Category Archives: Blogging

What do you use to add screen captures / logos to your blog entries?

Question for you all – what do you use to incorporate screen captures into your blog entries?

For a variety of reason, I like to incorporate images into my posts.  Sometimes it is just the logo of the company/product/service that I am discussing[1].  Sometimes it is a part of a web page or program screen (here’s an example).  In any event, my highly unsophisticated process of getting those graphics right now on my Windows XP PC is to do the following:

  1. Press Ctrl+Alt+PrntScrn to copy the current open window to the Clipboard.
  2. Switch to Windows Paint and paste the image into the window.
  3. Click on one of the other tools (like the eraser) so that I de-select the entire area and then click on the selection box again.
  4. Select the region I want to copy and then do the standard copy to Clipboard.
  5. Switch to Windows Live Writer (my current blogging editor of choice) and paste the graphic into my blog entry.

Like I said… not very sophisticated, but it works well.  However, I’d like to simplify it a bit – ideally drop it down to simply my steps #4 and #5, i.e. select a region of the screen and then paste it into WLW. 

Unfortunately, there doesn’t yet seem to be a WLW plugin that does what I want, although this plugin seems quite close if I feel like dropping $39 for TechSmith’s SnagIt program (and perhaps I will).  It sounds like Vista has a built-in utility for doing this, but I don’t have Vista and don’t foresee getting it for some time.

What do you all use?  How do you bring in screen captures?  logos?  etc.?  [2]

Thanks in advance.

 

[1] And sometimes a logo can be brought in by simply right-clicking it in Firefox, choosing "Copy Image" and pasting it into my blog editor.  But sometimes the colors don’t work and sometimes a site doesn’t make a logo easy to get this way – the logo is part of a much larger image or embedded in Flash… so you need to capture that part of the screen to get the logo.

[2] And Mac users, please don’t bother telling me that this is: a) trivial and built-in on the Mac; or b) I should get a Mac and run Parallels to use Windows and again would be able to do it.  I get it, okay… I understand the belief that Macs are superior for graphics.  But that doesn’t help change the fact that my corporate laptop is a Windows XP box!

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TypePad *finally* provides a native "3-column layout" with 2 sidebars!

As readers of this blog know, I built this blog (and the companion Disruptive Telephony) back in January by using the 3-column hack from TypePadHacks.org to essentially beat TypePad’s standard templates into submission and give me the format I’ve wanted.  Overall, it’s worked well… except for the fact that when you leave a comment you get squeezed into a tiny central column.  John Unger had a workaround for that which involved re-generating your Advanced Templates and copying/pasting a lot of things around… which is why I never quite did it.

So now comes word that TypePad has finally released a native template in this format!  I’m delighted because I very much like the format and think it’s a great way to have a blog set up (obviously!).  I look forward to using it on several of my other blogs.  I am assuming it will also fix my issue of having a narrow comment field.  It will also allow me to very easily manipulate sidebar content using the standard TypePad tools.  I do it now through the Advanced Templates and, while it can be done, it’s not overly fun at times.

And… those users out there still stuck on Internet Explorer 6 will hopefully no longer have a problem viewing my blogs!

Unfortunately, it will probably be a bit for me to move these two blogs over to that new template.  I’ve now customized and tweaked them so much in the Advanced Templates that it will probably take a while for me to get them moved over. (For instance, I have to move over the navigation bar that appears on the top.)

Still… I’m glad to see the format out there.  And now if you are a TypePad user, you, too, can have a format like this blogs format… without all the pain!  (The pain did, though, force me to learn an awful lot about TypePad Advanced Templates!)

Ghost blogging – Sallie Goetsch provides the (updated) perspective of a ghost writer/blogger

After my post yesterday on ghost blogging, there have been a number of thoughtful responses that I’d like to write about… but I simply have no time to do so today. 

