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A good solid list for starters. I would say that blogrolls and various 'clutter' in blog sidebars these days does look dated. In blog years I guess a packed sidebar looks mid 70's. Disco. My feeling is as blogs move more 'mainstream' that clutter is on the way out and clean is coming in. with technorati, delicious and various other tools there's plenty ways to give out the googlejuice without creating an overpacked blog template. Most people who read blogs don't know they're reading a blog and it must be very confusing for a time until you figure out the landscape, no? Is it not time to go minimal?

Good stuff. The third party RSS is something I regret not doing on a daily basis.

And design is crucial. pieman makes a good point. Get a feel for what kind of atmosphere you want to create, create it, and stick by it.

Another option on the categories - write pages (with comments enabled) instead if you're going to be all over the place. Display by ranking/views/your choice. It works for some people.

Oh, sorry, and the last two things - sign up for a statistics service, and consider a commenting policy (typekey, open, moderated etc).

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Robin Hamman from the highly to recommend blog cybersoc.com summerized 11 points people new to blogging should know when starting:
1. Sort out your domain name....

http://txpmag.com/article/11-things-blogges-should-know

Oh, very good. Useful for who hasn't got clear ideas about it.
I'll recommend it on my blog, maybe in an Italian translated version.
Thanks.

This seems to be a very reasonable checklist. But what sense does it make to use the services listed when you have a non-English blog - like me, Czech?

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Robin Hamman



  • Robin Hamman has over ten years experience devising, implementing and managing social media projects, particularly within the Broadcasting and Media sector.
    Robin recently joined Edelman (London) as Director of Digital. Robin was previously the Head of Social Media at Headshift and, before that, the Head of Blogging at the BBCwhere he also worked on a wide range of other social media projects. Robin was also previously an Executive Producer at Granada (ITV) and Communities Evangelist at Talkcast (mobile).
    Robin is also a Non-Residential Fellow at Stanford's Center for Internet and Society and a Visiting Fellow in the Department of Journalism at City University, London.
    The thoughts and words expressed here are Robin's own, and not necessarily shared by his employer.

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