<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom">
  <title>CivicSpace</title>
  <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://pingv.com/tag/civicspace"/>
  <link rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://pingv.com/taxonomy/term/70/atom/feed"/>
  <id>http://pingv.com/taxonomy/term/70/atom/feed</id>
  <updated>2005-11-28T15:38:57-06:00</updated>
  <entry>
    <title>Aid Workers Network</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://pingv.com/image/portfolio/web-portfolio/aid-workers-network" />
    <id>http://pingv.com/image/portfolio/web-portfolio/aid-workers-network</id>
    <published>2006-06-22T13:11:12-05:00</published>
    <updated>2006-07-05T12:40:38-05:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>Laura</name>
    </author>
    <category term="Web Portfolio" />
    <category term="Client" />
    <category term="Aid Workers Network" />
    <category term="CivicSpace" />
    <category term="Drupal" />
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[ <p>We just completed a quick Drupal theming job for <a href="http://aidworkers.net">Aid Workers Network</a>, an international relief networking organization for, well, aid workers:</p>
<p><br class="clear" /></p>
<blockquote><p>Aid Workers Network links relief and development field staff to share support, ideas and best practice. This web site is being developed by a team of experienced aid workers to provide a comprehensive resource for busy field workers needing practical advice and proven resources to help with their current work.</p>
<p>This site is made possible through the support of Oxfam, the Red Cross and the Fritz Foundation.</p></blockquote>
<p>It was a pleasure working with these folks.</p>
<p>The theme for their CivicSpace-powered site is powered by <a href="http://drupal.org/phptemplate">Drupal's phpTemplate theme engine</a>. They wanted something minimalist and clean, with lots of white space -- something that would download quickly on slow connections. </p>
<p><b>Related:</b></p>
<p>We also did the <a href="http://pingv.com/image/client/aid-workers-network">logo</a>.</p>
<p><a href="/image/client/aid-workers-network"><img src="http://pingv.com/system/files/images/1a-symbolic.thumbnail.png" alt="" title="" class="image thumbnail" height="113" width="175" /></a></p>
     ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Aid Workers Network</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://pingv.com/portfolio/web-design-and-development/aid-workers-network" />
    <id>http://pingv.com/portfolio/web-design-and-development/aid-workers-network</id>
    <published>2006-06-22T13:11:12-05:00</published>
    <updated>2008-07-03T14:40:24-05:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>Laura</name>
    </author>
    <category term="Web Design and Development" />
    <category term="Aid Workers Network" />
    <category term="CivicSpace" />
    <category term="Drupal" />
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[ <p>We just completed a quick Drupal theming job for <a href="http://aidworkers.net">Aid Workers Network</a>, an international relief networking organization for, well, aid workers:</p>
<blockquote><p>Aid Workers Network links relief and development field staff to share support, ideas and best practice. This web site is being developed by a team of experienced aid workers to provide a comprehensive resource for busy field workers needing practical advice and proven resources to help with their current work.</p>
<p>This site is made possible through the support of Oxfam, the Red Cross and the Fritz Foundation.</p></blockquote>
<p>It was a pleasure working with these folks.</p>
<p>The theme for their CivicSpace-powered site is powered by <a href="http://drupal.org/phptemplate">Drupal's phpTemplate theme engine</a>. They wanted something minimalist and clean, with lots of white space -- something that would download quickly on slow connections.</p>
     ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Taking it a step further</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://pingv.com/image/ideas-gallery/charts-graphs/taking-it-a-step-further" />
    <id>http://pingv.com/image/ideas-gallery/charts-graphs/taking-it-a-step-further</id>
    <published>2006-03-25T00:42:16-06:00</published>
    <updated>2008-02-17T14:51:11-06:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>Laura</name>
    </author>
    <category term="blogging" />
    <category term="CivicSpace" />
    <category term="community" />
    <category term="Drupal" />
    <category term="Internet" />
    <category term="Web 2.0" />