I do, though, want to point folks to Sallie Goetsch’s outstanding post, “Ghostwriting Does NOT Preclude Authenticity“.  Sallie is a ghost writer by trade and discloses here that she is also a ghost blogger and talks a good bit about that.  She and several others (including Kirrily Robert who left a comment on my previous post) have all pointed out that there can be value in having an editor help someone improve their writing (and I don’t disagree).  While she suggests that there are better strategies than ghost blogging, she suggests that ghostwriting does not mean it can’t be “authentic”.  She concludes:

Ghostwriting at its best preserves the author’s authentic voice while it translates it into a new medium. And that should be true whatever form the writing takes: books, speeches, and yes, even blogs

It’s a very thoughtful piece and definitely worth a read. (As is Terry Fallis’ comment and Sallie’s response.)

I’ll comment on other responses probably tomorrow.

P.S. I say it is Sallie’s “updated” perspective because she pointed out to me in a reply that her original post on ghost-blogging to which I linked yesterday was actually well over a year old since it was posted in February 2006!

Ghost blogging and the coming end of the Golden Age of blogging and transparency

Let it never be forgot
That there once was a spot
That for one brief shining moment
Was known as Camelot.
     – from the musical Camelot

There has been a great conversation raging these past few months in the PR/marketing section of the blogosphere about whether or not “ghost blogging” is acceptable, i.e. the writing of a blog for someone by someone else (including by a PR firm).  On the one side are those who don’t see any real difference between writing a blog entry for someone and writing a speech, press release (with quotes), annual report, etc.  On the other side are those early adopters of social media and others who worship at the altar of Cluetrain who believe that ghost blogging is the polar opposite of what the “transparent” world of social media is all about.  Blogs are just another communication vehicle with which we can assist our clients, say one side.  Blogs are a departure from “corp-speak” and are meant to be in an authentic, human voice say the other side.

It’s been a fascinating discussion to watch, especially as many of the people who I now consider friends have weighed in on the issue.  Shel Holtz and Neville Hobson have covered the issue on multiple FIR episodes. Terry Fallis and Dave Jones talked about it on their recent Inside PR #59.  Bryan Person kicked off a whole thread with his mention of a “blog” ghost-written by Topaz partners, to which Topaz responded (and made some changes).  Back in February, professional ghost writer Sallie Goetsch provided her interesting viewpoint. Chip Griffin talked about it in his Disruptive Dialogue podcast.  Mitch Joel just recently wrote excellent posts here and here (this latest one today).  Many, many others have written great posts.  Folks like Doug Haslam from Topaz has been running around posting excellent comments on so many of those articles. Regular “news” articles have appeared on the topic, such as this in Investors Business Daily: “Writing Blogs Can Be Hard, So Get ‘Help’“, which predictably set off more blog commentary.  Even Scott Adams got into the story with Dilbert.

To me the most salient point was perhaps Dave Jones commentary in Inside PR #59 that while on one level “there are no rules” in blogging, “the rules today” are all about being transparent, and that rules change.

Transparency… today.  But tomorrow?

Given that there are no real “rules”, let’s call them instead “conventions”.  The “culture of the Blogosphere” is such that certain “conventions” are adhered to by those who participate.  Those who don’t adhere to those conventions will be roundly chastised, attacked and otherwise shamed into conforming with the conventions of the culture.

This will, of course, change. 

We’ve been here before.

If you go back to the late 1980s and early 1990s, there was an extremely strong “convention” among those of us using this bright shiny new thing called the “Internet” that there was to be absolutely no commercial activitity whatsoever on this here Internet.  Anything that smacked of sales was absolutely verboten.  Anyone who sent an email trying to sell something was chastised and might in fact be banned.  Anyone who put up a gopher, ftp or (pre-1993) web server selling something was criticized.  There was a view that it was our playground and we weren’t going to let any of those sleazy salespeople come in and deface everything with their grafitti.

