What is ‘blogging’?

The widespread definition of a blog today is;

A blog (a portmanteau of web log) is a website where entries are written in chronological order and commonly displayed in reverse chronological order. “Blog” can also be used as a verb, meaning to maintain or add content to a blog.

(From Wikipedia.)

I think it’s interesting that in the years between being an activity by a few people on the nascent World Wide Web and the mainstream role that blogs have in today’s digital landscape (depending on how you define a “blog”), the idea that a “weblog” is a log of the web seems to have been superseded by the idea of a log on the web.
(more…)

March 24th, 2008 | Web Content | No comments

Will the Cookie crumble?

It’s easy to think that the internet is something like a one-way mirror; you can look in, but that unless you’re posting comments, sending emails etc. that nobody can look back at you. Well, that’s not really the case.

When you want to look at a web page, the server that it’s on needs to know what information to send out, and where to send it. So, for example, for your visit to this site, there is some information that you have had to send, which can easily be recorded.

Your user agent (that is, the is type of operating system and web browser that you’re using to see the page) can be identified as CCBot/1.0 (+http://www.commoncrawl.org/bot.html)

The page you came here from was

Your IP address is 38.103.63.59

Many websites rely on the ability to “remember” certain information. For example, when you log into a website, it’s obviously important that when you go to a different page on the site, it somehow knows that you’re still logged in under your own account. If you add something to a shopping basket then leave the site, it’s helpful if it’s still there next time you visit the site. If you choose to personalise a website in a certain way- for example, to change the number of results per page that a Google search shows you- then you want it to stay that way when you come back again. Or if you see an advert that leads you to buy a product, then the advertiser wants to know, because that’s the only way they can judge whether they are getting value for money from their advertising. (Especially if they are the kind brand who cares about their image and doesn’t want to litter thousands of websites with flashy and obtrusive advertising…)

To make this “memory” work, most sites will use cookies.

Cookies are simply small text files that are saved on your computer. You can see what’s stored in them- you will have a “cookies” folder somewhere on your computer which you can look in to see what cookies are being stored on your machine, and you can look at what information is stored in them by opening them up in a simple text editor like Notepad. Usually, these will mostly be things like unique numbers which correspond to an entry in the web servers’ database, identifying your computer with your online identity.

As is usually the case with technical matters, the level of understanding about cookies amongst most consumers is probably best described as “confused.” (more…)

November 29th, 2007 | The Internet, Web Content | 1 comment

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