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[ <p><i>Continuing <a href="http://www.pingv.com/blog/laura/200603/so-what-is-this-web-2-0-and-how-does-drupal-fit-in">this discussion of "web 2.0"</a>....</i></p>
<p>Moving beyond <a href="http://www.pingv.com/image/ideas-gallery/charts-graphs/web-2-0-redux">the basic dynamic website model</a>, we get up into the realm of the content management system, or "CMS" -- a dynamic site where not one but several people -- thousands, even -- have direct access and ability to update and add to the website's content. This is what we create with websites powered by <a href="http://drupal.org">Drupal</a>.</p>
<p>What's appealing about CMSs like Drupal is that they can be used for just about any website, from small business to large corporation to online community to non-profit organization. Just about any organization with <i>any</i> sort of web presence can benefit from having a website where many people can participate at different levels of access.</p>
<p><br class="clear" /><br />
<a href="/image/portfolio-gallery/web-screenshots/blogher-beta"><img src="http://pingv.com/system/files/images/BlogHer-beta.thumbnail.jpg" alt="" title="" class="image thumbnail" height="140" width="155" /></a><br />
The power this affords, for example, to an organization like <a href="http://blogher.org">BlogHer</a> is profound. <a href="http://surfette.typepad.com/blogher">Their website last year</a> was basically just a blog. Now it is an online community with literally dozens of blogs, oodles of members and many powerful tools at their disposal to not only disseminate information but also engage people in discussions on topics spanning the globe.</p>
<p><i>Next: Multiple websites in one.</i></p>
     ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>On itch scratching, hitchhikers and growing within the interactive ecosystem</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://pingv.com/blog/laura/200601/on-itch-scratching-hitchhikers-and-growing-within-the-interactive-ecosystem" />
    <id>http://pingv.com/blog/laura/200601/on-itch-scratching-hitchhikers-and-growing-within-the-interactive-ecosystem</id>
    <published>2006-01-06T11:57:55-06:00</published>
    <updated>2008-01-05T11:22:46-06:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>Laura</name>
    </author>
    <category term="blogging" />
    <category term="CivicSpace" />
    <category term="Drupal" />
    <category term="musings" />
    <category term="Open Source" />
    <category term="tools" />
    <category term="Web 2.0" />
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[ <p>
The <a href="http://www.documentary-video.com/displayitem.cfm?vid=1070">story goes like this</a>: A couple hundred years ago, <a href="http://www.uwgb.edu/dutchs/WestTech/CreditWhereDue.HTM">Scottish chemist Joseph Black</a> was approached by some Scotch distillers. With the explosion of coal power, they wanted to know exactly what techniques they should use to replace their wood-burning distilling processes with coal-fired methods. Black did some experimentation and developed for them the appropriate method.
</p>
<p>
But his calculations reportedly <a href="http://inventors.about.com/library/inventors/blwatt1.htm">inspired some new ideas in his colleague, James Watt</a>, who took Black's ideas of "latent heat" and used them in the development of a new steam engine.
</p>
<p>
The Scotch distillers were "scratching their own itch," and a major technological invention developed as an almost-direct result. This in turn revolutionized power generation, which allowed for major improvements in factories and industrial plants and led to a burst in what we call the Industrial Revolution.
</p>
<p>
Each of these steps involved new development, new inventing, new improvements in that which was. But how many of these things happened only because Scotch distillers wanted to use coal instead of wood to fire their boilers? If invention were left to inventors inventing only what they themselves might want to have around, would we be where we are today, beyond the industrial, transportation, atomic and information revolutions into this explosion of interactive communications?
</p>
<p>
<strong>The Drupal itch</strong>
</p>
<p>
There's been quite a bit of discussion going on in the <a href="http://drupal.org/mailing-lists">Drupal developer community</a> about, well, how to cultivate community. For the most part, there's a recognition that something needs to be done. For example, <a href="http://buytaert.net/">Dries Buytaert</a>, who launched his idea of an open source CMS a few years ago, noted that in 2005 the user base on Drupal.org grew threefold, but the number of contributors remained essentially constant.