Obviously, that changed.  The rise of graphical browsers in 1993 along with the rise in consumer Internet services, faster modems, etc. all brought about a massive influx of people onto the Internet.  And you know what?

They didn’t respect the conventions!

They put up websites with all sorts of advertisements.  They sent email to (gasp!) hundreds or thousands of people!  They harvested email addresses!!!  The valiant defenders of the playground desperately attempted to fend off the immigrants, but there were just way too many and in time the battle was lost (and those defenders went off to go find other playgrounds to be in… at least until those, too, were overrun (think of the issues in Second Life around those who resent the new corporate presence)).

There were other conventions, too, that went by the wayside (in many cases as the technical restriction that created the convention ceased to be relevant). Consider these:

  • It used to be considered extremely rude if your e-mail “signature block” (aka “sig”) was longer than 3 or 4 lines, and a 1 or 2 line sig was considered best.  Look at sigs today!  Often many lines… with graphics… animated icons and images… and so much more.
  • It was once the convention that you should never, ever, ever send an email with an attachment larger than 100 Kbytes.  That’s long gone as it’s now pretty routine to get multi-megabyte file attachments.

There’s many more, but the point is… cultural conventions evolve.

I definitely count myself among those who enjoyed Cluetrain and who revel in this world of social media primarily because of the authenticity… because of the “human” voices… because of the conversation that occurs outside the traditional stilted language of corp-speak.  I believe in the power of blogs and podcasts to “humanize” subjects and even people… to let us know them in all their humanity, warts and all.  I believe in the power of the authentic conversation.  For all those reasons, I do see ghost-written blogs as unnatural.

But I also expect ghost blogs to become quite normal… for one simple reason:

We have succeeded.

Blogs are no longer dismissed as trivial online diaries kept only by people who want to talk about their cats.  They are a serious and viable way to communicate directly.  They are increasingly thought of (if not yet used) as part of the regular toolbox of corporate communication vehicles. Oh, yes, and by the way… in the Age of Google when Search is king, blogs seem to get good “Google-juice”.  So you’re seeing the “I need a blog to be competitive” syndrome kicking in, and gee, since the tools are so easy to use, basically anyone can start up a blog.  And so you’ve had so many new people entering the blogosphere and I expect that we’ll see even more as the tools become increasingly easier and easier.  And you know what?

They won’t respect the conventions!

CEOs who want a blog but don’t seem themselves having the time will simply have a staff person do it.  Companies who want a blog will just hire a firm to do it… just look at the number of companies already out there today who will “provide content for your blog” if you want them to do so.  Those blogs will even “sound” human… just as good speechwriters today can create speeches in the style of the speaker, so too will ghost bloggers take on the style of the blog “author”.  Blogs, podcasts, wikis, etc. will just be part of the communication plan… and in many cases will sadly spew out the same bland corporate drivel that caused so many of us to celebrate the changes brought so far by social media.

I hold onto the perhaps vain hope that those blogs, podcasts and other vehicles that do speak with “authentic” human voices will rise to the top.  I’d like to hope that those CEOs who wade into the fray using their own words and writing their own text will get more attention (and see greater success) than those whose words are massaged through umpteen rounds of internal approvals and editing.  I’d like to hope that the public conversations that can be had directly between companies and their customers will foster greater transparency and openness. 

We’ll see.  Does “social media” truly represent a shift toward transparency and “authenticity”?  Or is it still too early to tell?  Will the established conventions hold?  Or will they be simply trampled upon by those newly arrived?  How long will the defenders of the conventions be able to hold out?  Will they be successful in converting the masses?  Or will they have to retreat to some other place where transparency and authenticy can reign?  (At least until it is discovered.)

Stay tuned… the story is being written all around us.

