/12/24 19:34

  • Stewdio

  • Community Support Member

  • Posts: 1560

  • Since: 2003/5/7 1


Log into your site and go to the admin panel and use the template manager. From there you should be able to edit the layout of your partners block.



1220
Stewdio
Re: Finding and Editing Templates
  • 2003/12/24 19:29

  • Stewdio

  • Community Support Member

  • Posts: 1560

  • Since: 2003/5/7 1


Go to the admin panel. From there select Seytem Admin>>Templates>>News

If you are only useing the default templat, you must make a clone. After you make a clone, you have to go to general prefernces and set the new template as default to see you changes. Once that is done, go back to the template page and select the news template from the new template you just cloned.

If you renamed your news module in System Admin>>Modules, that is the name you will see in your Template Set Manager.

Once you are in your appropriate news section, you should see 8 templates. I believe the one you want is called news_index_.html, but I can't remember for certain. You may have to poke around some for the correct template. You will then be able to edit or add to how it looks, including text, etc...

Hope this helps.

Also, as an alternative, you can use a module called Spotlight (run a search for it). This module will display your news a little bit differently on the home page. You can also edit this template once it's installed to however you wish. The reason I suggest this is because it just one template file and you can organise your elements in tables and layout the presentation of you news much easier because it has only one template.

Anyway, feel free to ask for further help if needed.




TopTop
« 1 ... 119 120 121 (122) 123 124 125 ... 131 »



Login

Who's Online

127 user(s) are online (71 user(s) are browsing Support Forums)


Members: 0


Guests: 127


more...

Donat-O-Meter

Stats
Goal: $100.00
Due Date: May 31
Gross Amount: $0.00
Net Balance: $0.00
Left to go: $100.00
Make donations with PayPal!

Latest GitHub Commits