</p>
<p>
What to do about this has been the subject of debate for the past several days now.
</p>
<p>
On the one hand, you have folks who believe that if you're not coding for Drupal, you're essentially a parasite -- a "<a href="http://drupal.org/node/42941">hitchhiker</a>."
</p>
<blockquote><p>
Users who don't contribute to Drupal are hitchhikers. Nobody needs them onboard, Drupal will get from A to B fine with or without them, and if they want Drupal to go out of its way on their behalf they should ask nicely, if there isn't time to take them exactly where they want to go hitchhikers should be thankful for the free ride they have had.
</p></blockquote>
<p>
Thankfully this attitude isn't a majority opinion -- at least I don't believe so. And the man who wrote the above paragraph has expressed a desire to have it rewritten because he readily admits that the wording is rather inflammatory and off-putting. <em>(Reader: The linked page very well could have changed by the time you look. The documentation pages on Drupal.org are living documents, always subject to revision.)</em>
</p>
<p>
However, I question the entire concept of users as "hitchhikers." A CMS does not grow in a vacuum. And I don't think it's simply the result of "scratching your own itch," either. Because the fact of the matter is that Drupal is not simply a result of development, it's also a tool for community-building, personal communications, business facilitation and so on.
</p>
<p>
<strong>A product or a tool?</strong>
</p>
<p>
Think of Drupal as the text. The developing community is the writer. And the users, site admins and designers are the audience. One cannot exist without the other. Just as a book's audience gives the book significance and meaning, Drupal's users give Drupal meaning. The text would not exist without the creator; the text would have no meaning without the user.
</p>
<p>
But Drupal is not simply a text -- a static body -- but is a dynamic object. It's both a product of development by the Drupal developer community, and a tool used by the users to achieve things that perhaps the developers never imagined. Drupal's development gives Drupal existence, but Drupal's use gives Drupal meaning. Drupal is the result of community development. But it's also the result of how it's been applied in the real world.
</p>
<p>
<em>For example</em>, <a href="http://civicspacelabs.org">CivicSpace</a> would not exist if it weren't for the developers who made that Drupal distribution happen. They are doing a lot of hard work to integrate powerful community-building features and modules into a seamless, effective community CMS. But would CivicSpace exist if it weren't for the demand for something like it in <a href="http://deanspace.org/">the Dean campaign</a>? Would the changes in CivicSpace since then have happened if people weren't actively using CivicSpace, challenging its limits and discovering new ways to make it useful and effective?
</p>
<p>
For example, would Drupal have a <a href="http://drupal.org/project/trackback">trackback module</a> if the <a href="http://www.movabletype.org/trackback/beginners/">trackback concept</a> never was embraced by bloggers in the first place?
</p>
<p>
<strong>Whose itch is it?</strong>
</p>
<p>
How many developers discovered they had an itch to scratch only when a site admin tried to do XYZ or simply asked if something were possible? How much of what has been developed for Drupal and CivicSpace happened in a vacuum far removed from reality?
</p>
<p>
How many itches that got scratched never would have appeared if the scratcher were not exposed to this or that idea, notion, approach or feature somewhere along the line?
</p>
<p>
I cannot say for certain, but my guess is that there are very few itches that start tickling in a vacuum. We're all a part of the world. In the Drupal context, we're all a part of the interactive web universe -- at least to some degree. And Drupal's evolution is not just a matter of DNA -- the programming ideas and talents of the developers -- but also a result of the habitat in which it exists.
</p>
<p>
I think the hitchhiker metaphor is a bad one because it suggests a monolithic construct of an automobile, in which developers are in the driver's seat and everyone else is just looking for a "free ride." The Drupal community is much more amorphous and diverse than a singular automobile, and there are far more drivers than can fit behind one wheel.
