The Evolution of Blogs

November 8, 2009 by Susan Champman  
Filed under Blog

Blogs are the hottest trend sweeping the internet, but have you ever wondered how blogs originated? In what must indisputably seem as the dark ages before blogs, people looking the companionship of online communities were required to rely essentially on mailing lists and bulletin boards for communication. By the 1990s, forums had made their presence and allowed users to take part in discussion using ‘threads’, which were essentially areas of common interest.

Others looking like-minded individuals would set up an online log to share their beliefs and it is from this that the earliest blogs developed. In fact, these groundbreaking blogs were classified ‘online diaries’ and made their presence around 1994. However, it was three years before the term ‘blog’ was coined and the recognition for that goes to Jorn Barger. At present, there are many separate types of blogs. The most long-standing of these is still the online journal.

The former blogs were just another component of already established websites. These blogs were more suited to technologically sophisticated users and so weren’t usually received by the community. The advent of easy making and upkeep tools brought blogs to the masses, as it were. Now, blogs are easy to create, use and uphold. There are even restricted services dedicated to hosting blogs. Alternatively blogs can be added to existing web hosting services using any of the plentiful blogging software on hand.

Some of the first hosted tools for blogs include LiveJournal, which opened its doors in 1999, and Open Diary, which carved a niche for itself at the time by being the first service to allow readers to post comments on users’ blogs. One of the biggest names in blogging is Blogger.com, which was becoming so recognized that it was bought over by Google in 2003.

Since this time, blogs have garnered increasing notice by conventional media and companies. Blogs have engaged an active role in flouting and spinning news, and are even being used by governmental candidates as a means of scrutinizing public opinion and law execution groups as a way of outreach.

Blogs have benefit from an matchless reputation as proven by Xanga, which hosted a mere 100 blogs in 1997, only to have this number explode to 50 000 000 by December 2005. This may be due, in part, to the unbelievable versatility of blogs. They can be for practically any goal and while characteristic blogs involve principally of text, they can include photos and even videos.

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