As the blogosphere becomes increasingly crowded (75,000 new blogs a day, according to Technorati), one of the big major challenges is finding high-quality blogs - however you want to define "quality". Search is obviously one of the tools, although most of the existing vehicles are based on the most recent or most relevant rather than posts worth reading - whether you're using Technorati, Sphere or Google Blog Search. The problem and challenge is coming up with a system that features technology and/or humans to separate the wheat from the chaff.
TheGoodBlogs is taking a crack at this quality vs. quantity challenge with a new service that uses the blogging community to promote and recommend the better blogs. This approach, in theory, will help expose high-quality blogs rather than just the "A-listers". Rather than being a search engine or a portal to help people search/find blogs, TheGoodBlogs has created a Javascript-driven box that you can put on your blog that features five other blogs. The box is continually updated. and can be customized to feature a particular category.
Truth be told, the service far from perfect but it is very early days. One major challenge will be ensuring quality given everyone's idea of "quality" is different. What one person may consider to be good, another will see as terrible. Unless TheGoodBlogs can come up with an eBay-like rating system (driven by bloggers and blog readers), it risks becoming a huge blog directory rather than something that drives quality over quantity. Another obstacle is getting the community big enough to ensure new, fresh blogs are highlighted as opposed to the same ones that dominate TechMeme or Megite. Still, TheGoodBlogs is a step in the right direction. The service, which will rely on small banner ads to generate revenue, is currently in private beta but invitations can be requested here.
Note: In the name of transparency, I've provided TheGoodBlogs with unpaid advisory services. Well, it's not exactly unpaid given they've bought me two coffees at Starbucks - which makes the compensation about equal to my daily AdSense payments.
Update: Scott Rosenberg has some issues with Technorati - even after the recent redesign, while TG Daily suggests the number of domain names is jumping due to the battle between Microsoft and Google to attract user to their blog services.
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A New Tool to Find the Good Blogs
by
Mark Evans
on Fri 04 Aug 2006 06:31 AM EDT | Permanent Link
Comments
Re: A New Tool to Find the Good Blogs
by
Murali
on Fri 04 Aug 2006 09:11 AM EDT | Permanent Link
I do not understand how this tool can promote only good blogs? First look at the site suggests that it will list out latest blog entries for a given/needed tag/category from the list of blogs added in its list. SO, if every blogger goes there and add their blog, the js box shows latest from all these blogs. Is there a way other bloggers rate any of them as good. I mean, how the filtering of good from not so good blogs happen?
I use a RSS feed digest that mixes blog feeds from my blogroll and show the latest stories on the toolbar. But only problem is that, I had to manually find fresh and good content on the huge blogosphere and add it myself if I like it. Re: Re: A New Tool to Find the Good Blogs
you make some excellent points. they really need to look at some kind of rating system where bloggers/readers provide a sense of quality - otherwise, as you say, it will just become a huge blog directory.
Re: A New Tool to Find the Good Blogs
by
TheGoodBlogs
on Fri 04 Aug 2006 12:56 PM EDT | Permanent Link
The question on quality is a great one. I'm not sure if there will ever be a silver bullet. The answer is find some balance between your personal blogroll and the whole blogging community. We address this in several ways using general tags to categorize your content, system tags to maintain a moderate list of good blogs and partner tags for blogging communities. You can choose a combination of any of these to optimize what you want to show on your blog. Rather than take up too much space on Mark's blog, you'll find a more detailed explanation in our FAQ section on our site.
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