Category Archives: Blogs

Transparent Blogging: The Pronk Effect

By | November 22, 2011

We could learn some lessons about blogging, honesty, accountability and the distinction between public and private views from an unlikely source: the U.N.’s special envoy to Sudan. Jan Pronk, expelled last month for comments on a blog he was writing about the conflict, has replied to an email I sent to him shortly after he… Read More »

Loose Wire Bits, Nov 12 2006

By | November 13, 2006

Bits and pieces: Andrew Lih reports that since China lifted its block on Chinese Wikipedia new registrations — people signing up to add or modify entries — have shot up from 300-400 to more than 1,200 on Sunday. Says Andrew: “The ZH community has been waiting over a year for this moment.” The Media Gap:… Read More »

Loose Bits, Nov 7 2006

By | November 22, 2011

Bleeding Edge, always worth a look, points to a new Firefox extension for saving material off the web: Zotero. It not only does a great job of storing globs of web pages or the whole thing but it has an academic bent too, allowing you to store bibiographic information too. That said, it’s not musty:… Read More »

The Blog-Browsing Worker

By | November 22, 2011

Is blogging kept alive by office-bound shirkers? Some blogs get huge amounts of comments, which always makes me wonder: When do people actually find the time to write these things? I can understand folk adding a comment if it’s something work related, but if it’s a blog about soccer, this can hardly be considered vital… Read More »

An Unlikely Blogger Expelled

By | November 22, 2011

Although it’s not good for Sudan, I think it’s good for blogging: CNN reports that  The government of Sudan on Sunday gave the top U.N. official in the country three days to leave, marking the latest hurdle in international efforts to bring peace to the nation torn apart by civil war. Sudan expelled Jan Pronk,… Read More »