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[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] RE: Blogging Systems
Many thanks, Tim. That is good advice. len From: Tim.Bray@S... [mailto:Tim.Bray@S...]On Behalf Of Tim Bray On Oct 5, 2004, at 1:05 PM, Bullard, Claude L (Len) wrote: > Asking here because it is the only place I know to ask. > This is very general. > > Suppose an executive decides to set up blogging for > corporate employees. Where do they start? We had a useful session on this at the Foo Camp. There are three interesting issues: 1. internal/external, 2. policy, 3. technology 1. internal/external - I am not aware of any instance of really vibrant & useful internal blogs. They do happen, other people tell me about them, but if you have both external and internal, the external tends to end up being the big deal. 2. policy - ideally, the draft policy should contain two sentences. The first says "1. Exercise good judgement" The second says "2. If you contravene #1, you're in trouble." For our effort at Sun, we went quite a bit further: http://www.tbray.org/ongoing/When/200x/2004/05/02/Policy - internal versions have refined that a bit but they're not public yet 3. technology - there's lots of good software out there. We picked Roller and it held up pretty well under the strain of 500+ bloggers but we wanted changes so we hired the author, and now it's going to be moving forward much faster because it's his day job. http://www.rollerweblogger.org/page/project In terms of infrastructure, it won't take much, blogging is a low-rent web app. Of course, the hard part is finding the courage to pull the trigger and let your people speak to the world. It worked for us but your mileage may vary. -Tim
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