"3. The lines between blogs and discussions will blur. Contributing to a blog discussion requires less effort than creating your own and taking the initiative to come up with topics every day or so. The regular participants in a blog discussion will consider themselves to be blogging. (We see this beginning to happen in the comment boards of the Howard Dean blog.)
4. The lines between email and blogs will blur. Already we can post to our blog via email. But at some point, maybe we'll be able to press a button on an email to post it to the Web, with the link sent automatically to everyone on the message's cc list, creating an instant blog site that grows as the thread grows. There's no technical barrier to this, of course, and the functionality already exists already almost and kind of, but it hasn't been presented to us as a type of blogging. Something like it will be, and the ecological niche between email and blogging will be quickly filled in (...)."
Mais, peut-on aller jusqu'à croire que le blogging ou fil RSS va remplacer le mél ? Le blog et les fils RSS ne sont pas la panacée contre le SPAM.
On oublie trop vite une chose : un outil n'en remplace pas un autre... L'annuaire Web n'a pas été remplacé par les moteurs de recherche. Les newsgroups sont bien différents des groupes de discussion et autres listes de diffusion.
Et le fil RSS ou les blogs ne sont pas la nouvelle recette magique de l'Internet "tout merveilleux" ;-)
Aucun commentaire:
Enregistrer un commentaire