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Dirty Sexy Comments

{Originally published on Bird on a Wire}

This is not a plea for comments for THIS blog. I talk about my chronic commentitis here. I use my blog only as a reference point. Instead, this is a reminder that comments are like chocolate, really good if they’re rich and have some substance to them. And that if you can’t comment, you can still help out the bloggers that you like. A big shout out to Mommie Pie and Bloghernot 2008. I’ll be participating in a big way!

At the time of this blog posting, over 543 people receive this blog in their RSS reader (or via email).
Another 2,000 - 4,000 come to the site directly, depending on the day and the post. Add those up, and let’s say that around 5,000 people come here daily to read my stuff. (Hey, don’t laugh, I’m pretty jazzed about those numbers.)

If 1% of you commented, that’d be 50. (I’m bad at math. Did I do that right?) The average post on here gets a respectable 10 or so comments, but that’s about 1/3 of 1% then, of the folks who get a copy of each post. Ok, enough of the math class stuff.

This got me thinking about the other great blogs that I love.

I read several hundred blog posts a day. I comment on maybe five or six, if there is something I feel compelled to say. So I’m in there with you. I’m not commenting much, either. Does that make us bad ? Not really. If I’m able to leave a decent and thoughtful comment, I know that the other blogger will appreciate it. Sometimes, I even get a nice little email from them saying so. Comment Relish is a great little Word Press plug in that sends an e-mail message to users who comment on your website who have never commented before.



We Need Fresh Meat: New Channels call for new Channel Editors!

EditorNoshNotes

Sometimes I am simply madly in love with this magazine. Blog Nosh Magazine has changed the way I read blogs, as I now approach the internet as one massive This American Life story. On my better days, I so fancy myself as Ira Glass. (tongue firmly planted in cheek, thank you.) So many different perspectives, so much to find, opening my eyes to stories I may never have heard before if it were not for blogs. If it were not for your willingness to open your lives to us.

Our goal for Blog Nosh Magazine is to deliver as many diverse perspectives as possible, across numerous topics and genres, many of which you may never have been exposed to in your daily reading, let alone daily real life. This is made possibly by the work of our Channel Editors, of which we have close to 40. But even with a team that size, it is still not enough.

We need more. We need more eyes. More minds. More guts. More hearts.

(click title for more)



Blog Nosh Magazine Opens to Private Advertising and Evolves into Print

Less than two months in and Blog Nosh Magazine is growing by leaps and bounds, all thanks to you! In the pipeline, we have a very exciting site redesign with ease-of-navigation in mind, new channels (including Race & Ethnicity, Travel & Expats, and Personal Finance), dynamic new editors with even more diverse perspectives, and much more.

Today may be one of the biggest turning points for us, though, as we proudly announce that we are opening to private advertising! And for a very good reason:

Blog Nosh Magazine will soon introduce a quarterly print publication to complement our daily online magazine!

What serious blogger doesn’t dream of seeing their name in hard copy? Now is your chance.

Grab your piece of the pie! Cherrypie

One of the key elements of Blog Nosh Magazine is timeless content. As such, we plan to offer a quarterly literary magazine perfect for casual browsing-over-coffee-n-scones or in-depth reading during your daily (ahem) personal time. The ideal coffee table magazine that you can keep for years, so to speak.

Blog Nosh Magazine begs to have crumbs scattered across its pages, don’t you think? We do and we welcome you to be part of making this happen as an advertiser on www.blognosh.com!

(click title for more)



How to Earn Income from Your Blog

Tech Metablogging Blog Nosh Magazine
Originally published at Blogging Basics 101

Wouldn’t it be nice if we could post
our little hearts out, sit back, and watch the dollars roll in? The
truth is that there are very few people getting wealthy from blogging.
If you’re doing it solely for the bucks, you’re probably going to be
disappointed.

There are, however, a few ways to generate a bit of bloggy income.

The most obvious way to earn income is by having ads in your
sidebar, or elsewhere on your page. You can try selling these
yourself–a lot of work, but it works for some people. Many bloggers
have had success using an ad service that sells the ads for you, giving
you a percentage of the income. (They give you the code to insert on
your blog, and your ads will appear in that spot. Any ad service worth
its salt will offer you pleny of editorial freedom to block certain
types of ads from your blog.)

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5 Misconceptions About Social Media

Tech meta

Originally published at The Social Path

Yes, I
know. We’re all tired of lists. But studies have shown that they’re
still the most effective way to list things, and I can’t argue with
science.

Myth No. 1: This is all just a fad.

We could talk about how
socializing goes back thousands of years, blah blah blah, but let’s go
ahead and skip to the modern era. Social networking online has actually
been going on a lot longer than most people think.

I got started as a teen in the early 1990s, when I was running a
BBS. If you’re not a nerd, I should explain that a Bulletin Board
System was like a prehistoric Web portal, except without the Web. You
would dial in on your modem, then be able to e-mail or play games with
other folks who used the same BBS. Some were even networked, letting
you communicate across the whole nation. Yes, hard to believe there was
a time when that was impressive.

So why does social media feel like such a new trend? Well, the
technology has gotten a hell of a lot better in recent years, making it
easier than ever to join or even start a new network. Faster Internet
connections have also made it possible to share more than just words.
High-res pictures, podcasts, movies — you name it, it can finally be
passed around without hours of wait.

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50 Timeless Blogging Tips

Tech meta

Originally posted on Blogging Sueblimely

Words of wisdom from the world’s greatest thinkers are timeless
providing advice which is as relevant now as when first spoken. All of
these quotes could easily be applied to blogging:

Advice for Bloggers

Albert Enstein quotes

  1. They may forget what you said, but they will never forget how you made them feel. Carl W. Buechner
  2. When dealing with people, remember you are not dealing with creatures of logic, but creatures of emotion. Dale Carnegie
  3. Speech is power: speech is to persuade, to convert, to compel. It
    is to bring another out of his bad sense into your good sense. Ralph Waldo Emerson
  4. The ability to speak eloquently is not to be confused with having something to say. Michael P. Hart
  5. My opponent can compress the most words into the fewest ideas of anyone I’ve ever known. Abraham Lincoln
  6. Words are, of course, the most powerful drug used by mankind. Rudyard Kipling
  7. You do not really understand something unless you can explain it to your grandmother. Albert Einstein
  8. I don’t let my mouth say nothin’ my head can’t stand. Louis Armstrong

Research Tips

  1. First learn the meaning of what you say, and then speak. Epictetus
  2. Do not believe in anything simply because you have heard it. Do not
    believe in anything simply because it is spoken and rumored by many. Do
    not believe in anything simply because it is found written in your
    religious books. Do not believe in anything merely on the authority of
    your teachers and elders. Do not believe in traditions because they
    have been handed down for many generations. But after observation and
    analysis, when you find that anything agrees with reason and is
    conducive to the good and benefit of one and all, then accept it and
    live up to it. Buddha

Writing Tips

Mark Twain quotes

  1. What is written without effort is in general read without pleasure. Samuel Johnson
  2. Put it before them briefly so they will read it, clearly so they
    will appreciate it, picturesquely so they will remember it and, above
    all, accurately so they will be guided by its light. Joseph Pulitzer

(click title for more)