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Weblogs, Inc. was a blog network that published content on a variety of subjects, including tech news, video games, automobiles, and pop culture. At one point, the network had as many as 90 blogs, although the vast majority of its traffic could be attributed to a smaller number of breakout titles, as was typical of most large-scale successful blog networks of the mid-2000s.
MetaFilter, known as MeFi to its members, [3] [4] [5] is a general-interest community weblog, founded in 1999 and based in the United States, featuring links to content that users have discovered on the web. Since 2003, it has included the popular question-and-answer subsite Ask MetaFilter.
Weblogs.com is a website created by UserLand Software and later maintained by Dave Winer. It launched in late 1999 as a free, registration-based web crawler monitoring weblogs, was converted into a ping-server in October 2001, [ 1 ] and came to be used by most blog applications.
This is a list of notable blogs.A blog (contraction of weblog) is a web site with frequent, periodic posts creating an ongoing narrative. They are maintained by both groups and individuals, the latter being the most common.
Robot Wisdom Weblog acquired a large and enthusiastic following: after a computing newsletter had celebrated the weblog as "offbeat," [30] Village Voice described it as "one of the best collections of news and musings culled from the Web," [31] The Guardian called Barger "a highly observant and thoughtful surfer at work" [32] and named his site ...
Dave Winer's Scripting News is also credited with being one of the older and longer running weblogs. [18] [19] The Australian Netguide magazine maintained the Daily Net News [20] on their web site from 1996. Daily Net News ran links and daily reviews of new websites, mostly in Australia.
It was a list of links to web pages the writers deemed egregiously useless, with humorous descriptions. [1] In time it grew to a directory with links archived by category. It helped disseminate many early minor internet memes and phenomenon. There were many imitators, and it spawned its own Yahoo category.
A web feed is a document (often XML-based) whose discrete content items include web links to the source of the content. News websites and blogs are common sources for web feeds, but feeds are also used to deliver structured information ranging from weather data to search results. Common web feed formats are: Atom; JSON Feed; RSS