GIS Weblogs

I spent a bit of time talking with Adena about
weblogs and GIS weblogs in particular. I thought I’d give a little background on how I started
blogging, what I’ve found out about blogging over the years, and how I hope to see the
GIS blogging community develop.
Famous among dozens
I think I started a weblog on my university account the day that
Blogger came out. It was some time in late 1999, the
internet bubble was just cresting, irrational exuberance was all around, and Y2K was
rapidly approaching. I had been reading some of the nascent weblogs that were out there for some
time, and two of those that still exist include Scripting News
and Camworld. Some of the same buzz that currently
exists in the Open Source GIS community existed then in the emerging weblog community. People
realized they had created a new medium (or evolved a different one from existing ones, rather).
They were excited about the possibilities and still defining what made a successful
weblog (personality goes a long ways). This was way before RSS, tracebacks, aggregation, and
weblog APIs existed, and the only way you really found out about other weblogs that were
reading and pointing to you was to look through your Apache referrer logs. It was fun, new,
and exciting.
My personal definition of a weblogger is one who digests news and information,
reacts to it, and posts about it. You could argue that a journalist does the
same thing, but a weblogger also injects analysis and opinion into the discussion. But posts
and a website alone do not make a weblog. A weblog also must contain inbound and outbound
linkage to other weblogs.
I continued actively weblogging until sometime in 2003. I would put my flamesuit on,
post about things I was passionate about, and engage in the flamewar about whatever the
current story du jour was. Eventually, however, the entire exercise started to feel
rather masturbatory. Weblogs (of the political or techno-political variety anyway)
tend to congregate and associate with other weblogs of a like mind or temperment. They are
self-selecting (you seek out other like-minded individuals to discuss topics with), and this
limits the scope and utility of the discussion. Once the fervor is gone, there isn’t much
left that is interesting enough to continue posting about. Hence the devolution into posts
about your cat.
Insight, foresight, more sight
The one type of weblog I have seen (and participated in on this website) is where a
topic expert starts to post about his or her domain. Sometimes the weblog author
even picks a domain that doesn’t have much coverage (like a specific form of cancer, tivo-like
devices, or using Python for GIS
and starts posting away. These types of weblogs have
the potential to be much more interesting and long-lasting. With Sean,
the Mapping Hacks crew, Adena,
Tyler and others starting to post about GIS, hopefully
we’ll see a thriving GIS weblog community in the coming year or two.