"Blog" is short for "Web log"-an online site with time-dated postings, maintained by one or more posters, that features links and commentary. But that is like saying a car is a means of transportation featuring four wheels. Millions are changing their habits when it comes to information acquisition, and the blogosphere has appeared so suddenly as to surprise even the most sophisticated of analysts. In Blog, best-selling author Hugh Hewitt helps you catch up with and get ahead of this phenomenon. Up until now no influential blogger has written a definitive book about this phenomenon. Since Hugh Hewitt's blog site-HughHewitt-was launched in early 2002, more than 10 million people have visited this site. Why does this visitor traffic matter? People's attentions are up for grabs. If you depend upon the steady trust of others, suddenly you have an audience waiting to hear from you. The race is underway, though, to gain mindspace and to be part of the blogosphere readers' habits and to position yourself as well as your business or organization at the forefront of this information movement.
If the blogosphere had a press agent, it would be Hugh Hewitt. He has flogged the potential of the blogosphere for over a year on his website, and "Blog" attempts to bring the word to people who don't get their news from the Internet. Like his previous work, "If It's Not Close, They Can't Cheat," "Blog" is an eminently readable work you can devour in an afternoon. Hugh's writing style is conversational and transmits information quickly and clearly. This makes "Blog" a good read regardless of your position on blogs and blogging. Hugh's thesis is simple: blogs are the next wave in the information revolution, as important to the dissemination of information as the printing press was to the Reformation. While Hugh touts a number of blogs (oddly enough missing yours truly, but I'm sure that was an oversight), his discussion isn't about any particular blog, but about how the technology of blogs is changing how information reaches the public. He cites four significant instances of the blogosphere influencing the public discourse: the removal of Trent Lott from his position as Senate Majority Leader, the fall of Jayson Blair and Howell Raines at the New York Times, the takedown of John Kerry by the Swift Boat Veterans for the Truth and Dan Rather's immolation following the 60 Minutes forged National Guard documents scandal. Each case illustrates how the blogosphere was able to keep stories percolating (and even breaking, in the latter two cases) until the national media had no choice to take what the blogosphere was giving them, and in each case the results were markedly different than what would have occurred prior to the rise of the blogosphere. Naysayers will probably ding Hugh for what notes as blogger triumphalism, but I think such readers are missing the point. Hugh is not arguing that any one blogger or group of bloggers is able to have this effect, but that the blogosphere as a whole is distributing the flow of information in such a manner as to make it far more difficult for anyone to control that flow. That will make life far more difficult for people accustomed to keeping tight control over information, but it also represents a great opportunity for people willing to take advantage of this new medium's strengths. And this is what Hugh is trying to sell: those people and businesses that jump into the blogosphere now are going to gain a serious competitive advantage on those who continue to stick to older methods of communicating. While this process in likely to move in fits and starts over the next few years, it is coming nevertheless, and "Blog" offers some good advice to those people looking to get out ahead of the blogosphere rather than ending up in trouble due to a failure to understand this new technology. The definitive work on the blogosphere is yet to be written, because it's still too early in the development of the system to chronicle it all. But Blog is a good start and a valuable resource for anyone looking to understand more a
Another excellent book by Hugh Hewitt
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
Of all talk radio hosts in this country Hugh Hewitt does more to promote freedom and liberty on his show than anyone else. And he shares his platform by encouraging people to visit the wide array of independent journalists in the blogosphere. His book "Blog ..." is an excellent primer for anyone who desires to make their opinion known and available to everyone in the world with an internet connection.
The Real John Hinderaker Reports
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
Some moron, presumably a liberal, misappropriated my identity to post a fictitious review in my name. For what it's worth, he doesn't even know where I live. More important, he completely misrepresented my opinion of Hewitt's excellent book. Here is what I wrote on Power Line: "My copy of Hugh's book arrived in the mail today. From a quick skim, it looks great. Hugh documents the rise of the blogosphere, gives a riveting account of the role blogs played in the 2004 election, and offers both theoretical and empirical arguments for the historical importance of the blogosphere....Buy it!" Having now had time to finish the book, I can confirm that anyone who is interested in blogs, the media, politics, or just doesn't want to be left behind by the next wave of the communications revolution should read Blog. I was particularly interested in Hugh's observations on the relevance of blogging to the corporate world. So, I repeat: Buy it!
The True Affects Of The 'Blogosphere!!!'
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 20 years ago
As a Hugh Hewitt fan for serveral years now, this book is a really good book that illustrates the phenomenon of blogs. After receiving a limited release for his book, I am very surprise with the accurate detail he describes in the book. This book answers many question people might have been wondering, and one of them is: why so many people are now turning to 'Blogs' as sources of credible information. This book is a great book. I am very happy with Mr. Hewitt because he finally found the time to pen a thoughtful, well-documented look at the rise of the blogosphere. Mr. Hewitt is nothing, if not prolific, and we're fortunate to have a visionary thinker like Hewitt on our side. I would encourage anyone for this book who is interested in the blogosphere, and what it might look like in the future with all the "Blogs" we have today.
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