Say Everything: How Blogging Began, What It's Becoming, and Why It Matters (Hardback)
Unavailable
Sorry we can't get this title, the button below links through to AbeBooks who may have this title (opens in new window).
|- Also available in...
- Paperback $13.98
Short Description for Say Everything Blogs are not a fad. They are a new species of written conversation, a complex network of influence spanning everything from political debates to torrid confessions to urgent bulletins from first responders. The days when three network anchors would tell us what to think are gone; now we get to tell one another.Say Everything offers close-ups of blogging innovators like Blogger founder Evan Willia...
Full description- Publisher: Random House Inc
- Published: 07 July 2009
- Format: Hardback 404 pages
- See: Full bibliographic data
- Categories: Ethical & Social Aspects Of Computing | Internet Guides & Online Services
- ISBN 13: 9780307451361 ISBN 10: 0307451364
- Sales rank: 1,059,224
Full description for Say Everything
Blogs are not a fad. They are a new species of written conversation, a complex network of influence spanning everything from political debates to torrid confessions to urgent bulletins from first responders. The days when three network anchors would tell us what to think are gone; now we get to tell one another.Say Everything offers close-ups of blogging innovators like Blogger founder Evan Williams, Josh Marshall of Talking Points Memo, exhibitionist diariest Justin Hall, and many others, and explores the dilemmas that still face bloggers: How much if their private lives should they reveal? Should they blog for the love or for money? Is blogging anonymous ranting or honest, unmediated discussion? Through their stories, Say Everything presents essential insights into privacy, self-expression, authority, and community for all of us in the era of Google and Facebook.In his first book, Dreaming in Code, Scott Rosenberg brilliantly explored the art of creating software ("the first true successor to Tracy Kidder's The Soul of a New Machine," wrote James Fallows in The Atlantic). In Say Everything he brings the same perceptive eye to the blogosphere, capturing as no one else has the birth of a new medium.

