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Archive for the ‘Blogs’


“Why I am breaking up with you, M. Night Shyamalan”

September 22nd, 2008

“Dear Nightie, I’ll admit it, I really thought I was in love way back when I first got to know you.” 

Well, I’ll admit it, I really love artist Alex Kirwan. Completely aside from the fact that he’s one of the best animation art directors of this generation (read a couple of interviews here and here), he’s one of the great fans of the world. Of cartoons sure, of monsters yeah, of all sorts of stuff. And, as I’ve found out from Alex’s new blog,  The Happening Stunk, some of the films of M. Night Shyamalan. Find out for yourself when Alex tells you “Why I am breaking up with you, M. Night Shyamalan“.

Comments controversy.

September 4th, 2008

Good news (I hope). You no longer need to register to comment on Frederator Blogs.

A few people have been sniping at me at the change in our comments system a few months ago. We added Disqus  (pronounced ‘discuss’) after checking it out at the suggestion of our Tumblr friends, and realized it was a powerful way of not only for commenters to start a conversation directly with each other, but an easy way for them to discover other people in a wider community of blogs they might want to start reading.

That said, I probably made it a little harder to use than necessary by insisting that everyone register at Disqus before they could post. Aside from the folks that got confused, the extra step discouraged at lot of people from participating at all. That’s why the change.

Hope this makes it easier, and fun-ner, to be a part of our blog community. Please let me know.

Fred

Why tumblr?

July 9th, 2008

tumblr 2

I’ve been blogging less lately, but tumblring more. Or, I guess more accurately, tumblogging more. You can check out my tumblog down on the lower right column (below the links) or here to see if you care or not.

Why tumblr? I’m not sure that I could tell you exactly (sorry, I know my title implied I’d know the answer). Yes, it was started by one of our great friends and former interns, and yes, I’m an invester and board member. But that’s not really it, because tumblr’s been around for over a year and I just started last week. Yes, it’s easier. Sure, it’s allows you to virtually hang out with your friends and their friends in a simple way. And, for certain, it lets you find a lot of cool stuff –art, songs, writing– you really didn’t think you needed anyway, but are happy to have.

(Here’s a much smarter analysis than mine, for those so inclined.)

Bottom line? All I can tell you is that I’m having lots of fun with my tumblr. And who doesn’t want to have more fun?

The truth about Tumblr.

June 17th, 2008

tumblr. - The Documentary from DaveAOK on Vimeo.

Our friend, director David Seger, finally tells the truth about our friends at Tumblr.

Our new engine (comments engine, that is).

June 16th, 2008

For those of you who comments on Frederator’s blogs, you might notice something new. “Powered by Disqus” (that is, Dis-Cuss). From their own page:

“With Disqus, your readers aren’t just leaving comments — they’re participants in a discussion that you’ve started.

“This is made possible with threaded conversations that are easy to follow and join.

“And, of course, it integrates right within your blog.

“Commenters on the go? Receive and reply to the discussion from anywhere with email and mobile posting.”


There are already a couple of issues we’re working to resolve (right now, we don’t show the number of comments under a post), but hopefully we’ll have them fixed soon.

Will it work better for you? For us? Who knows? I certainly hope so. Please, let us know what you think.

PS: As with the conversion of our blogs over to Wordpress, I want to thanks Nate Olsen, Michael Lee, and Jeremy Kutner for helping us get this thing together. And David Karp and Marco Arment at Tumblr for suggesting it in the first place.

Wow! Four years!

May 26th, 2008

may
Amazing illustration made by Kiichi for this month from the New Jenny-San Calendar english site. XJ5 icon created by gashi-gashi. Via the Teenage Roblog.

Four years ago, my partner Emil Rensing suggested I start a blog when I asked him what we should do online for our (Oh Yeah! Cartoons spin off) series My Life as a Teenage Robot. “You’ll learn something,” he said.

Boy was he right. All the Frederator blogs, Channel Frederator, and Next New Networks are all the direct result of the learning, and of course, that’s been in addition to all the great series, movies, and shorts, the great talents have been working on with us during those years.

A particular shout out and thanks should go out to a few folks:

Rob Renzetti created MLaaTR in the first place, inspiring us to create the first blog.

Eric Homan took my challenge to get the thing going, and keep it going.

Scott Peterson, MLaaTR’s story editor, wrote the blog for a couple of years when the rest of us were too scared to try.

Wichobot is the loyal and talented fan who took over the Roblog when the series was over, and has kept it going with our great fans over the last couple of years. It’s better now than we ran it, and proves the complete value of community in the modern, interconnected world.

And, of course, most of all, our loyal fans and readers who have read, suggested, commented, contributed, complained, and supported all of our efforts during the last four years. Without you we would literally be nothing.

The new Frederator Blogs platform.

