Posts

(PRWEB) January 10, 2005

A November study by the Pew Internet and American Life Project showed that 27% of online adult population in the U.S. has checked out a blog or two. That’s up from 17% in Febraury.

With blogging rapidly gaining in popularity, the people at the DaVinci Institute have decided to put together a Blogger Boot Camp on Jan 15th to help people who are interested in developing their blogging skills.

“Blogging is simply a way of sharing your thoughts and opinions, and things you find interesting with the rest of the world,” says Greg Reinacker, founder of Newsgator and one of the instructors at the Blogger Boot Camp. “But it ends up being much more than that.”

The Blogger Boot Camp is for people who are interested in blogs, may have read some, and perhaps have even started one – but seek a more detailed understanding, some advice, and some hands-on experience. The morning will be an introduction to blogging. We’ll talk about what makes a blog, some of the history of blogs, and some of the different types of blogs are out there. We’ll see blogs used in academic research, knowledge management in business and for breaking news. We’ll see personal blogs driven by diverse concerns ranging from socializing to tracking an obsession with cell-phone photography. We’ll talk about some of the tools for blogging (e.g., Movable Type, Blogger, MSN Spaces, Typepad) and their differing strengths and emphases. We’ll look at blog standards such as Trackback, RSS, the Blogger API et al, and Atom. We’ll look at blog community building and analysis tools (e.g., Technorati, del.icio.us) and aggregation tools (e.g. Newsgator [Online and Outlook], FeedDemon, and NetNewsWire). We’ll discuss related developments such as wikis, and the larger field of social software.

For the techies, a blog is a web application that contains periodic, reverse chronologically ordered posts on a common webpage. Some are maintained by single authors, while others have multiple authors. Many blogs allow visitors to leave public comments, which can create to a community of readers centered around the blog; others are non-interactive. The total universe of blog-related websites is called the blogosphere.

“Blogs today are rapidly transitioning from the early text-only blogs, to photo blogs, to audio blogs that include a new distribution system known as podcasting, to video blogging,” said Thomas Frey, Executive Director of the DaVinci Institute. “We have recruited some of the top experts in Colorado to help us teach te fine art of blogging.”

Instructors include Greg Reinacker – Founder and CTO of NewsGator Technologies, Gil Asakawa – Executive Producer of Denver Post Online, Bill French – Co-founder of MyST Technology Partners, Pat Maher – founder of Maher Media, and Jock Mirow – Chief Strategist for BroadbandVideo.

The Blogger Boot Camp is designed as a Weekend Crash Course from 8:00 am to 4:00 pm on January 15th at DeVry University, 1870 W. 122nd Avenue, Westminster. The cost to attend is $ 195 with a $ 50 discount for members of the DaVinci Institute. More information can be found at http://www.bloggerbootcamp.com.

Top 10 Interesting Blog Facts:

1.) In pre-blog times Ham radio had logs called “glogs” that were personal diaries made using wearable computers in the early 1980s.

2.) The first blog was the first website, http://info.cern.ch/, the site built by Tim Berners-Lee at CERN. (Archived at http://www.w3.org/History/19921103-hypertext/hypertext/WWW/News/9201.html)

3.) In 1999, the early blogging software produced by Blogger and Pitas opened the doors to for non-techies by offering a simple way to create a weblog. These hosted services allowed any person to easily sign up, create a blog, and write numerous postings.

4.) Blogs have made such an impact this year that Merriam-Webster named it the word of the year.

5.) More than 10,000 new additions are added to the “blogosphere” each day.

6.) 2004 was the first year, bloggers were permitted to cover the national political conventions firsthand.

7.) Some of the most compelling images of 2004 found their way to blogs first, from the Florida hurricanes to the war in Iraq.

8.) In November 2004, Boulder’s Christopher Locke was named as the world’s first Chief Blogging Officer for HighBeam.

9.) Blogwise, a specialty search engine for blogs, now has 34,917 sites listed, of which 348 were listed in the past 7 days.

10.) According to Technorati, the two top rated blogs are Boing Boing: A Directory of Wonderful Things and Instapundit.com

For information or interviews, contact:

Greg Reinacker, NewsGator Technologies – 303-552-3900 or gregr@newsgator.com    

Thomas Frey, Executive Director, DaVinci Institute – 303-666-4133 or dr2tom@davinciinstitute.com

About the DaVinci Institute

The DaVinci Institute is a Futurist Think Tank based in Louisville, Colorado. The Institute goes beyond the traditional role of a think tank. We believe that shaping the future requires more than ideas; it requires action as well.

The DaVinci Institute believes that the people that will shape the future are people that take brilliant ideas and make them become reality. Inventors and entrepreneurs will shape our future. That is why the DaVinci Institute produces futurist event designed to assist the revolutionary thinking inventors and entrepreneurs, and helps them get their ideas off the ground.

The DaVinci Institute is a 501-c-3 non-profit organization supported by memberships, sponsorships and attendance fees for the programs we produce.