Celebrating 7 years of blogging… missing the anniversary by a day… and the renewed Advogato site after a community goes through severe change…

Yesterday was a special day for me… it was seven years ago last night that I entered the world of blogging through the creation of my Advogato account on May 10, 2000.  I had meant to mark the occasion yesterday with a special post, but time just got away from me.  I find it rather humerous to re-read parts of that first entry:

In any event, since it’s after 9pm and I’m still here in the Linuxcare office in SF, I decided to join this experiment… let’s see if I actually keep up with it.

Well, yes, I did “actually keep up with it” a wee bit.  Actually, for pretty much four years… until the 5+ week server outage starting in May 2004 had me move over to LiveJournal, where I focused my writing until the beginning of this year when I broke my writing out across several blogs (including my LJ account).

Also amusing that I mention Cluetrain and also my first visit ever to Ottawa the previous week.  Little did I know that Ottawa would very soon play a much larger role in my life!  Yet so many other pieces of that entry far removed from my life today. And then this line:

Okay… my first diary entry… and a long one… typical… no one has ever praised me for my brevity!

Well, some thing don’t change!

It’s definitely been a long, strange trip… filled with lots of fascinating people and interesting changes…

Speaking of changes, I was pleased to see that Advogato successfully went through a change in management from Raph Levien to Steven Rainwater last fall.  Here’s an interesting series of articles showing a community going through change:

Reading through the comments is certainly an interesting way to see the passion of the community that began there and obviously still continues today.  I’m thrilled it continues, as it continues to provide interesting articles, as well as a home for many who still write there.  Steven is now actively improving the site (as shown in the status blog) and after remembering my password and logging in, I can see he’s offered users some interesting new features.

One of those is the ability to syndicate other blog feeds there… and so perhaps what I will do is create a feed of the items in my various blogs tagged “opensource” and have that syndicated over there.  We’ll see. 

If you’ve never visited Advogato, do check it out.  It’s obviously focused on the community of free software and open source developers, but along the way some of the “trust metric” work was quite intriguing. (And here, here and here are some fascinating posts about blog spam and how the site and community fought it off.)

P.S. Raph… should you stumble across this post, many thanks to you for hosting Advogato for so long and giving us all a first place to start blogging.  And thanks to you, too, Steven, for picking up the torch and carrying it on.

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Podcamp Europe registrations look to be going well… 6 weeks out and 78 people!

Registration for Podcamp Europe (June 12-14, Stockholm, Sweden) seems to be going well… 78 people currently registered, with what looks to be quite an interesting range of people there.   Of course, there still need to be more sessions, but those will come as the time gets closer I am sure.

My primary purpose of travelling to Stockholm, of course, is Spring VON Europe where I will be speaking on VoIP security on a panel moderated by my good friend and colleague Martyn Davies. I’m looking forward to meeting a good number of folks there and hearing some of the sessions.

As my schedule and meetings allow, I’m also looking forward to visiting Podcamp Europe (as I know, is Martyn).  In the spirit of things I naturally put myself down for a session or two and will fit those in somewhere around my VON schedule.   Should definitely be a interesting time.

If you are in Stockholm (or can easily get there), do check out Podcamp Europe.  Registration is free and based on recent Podcamp events will no doubt be a very useful and enjoyable experience.

Jan stops using his Skype blog domains after Skype Legal notes he can’t use Skype brand for promotional purposes (chopsticks)

The news in the VoIP part of the blogosphere over the weekend was that Jan Geirnaert was shutting down www.skype-watch.com and www.skype-gadgets.com blogs.  Well, to be more precise, he was stopping the use of those two domains.  His weblog continues, just at his original domain name.

Blog reaction was quick, especially after Techmeme pointed to Phil Wolff’s article.   I intended to write on the issue, but just didn’t have the time, so let me point you to those who did write on it:

Jan, naturally, continues to write on the issue.

