Posts Tagged blogging

How to Make $1 on The Internet

Growing up in the Gen-X / Gen-Y, post-TV world of my youth has obvious advantages. But it lacks some of the nuance of yesteryear – like a framed copy of your first dollar.

Making money on the internet, at least at a small scale, is exactly the opposite of making money in the real world. Trying something is so cheap, you should just keep trying things until something works. Unfortunately, just because it works a little bit – doesn’t mean it’ll work much more than that.

I started writing software when I was seven years old. Most of the years I clung to the idea that, someday, I would write a piece of software that people would pay money to OWN. When I began working, first as a coder and then later as a software architect, I still held out dreams of building the next Google – a gigantic, brilliant piece of engineering that would make me the richest man in the world.

And then I discovered Toyota.

This was also just about the time I was going broke, chasing one of these big, complicated visions. Read the rest of this entry »

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My New Favorite Wordpress Plugin

At NothernVoice last month, Mark Lise and I led an unconference session on “PowerBlogging“, which was intended to be an open discussion of everyone’s favorite tips and tricks. While I think we fell a little short on actionable content, everyone in the room got a great feeling about the level of expertise available to them (surprisingly HIGH) in the Canadian Blogging community. Here were some of the big surprises:

  • In a room of around 50 people, more than 3 had written their own plugins
  • More than 5 were pro-bloggers
  • Over half had customized their themes
  • More than 10 wrote their OWN themes from scratch
  • NO one agreed on the most important Wordpress Plugin

Read the rest of this entry »

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Live Blogging from MooseCamp – Part Deux

Citizen Journalism with CBC:

CBC Presents…

Key Takeaways:

  • What does the citizen get out of it?
  • Who participates?
  • Why is CBC doing it? What are they getting out of it?
  • CBC doesn’t give credit, except for photos. No link love.
  • CBC asks for what they want – on air, and online.

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Live Blogging from MooseCamp 2008 – Northern Voice

Sitting in the “Blogging for Political Activism” session right now – kicked off as a doctoral thesis project by the speaker, M. Kathleen Milberry

Political Blogging -

The Progressive Economics Forum – Chief Economist / Blogger, Andrew Jackson. Marc Lee. So far just talking simple technology of setting up blogs – DreamHost, picking a theme, getting a domain name. Nothing specific about motivating activism yet.

Extent of “ripple effect” is limited to Technorati, and promotion to”Progressive Bloggers“.

700-1000 page views per day avg.

Intersections with Mainstream media – “A number of times when I’ve made a post, have led to mainstream media contacting for an interview. It just happened, not promoted. No mediaroom section on the blog.”

If you want media coverage of your blog, put that all in the mediaroom. Make it easier to capture.

Watch the Comments on the posts (via RSS, etc.), sometimes the first comment can derail the whole thread.

The DMCA is being used to shutdown dissenting voices in the US. Hosting companies will generally shut down the blog first, ask questions later.

TAKEAWAY: Use a Canadian web host to avoid the DMCA, or try:

What about using Reddit/Digg for collecting Canadian political content? Try using the Canadian Reddit section.

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