</p>
<p>
And let's face it, the "end users" -- bloggers, site admins, business people, campaign managers, community leaders, artists, etc. -- have a lot more influence on development than a hitchhiker does on an 18-wheeler trundling down the Interstate.
</p>
<p>
<strong>A community defined by Drupal</strong>
</p>
<p>
In the end, I guess I'm saying that Drupal is not only defined by its community, but the community is also defined by what is Drupal. And because of that symbiotic relationship, it's only healthy to cultivate communication and camaraderie across all niches within that community. We may each be able to survive without each other, but we won't thrive.
</p>
<p>
And just as Drupal does not benefit from <a href="http://drupal.org/node/41966#comment-79224">users demanding free work from "ubergeeks,</a>" developers' looking at the user side of the community as hitchhikers yields no gains, either.
</p>
<p>
Divided we can survive. But working collectively we can thrive.
</p>
     ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Looking back at 2005</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://pingv.com/blog/laura/200601/looking-back-at-2005" />
    <id>http://pingv.com/blog/laura/200601/looking-back-at-2005</id>
    <published>2006-01-01T18:08:12-06:00</published>
    <updated>2006-01-01T19:10:03-06:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>Laura</name>
    </author>
    <category term="DVD Authoring" />
    <category term="Hosting" />
    <category term="Web Design" />
    <category term="business" />
    <category term="CivicSpace" />
    <category term="Drupal" />
    <category term="Open Source" />
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[ <p>
This past year has brought about many changes. Early in 2005, when we started up <a href="http://www.pingv.com">pingVision</a>, Katherine and I had a clear vision of what we wanted to achieve in five years, ten years.... Those plans are still there, still in the works. But wasn't clear back then was how we ourselves would work our own ways down <em>both</em> the internet and television paths towards the inevitable convergence, when interactive television -- the medium combining the hyperlinking freedom of the web with the full-motion video of television -- becomes a reality.
</p>
<p>
The television path was fairly clear. DVD authoring was a natural choice, given its nascent interactivity (and the fact that our experience, equipment and training made it possible). The future of the DVD format is still uncertain, but once a format is settled, growth in the HD DVD area will explode, and give us the first glimpses of what new kinds of interactivity will be possible -- and, more important, will catch on with users. Count me as one who is <em>really</em> looking forward to <a href="http://www.nabshow.com/">NAB</a> this coming year.
</p>
<p>
The internet path was less obvious to me. When we started the business, my experience with Drupal had been limited to five or six small websites. But as I was helping people configure their systems, and tweak designs here and there -- and as I got more familiar with Drupal and realized just how flexible and powerful a CMS it is -- the path began to take shape: design, configure and host Drupal- (and <a href="http://civicspacelabs.org">CivicSpace</a>-) powered websites for clients ready to step up from static brochureware sites, simpler blogging tools or proprietary systems that had locked up their opportunities to improvise and expand.
</p>
<p>
What really added to the appeal of this approach for me was the Open Source nature of the Drupal project. I love the idea of community-built tools. I love the self-empowerment that results from truly owning one's own website code -- something you don't get with proprietary systems. As a lifelong entrepreneur, anything that helps empower people is exciting. Entrepreneurialism is all about self-motivated action, blazing one's own trail (even if following a well-marked map), and creating one's own enterprise. It's a self-empowering process. And the spirit of Open Source seems to capture that.
</p>
<p>
So Drupal it was. Now even though I had been creating websites for ten years, mostly for myself but sometimes for companies I worked for, getting under Drupal's hood was a bit daunting -- very much like the feeling I have opening the hood of my Outback with the intention of fixing something. With the car, I just close the hood and call the garage. But with Drupal, I dug in. And though I didn't get grease on my hands, I confess there were times when I felt I had mud in my brain. Drupal is an efficient, yet very complex, core package, with code mature enough that knowing (or learning) PHP is not quite enough.