My own take – and I should note that I’ve been a regular reader of Jan’s and have valued many of the links he has provided over the past while:

  • It was very appropriate for Jan to contact Skype asking about use of their brand on a promotional product (chopsticks) for his websites.
  • It was very appropriate (and predictable) for Skype to indicate that they could NOT allow the use of their brand on promotional products for web sites that they don’t control.  They have to protect their brand.
  • It’s not entirely clear to me that Jan had to stop using his domains, but that was his choice and I can certainly understand why he did so given the full text of Skype’s letter.
  • Regardless, it certainly wasn’t the smoothest of PR moves by Skype.  Their letter could have been a bit less harsh.
  • It’s a good lesson that companies need to remember that they are in an “always on the record” world where bloggers may just go off and write about them.
  • It’s another good lesson in why you should never register domains that have someone else’s brand in them!

Will Skype’s lawyers send out more such letters?   Certainly.  They have to defend their brand and mark.  It’s understandable or else someone out there will say or do things that reflect negatively on their brand.  Protection of the brand is part of their job.   Could this have been handled differently?  Certainly.  

It’s interesting, too, to think of the impact of electronic communication on this case.  In the “old days”, a company’s legal firm or dept. would send out a snail-mail “cease-and-desist” letter.  Many such letters have turned into PR issues in newspapers or other media, but usually not verbatim.  Perhaps someone might scan or OCR it and post it online, but probably not.  However, in this case the “letter” was sent out via email and could immediately be posted to a weblog in its entirety.   Making that communication now visible to the entire global internet.  And so a letter out of Legal rapidly becomes a PR issue…  ah, the “fun” of the online world.

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What does a "corporate blog portal" need to have to be successful?

In report today into For Immediate Release I raised the question of "What do you want to see in a corporate blog portal?"  Either one for internal blogs on an Intranet, or one on a public site.  I first posted this list back in February, but have refined it a bit since then… and this is where I’d like your help:

  • What do you think a corporate blog portal needs to be effective?  (intranet or external)
  • Are there specific corporate blog portals you have liked better than others?
  • If you have implemented one, what have you found made it most successful?
  • Also, what software (or combination of software) did you use?

I would love to have your comments either posted here or sent in to FIR (fircomments@gmail.com) for the next show.

P.S. If you don’t understand the kind of site I’m talking about, take a look at http://blogs.sun.com/ or http://blogs.cisco.com/home as two examples.

 


 

DESIGN REQUIREMENTS FOR A CORPORATE BLOG PORTAL, version 2.0 

The following is a list of requirements for a "blog portal" for a company or organization.  This could be for either an internal or external (i.e. public) blog portal.   I’ve broken this into two area: 1) the web interface that visitors see; and 2) the technology used by the software program implementing the blog portal. 

User Interface Requirements 

1. LIST OF AVAILABLE WEBLOGS – Ideally if you went to the blog portal you would first see a web page that listed all the various weblogs that are hosted on the website, complete with brief descriptions, links to their RSS feeds, etc. 

2. AGGREGATION OF BLOG ENTRIES ON A MAIN PAGE – There should be a listing of "recent entries" across all blogs. This would allow someone unfamiliar with different blogs to simply look there and see what people are writing about. Two approaches I’ve seen work for this: a) raw aggregation of all recent entries across all blogs; or b) recent entry for each of the various blogs. 

3. RSS FEED FOR ALL BLOGS – It would be great if the portal provided an RSS feed for this aggregation of blog entries. Think of it as the "everything" feed. There might not be many folks who would want this "entire" feed (outside of true company junkies, analysts, and competitive intelligence staff at competitors) 

4. SEARCH ACROSS ALL BLOGS – On that same "main page" that lists all blogs on the platform, there should also be a Search box that allows you to search across all blogs for any entries in any weblogs that have the search words/phrase. Another search box (or the ability to use the same one with an option) for "tags" or "categories" would be a bonus. 

Technology Requirements 

5. DESIGN INTEGRATION WITH MAIN WEBSITE – It probably doesn’t need to be said, but a company is going to want to integrate this with the rest of their corporate website, so there needs to be the ability for the web design to be modified, customized, etc. to seamlessly fit in with the rest of the enterprise web site. So full ability to modify CSS, change headers, footers, graphics, etc., etc.