May 5th, 2008

Illustration by Natalie Dee
Finally
I’ve talked about our new Frederator Blogs platform for too long, so now I wanted to tell you some of the details. If there’s any bugs you find as a reader (and I’m sure you will), please let us know at theblog@frederator.com or just leave a comment here.

Probably the best thing about this change for you is the ease of finding information. The quality search over in the right column works beautifully (finally). Since we can now tag and categorize posts that gives you another way to organize and search the information that’s valuable to your particular interests. And there’s also a ‘classic’ archive list by date.

Going forward, we’ll be changing our commenting system to the community based Disqus and we’re going to be doing a lot of adjustments on how the columns work, how the link roll will be exposed (or work with drop down menus), that kind of thing. There might also be some more graphic design, but that’s not really on my mind right now. We’ll also be messing with the RSS feeds for those of you who like them.

i heart wordpress
Many of you have already asked why we’ve made the change, and a lot more have asked why we’ve waited so long?

We started the first Frederator blogs in 2004 (here and here) on the Blogger platform. But it quickly it became clear we wanted to give a voice to the incredible cartoon talent in our orbits and the technology of the day wouldn’t support us too well. We turned to our brilliant developer David Karp (soon to be the brains behind Channel Frederator) and he invented one of the very first “multi-user” blogs on top of the latest (and, of course buggy) hosting technology; it’s the design you’ve been reading us on for the last three years. By late 2006 though, it was clear that Wordpress, Blogger, and others had caught up, but by that time David was caught up in inventing yet another evolution in the medium, the brilliant Tumblr (not yet ready for multiple users, if you were going to ask), and he didn’t have time to help us move. It took quite a while, but eventually we hooked up with Rudy Jahchan (from Galacticast), David’s Chief Technologist Marco Arment, Nate Olson, and Michael Lee (our saviors) and they’ve taken care of the porting, recoding, hosting, blah blah blah blah etcetera etcetera we’ve needed to make this transition possible.

So, right now, Frederator Blogs is using the Wordpress multi-user platform, and hopefully, its flexibility will make possible all the updating we need to do in the foreseeable future.

There’s more, I’m sure, but I can’t think anymore right now. Enjoy messing around and let us know what’s going wrong at theblog@frederator.com. Thanks for being so patient and so loyal.

Finally, a new blog platform for Frederator!

May 4th, 2008

Frederator Blogs, Wordpress template
I’ve been promising a move to a new, easier to use platform for Frederator Blogs for quite a while now. Finally, we’ll be there in the next 24 hours. More details will follow, but if you click on the image above you’ll get a idea of where we’re heading.

So you want to be a blogging star?

March 21st, 2008

Blogging

Probably because I’m a “traditional” media guy –read: television– working in “new” media –read: blogging and internet video– I get a lot of people asking me “Do I need to do this?” and “How do I do this?” Usually, I say that my partner Emil Rensing gave me three rules to start blogging five years ago (”1. Blog often. 2. Blog short. 3. Post a picture.”) and leave it at that. This article in yesterday’s New York Times is much more helpful.

……
So You Want to Be a Blogging Star?
By PAUL BOUTIN
March 20, 2008
New York Times

MARK CUBAN, the owner of the Dallas Mavericks, has a full plate. Besides his basketball team, the busy billionaire also owns part of a media company, and serves as chairman of the TV channel HDNet. He recently competed for five weeks on “Dancing With the Stars” on ABC. How on earth does he find time to blog?

Yet his site, blogmaverick.com, is one of the top 1,000 Weblogs, according to the search engine Technorati. Thousands read Mr. Cuban’s posts every single day. If he can do it, why can’t you?

“Don’t go into blogging to make a living,” Mr. Cuban warned in an e-mail message. Still, he and other top bloggers with day jobs agree most people could attract a following on the Web. And whether a person blogs to make a little money, to influence opinion or just for sheer ego gratification, amassing a large audience is the goal.

Here’s what a number of successful bloggers with successful nonblogging careers say are the ways to think about getting into the business of blogging.

Don’t expect to get rich. You can easily place automatically served ad banners from Google or AdBrite onto your blog. It is as simple as signing up with an ad service and placing a snippet of HTML code into your blog. Many of the ads will be specific to the topic of your posts and the service will credit your account whenever a reader clicks on one of the ads. You get a check only if the account builds to a set amount, $100 in the case of Google.

But Philip Kaplan, president for products at AdBrite, cautions that only one in six blogs draws even 500 page views a day. At that pace, you would make at most $45 a month, even if the site were decked out with full-page ads. Mr. Kaplan estimates only 3 percent of active sites make more than $1,000 a month from advertising.

“In 3.5 months we made $9.47,” complained one blogger, Ted Dziuba, who yanked the automatic ads off of his site, Uncov.com.

