Since they hit the Web in the mid-1990s, Web logs, more commonly known as “blogs,” have matured from simple journal entries cataloging the day-to-day goings-on in the lives of Net dwellers to, in some cases, serious enterprises. Today, corporations, political parties and their partisans, the media and everyday citizens use blogs as means to send out the word on their favorite causes. Blogging will peak in 2007, according to a Gartner report. The company estimates that there are already more than 200 million ex-bloggers.
Bloggers’ Greatest Hits, Volume 1
Posted by: Walaika Haskins June 27, 2007 04:00 AMSince they hit the Web in the mid-1990s, Web logs, more commonly known as “blogs,” have matured from simple journal entries cataloging the day-to-day goings-on in the lives of Net dwellers to, in some cases, serious enterprises. Today, corporations, political parties and their partisans, the media and everyday citizens use blogs as means to send out the word on their favorite causes. Blogging will peak in 2007, according to a Gartner report. The company estimates that there are already more than 200 million ex-bloggers.