6. SUPPORT FOR USERS AUTHORING IN MULTIPLE BLOGS – Ideally a user should be able to login to the blogging platform and then contribute to whichever blogs they have been granted access. I don’t want to have to login separately for each of them – and from the admin side, it would be nice if there was an interface that made it easy for the admin to set permissions across blogs. (Step 1 could be requiring the admin to config ACLs on each blog, but ideally a Step 2 would centralize that into an interface that shows who can write where, etc.)

7. PRIVACY/PASSWORDS – There should also probably be the ability for a weblog author to "opt out" of the cross-blog search and appearance on the main page. Similarly, I could see the use in the ability to restrict access to *viewing* the weblog (and/or subscribing to its feed) to specific users. There could be a blog with content that is ideally only for executives, for instance. To me this is a lower priority because I think the greater value is in sharing information widely… private information can still be kept in email or on a specific hard drive. Still, I could see it being a request at some point. 

8. STATISTICS – Everyone loves stats and at some point champions of a blogging project will be asked how it is going. Anything that can give overall stats, typical web stats like number of page views, etc., but also more blogging-specific things like total number of posts, average number of posts per day/week/month, total number of comments, average number of comments per day/week/month, avg number of comments per post, subscribers to RSS feed (which I grant is tough to discern), number of posts in last day/week/month, etc.. If the portal was for external blogs, you could get fancier and give stats on number of trackbacks, external links, etc. Overall summary stats would be great, but also stats for individual blogs. Ideally even a page that compared all hosted blogs in those stats. This would enable the champions of the blogging program to see which blogs might be doing exceptionally well, which might be struggling and indeed which have stopped – without having to visit all the individual blogs. Bonus if the software generates nice pretty charts that can be used as eye candy in powerpoint presentations.


 

Comments and feedback are definitely welcome!

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Kathy Sierra moves on… Alec calls for civility and an apology… and some thoughts on the mob rush to judgement

Per Alec Saunder’s great post this morning, I learned that Kathy Sierra wrote a “final post” on her blog and is now debating what to do next… but fairly certain it won’t involve blogging or public speaking, at least for some period of time.  Her post is a good one and includes at the end of her text a collection of some of the great pictures that populated her posts.  I always enjoyed her posts not only for her great content, but also for all these great graphics that she created.  She has a fun and witty way of simplyifying complex issues into simple pictures.  If you haven’t seen her work, do scroll down through her post to see the images.  They’re worth it.

I think it is a loss for us all if she is now ending her blogging (at least in this form and place), but I don’t underestimate the issues with which she is grappling.  Given all that has transpired and the heinous images and text she had to deal with, it’s definitely understandable that she’s going to take some time to figure out what’s next.  I do hope she does figure out a way to continue her teaching… she’s good at it and her continued voice would be good to have out there.

Alec’s post, though, brought my thoughts back to the third post I was intending to write here on the situation.  When the whole storm started, I wrote some initial thoughts and wondered if maybe this might make people think.  I followed up with a post of links, but I had another post I started which I titled “Kathy Sierra and the Blogosphere’s Mad Rush to Judgement”… but then life intervened and the time to write that post never materialized…  in the meantime, though, others did perhaps a far better job than I would have. Two in particular I liked:

Stephanie’s post included this text, which said it well:

Please, Blogosphere. Keep your wits. This is a messy ugly story, and oversimplications will help nobody. Holding people guilty until proven innocent doesn’t either.  <text snipped>

If you have something thoughtful to say, then say it. But if all you have to say has already been said out there ten times, or if you won’t take the trouble to check your sources, read carefully, calm down before blogging, avoid over-generalisations, and thus avoid feeding the already bloated echo-chamber — just go out for a walk in the sun and let the people involved sort themselves out.