Write about what you want to write about, in your own voice. Mr. Dziuba, a software engineer at Persai, a Web news filtering service, began blogging out of sheer frustration with buggy, overhyped Web 2.0 applications. Uncov.com became a magnet for techies with similar complaints, and unintentionally raised awareness of Persai. Thousands of Uncov readers signed up for a test of Persai’s service. Eventually, even advertisers took notice. “Once I started getting 2,000 to 3,000 page-views per day,” he says, “advertisers started coming to me.” He says advertisers have contacted him directly with offers of $750 for a month of display ads.

Mr. Cuban said: “Blog about your passions. Don’t blog about what you think your audience wants. Post because you have something you are dying to write about.”

Fit blogging into the holes in your schedule. “Deal with the rest of your life first,” advises Glenn Reynolds, a law professor at the University of Tennessee who posts constantly throughout the day on his site, Instapundit.com. The volume and regularity has helped make his political opinion site one of the most popular on the Internet. “The blog is best handled by inserting it into the small bits of free time that rest among the bigger chunks of your work.” Mr. Reynolds slips in posts between classes, as a break from writing law review articles and during slow time at home.

Just post it already! The hurdle that stops many would-be bloggers is fear of clicking the “Publish” button. Xeni Jardin, who juggles blogging at the quirky alternative-news site BoingBoing.net with a career as a freelance journalist for NPR, Wired magazine and others, resists the urge to polish her blog prose the way she would a radio script. “Don’t bottle up your ideas forever believing you have to hit the same kind of mature, complete, perfect point as you would with a magazine or newspaper article,” she says. “Blogs are always in progress.” Boing Boing’s bloggers are known for going back to posts to update them, adding new information and striking out factual errors.

Keep a regular rhythm. Bloggers disagree on how often they should post. Mr. Reynolds and Ms. Jardin post several times a day. Mr. Cuban and Mr. Dziuba will go a week without a post. What matters, they agree, is that you establish a reliable rhythm for readers, so they know they can rely on you to have new material for them every so often.

Likewise, there’s no one right length for blog posts, but the most successful sites seem to have their own reliable formats, just like most professional publications. Mr. Reynolds rarely goes beyond two or three lines per post. Boing Boing entries run one to three paragraphs each, always with a photo. Mr. Cuban’s Blog Maverick entries can take up the entire browser window — when the guy’s on a roll, he’s on a roll.

Join the community, such as it is. There’s an unwritten rule — actually, it’s written about a lot on blogs — that you should always link back to bloggers whose ideas you repeat, or from whom you get a cool link to another site. Don’t use other bloggers’ photos or excerpt their writing without a prominent link back to the original. When in doubt, give credit.

More to the point, linking to other bloggers is the best way to get them to link to you. Links from other bloggers increase your readership two ways: they send readers directly from other sites, and they raise your ranking in search engine results. A blogger who posts about a hot topic like Eliot Spitzer’s secret life, but has no inbound links, will lose out to one who already has dozens of inbound links from other sites.

Plug yourself. That’s what all the name-brand bloggers do. It’s not bad form to send a short note to a prominent blogger drawing his or her attention to a really good blog you wrote. Some bloggers place links to their sites in comments they write on more established blogs. (And some bloggers are on to the trick and refuse to allow it.)

A more direct way to draw a crowd is to submit your blog posts to news aggregation sites like Digg, Fark and Boing Boing. Readers vote on how much they like the posts and new readers are drawn to the list of most popular posts. Granted, it helps if your blog post includes a home video of someone being attacked by a cat or really arrogant e-mail messages from a hedge-fund manager. Those get passed around virally in an instant.

Allowing readers to post comments on your blog not only increases readership, it provides a sense of live interaction with the rest of the world. But beware: the insulting comment is an Internet art form. “There’s a big difference between being flamed on someone else’s blog, and having them come do it in your own home,” Ms. Jardin said.

In the end, the biggest threat isn’t that you’ll fail to learn to blog. It’s that if you blog regularly for long enough, and begin to get comments and links from other bloggers, you’ll have trouble doing your day job.

“I can’t stop reloading,” confessed a colleague over IM after a post of hers began to attract dozens of comments. “I should be working, I know,” she added a few seconds later. “I have an unhealthy obsession.” Isn’t that the whole idea?

Videoblogging at Pixelodeon.

June 24th, 2007

geek-2.gif

I mentioned Eric and I were going to the first Pixelodeon at AFI a few weeks ago. I met founder/organizer/force of nature Irina Slutsky whose day job is the very cool video blog you may have seen: Geek Entertainment TV. She anointed me one of the fanciest people at Pixelodeon on the beautiful AFI patio.


Click To Play

If you think of it, buy her ultra-swift I Was Internet Famous Once t-shirt, you’ll be glad you did.
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