# # #







Scouting’s 2014 Jamboree On The Air (JOTA) is set for the October 18-19 weekend. The annual event links Scouts and Guides around the world via Amateur Radio each third weekend of October. According to the World Scout Bureau, JOTA is the largest Scouting event in the world, with nearly 750,000 Scouts participating from 6000 stations in 150 countries around the world. Scouts of any age can partic…

American Radio Relay League | Ham Radio Association and Resources

The ARRL is taking issue with the World Radiocommunication Conference 2015 (WRC-15) stance of the National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) with respect to an upgraded 60 meter Amateur Radio allocation. In response to WRC-15 agenda item 1.4, the NTIA has called for no change at 5250-5450 kHz. The League said in comments filed September 24 in IB Docket 04-286 that while i…

American Radio Relay League | Ham Radio Association and Resources

A member of Amateur Radio Direction Finding (ARDF) Team USA medaled in the 17th ARDF World Championships earlier this month in Kazakhstan. Vadim Afonkin, KB1RLI, of Boston, Massachusetts, took home a silver medal in the men’s age 40-49 category in the 2 meter competition on September 8, the first day of competition. The Kazakhstan Federation of Radiosport and Radioamateur (KFRR) hosted the cham…

American Radio Relay League | Ham Radio Association and Resources

The 2014 Global Amateur Radio Emergency Communications Conference (GAREC 2014) held last week (August 14-15) in Huntsville, Alabama, and hosted by the ARRL Alabama Section and the Huntsville Hamfest, offered an opportunity for participants to share presentations and perspectives from around the globe. Greg Sarratt, W4OZK, organized this year’s GAREC event, which focused on the application of ad…

American Radio Relay League | Ham Radio Association and Resources

An Amateur Radio Village and special event station GB2EMF will be among the highlights for hams at the Electromagnetic Field “EMF 2014” event Friday through Sunday, August 29-31, just south of Bletchley in the UK.

“EMF 2014 is a festival for anyone interested in radio, electronics, space, homebrewing, robots, UAVs, 3D printing, DIYBio, Internet culture or pretty much anything else you can think …

American Radio Relay League | Ham Radio Association and Resources

The collapse of two radio towers in North-Central West Virginia on February 1 resulted in three deaths and injuries to two individuals. The tragedy also resulted in the loss of three Amateur Radio repeaters belonging to the Stonewall Jackson Amateur Radio Association (SJARA) and forming part of the HamTalk linked repeater system, which were available to assist with emergency and disaster commun…

American Radio Relay League | Ham Radio Association and Resources

Members of The American Legion Amateur Radio Club (TALARC) will honor their fellow veterans in a special on-the-air tribute on Veterans Day, Monday, November 11. TALARC will operate on 20 meters, IRLP, 2 meter simplex and a Central Indiana repeater from 9 AM through 5 PM Eastern Time (1300-2200 UTC), using special event call sign W9L. Anyone contacting the station is eligible to receive an attr…

American Radio Relay League | Ham Radio Association and Resources

Radio amateur Jonathan Trappe, KJ4GQV, of Raleigh, North Carolina is trying to cross the Atlantic in a cluster balloon. He took off September 12 at 1200 UTC from Caribou, Maine. According to a reporton AMSAT-UK, Trappe is carrying Amateur Radio beacons on 14.0956 MHz and 144.390 MHz APRS.

The 14.0956 MHz beacon is just above the WSPR frequency (approximately 1880 Hz in the waterfall display), ru…

American Radio Relay League | Ham Radio Association and Resources

The so-called Morgan Incident Fire, in chaparral southeast of Clayton, California, on the eastern flank of the north peak of Mount Diablo put at least four Amateur Radio repeaters off the air September 8. These include the K6MDD D-Star repeater, the W6UUU MotoTRBO repeater, the recently relocated W6CX APRS digipeater and the W6CX ATV repeater. Mount Diablo Amateur Radio Club President Jim Siemo…

American Radio Relay League | Ham Radio Association and Resources

David J. Stapchuk is the new chief of Air Force MARS. He assumed command August 23 from outgoing chief Richard S. Jenson, who has taken on a new assignment. Stapchuk is the director of operations at the 92nd Information Operations Squadron Detachment 1 at Scott Air Force Base in Illinois. In that role he oversees cyber operations in support of the detachment’s communications security mission.

“…

American Radio Relay League | Ham Radio Association and Resources

Through its Teachers Institutes the ARRL’s Education & Technology Program (ETP) has been working for more than 10 years to promote the teaching of technology. In a new teach-the-teachers twist, the program recently sponsored a Teachers Institute on remote sensing and data gathering. At the inaugural four-day session held in late July in Dayton, Ohio, 12 teachers explored the use of remote senso…

American Radio Relay League | Ham Radio Association and Resources

Bob Bruninga, WB4APR, led a group of radio amateurs earlier this month to Mammoth Cave — the world’s longest known cave system — at Mammoth Cave National Park in Kentucky to test how the Automatic Packet Reporting System (APRS) can be used as a means to extend radio communications underground. “When used underground, VHF and UHF radios can only work within a few hundred feet of each other and…

American Radio Relay League | Ham Radio Association and Resources