Indeed.  That’s largely why I didn’t post here more on the issue… I didn’t have the time to check sources and do the other work to add anything thoughtful.  Without that work, what could I have added?   Not relying on a single source is absolutely critical… and yet it is something that seems to be forgotten by so many as rumors simply propagate through the blogosphere.  (I found myself just this morning sitting on a story that I could have run with (for an internal blog)… but waited until I could confirm with a second source.)  It’s a lot easier just to hit Publish and send the words off.

I also was not involved directly in the issue… and it seemed that certainly initially there was a huge amount of posting – without hearing from all the folks involved.

It’s also key to remember that we have many other ways of communicating and getting information directly from people involved in the situation.  Jim Turner has provided some good and detailed coverage of the whole situation and one of the things that I have most respected is that he has done the extra work and done things like, oh, calling up people involved on the phone!  Novel concept, eh?  In our online world, people often tend to forget about that little phone thingie sitting on their desk…  but having that direct conversation can be so critical. 

I note that the storm continues… the NY Times: “A Call for Manners in the World of Nasty Blogs“… Tim O’Reilly issued his draft code of conduct… Business Week: “Web Attack” (which isn’t about Sierra but about similar online nastiness as it relates to business) and “Managing the Menace of Online Mobs“…

Do we need a defined “code of conduct” for the blogosphere?  I don’t know that we need something formal to which people agree… I’d like to hope we’re all adults here (and yes, I realized that there are kids posting out there)… and if you look at Tim’s code of conduct, you could more or less summarize it as:

Call it what you will… in the end I think we all need to just be a bit more civil to each other… to make sure there are verifiable sources for what we write… to take deep breaths (and breaks) before responding to emotionally-charged issues/comments… to treat other bloggers the way we want them to treat us.

Will we?  The optimist in me would like to hope so…   (they cynic in me says we’ve been dealing with this issue since the dawn of time and so while this whole episode is a welcome reminder, it’s certainly only a matter of time before it crops up again…)

Technorati Authority Widget does NOT do what I thought…

Hmmm.. so the “Technorati Authority Widget” I mentioned in my previous post (and described on the Technorati blog and Tools page) does NOT do what I thought it would do.  Based on this:

What’s your Authority? Are you considered an authoritative blogger who’s fluid prose rakes in link love by the bushel? Now you can proudly display your official Technorati Authority with our new Authority Widget.

I assumed that the widget would return your Technorati “ranking”.  Instead, it returns “the number of blogs that link to you”, which is an okay thing to display… but not my expectation.   It’s also the opposite of the “ranking” in that you want a higher link count.

It seems to me that Technorati needs to clarify, at least for this widget, what they mean by your “official Technorati Authority” because they have two (well, really three) measures in their stats (example – stats for this blog):

  1. Technorati Ranking: lower is better – ranking of your blog against all others based on some metric Technorati developed. Down side is that widget could get quite huge due to large numbers and there is also little incentive for someone who is #1,891,345 to put it on their blog.
  2. Number of blogs that link to you: higher is better – number of blogs that have linked to your site in the last 6 months.  Appears to be a major input into “ranking” and is a good sign of potential “authority” of blog.  Widget size is probably no issue because count grows up and realistically won’t get too high (top blog list currently has high of 26,866). More bloggers might use it because again it is counting up and not on such a massive scale as the “ranking”.
  3. Number of links from other blogs: higher is better – number of links to your blog from the blogs counted in #2.  Useful in that some blogs might link to you many times.  The challenge is how to interpret the number.  Knowing that a blog was linked to several times by a highly-regarded blog is useful information.  Having it linked to many times by a spam blog (or one of the author’s other blogs) is not terribly useful.  This number would seem very easy to game.

Obviously they have chosen #2 for this widget… but my feedback to the Technorati folks would be to clarify in the text on their Tools page exactly what this widget is showing.