</p>
<p>
Unlike my experiences with phpBB and Mambo, however, I've found the core to be rock solid. Rarely does an error in a contributed module do more than simply render that module ineffective. And that's a blessing. Because if your system remains up and running when dealing with a problem, there's much more opportunity, imho, to learn something from the fixing process. In the past year, that fixing process for me has mostly been a matter of filing or finding a bug report, and then reading and learning from the fixes provided by others. It's been a fruitful learning process, to the point where now I've been contributing <a href="http://drupal.org/node/39282">php snippets</a> to the effort. (This isn't to say that other CMSs like Mambo are inherently unstable. But my experience was that a buggy module in Mambo would take the entire system down. It all just seemed so ... <em>brittle</em> ... to me. A subjective take, fwiw.)
</p>
<p>
What has always surprised me about Drupal, though, is its flexibility. Whether you need a community network site, a business store site or an artist's showcase site, Drupal can be used as a robust and powerful core. I think a lot of people try Drupal without realizing that power and flexibility, and end up feeling overwhelmed, like someone looking for a Vespa ending up in the cockpit of a Lear jet. ("But how do I <em>go?</em>") A Drupal-powered site can be configured for very simple operation (such as a personal blog); it can be as easy as a scooter. But it's Drupal's capacity for complexity that appeals to me -- because the complexity is in <em>possibilities</em>. Drupal can seem complicated because there are so many ways to do so many different things; but it's the <em>intersection</em> of all the cleanly-coded <em>variables</em> that results in an astounding matrix of potential paths. I much prefer the world of possibilities with complexity over systems that have only one (usually quirky) way of doing something -- especially if I'm building a site for a client.
</p>
<p>
But I have to say, I feel the <em>biggest</em> blessing of the year when it comes to Drupal has been <a href="http://drupal.org">the Drupal community</a>. The core developers, led by Dries Buytaert (who now has started <a href="http://buytaert.net/">his own blog</a>), have been taking Drupal forward in great strides, and the developers of the contributed modules have brought some wonderful insight and innovation into the project, resulting in unexpected and often very exciting features and benefits. And it's only because of these developers, and the Drupal community itself, that I felt, and feel now all the more so, that investing our time and energy and resources in learning the workings of Drupal and becoming part of the Drupal community is worthwhile. Drupal is a solid investment for virtually any forward-looking website project.
</p>
<p>
2006 looks to be an exciting year. While wrapping up a major community website and a complex instructional DVD project many moons in the making, we enter the new year with a redesign for a popular blog and a re-branding and design for an organization doing some wonderful work in the non-profit world. What else the year holds for us, who can say? We'll find out when we make it happen.
</p>
<p>
Happy New Year!
</p>
     ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>Drupal 4.6.5 quickie update</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://pingv.com/blog/laura/200512/drupal-4-6-5-quickie-update" />
    <id>http://pingv.com/blog/laura/200512/drupal-4-6-5-quickie-update</id>
    <published>2005-12-15T09:55:07-06:00</published>
    <updated>2005-12-15T10:55:21-06:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>Laura</name>
    </author>
    <category term="Announcement" />
    <category term="CivicSpace" />
    <category term="Drupal" />
    <category term="security" />
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[ <p>With a <a href="http://www.pingv.com/blog/laura/200511/drupal-security-update-released">security update</a> and <a href="http://www.pingv.com/blog/laura/200512/a-drupal-4-6-4-quick-fix">patches</a> coming in rapid succession, many Drupalers may have missed that another Drupal update was released a couple of days ago. Drupal 4.6.5 incorporates several little patches that are not security related, but do address some functionality quirks.</p>
<p>Easy update: Simply upload to your Drupal 4.6.4 installation the changelog and the /modules and /includes directories, replacing all files. There were no database changes. (And if you're running an older version, check for <a href="http://drupal.org/security">security updates</a>. Same goes for <a href="http://civicspacelabs.org/home/developers/download">CivicSpace</a> users.)</p>
     ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>CivicSpace 0.8.2 released (with CRM)</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://pingv.com/blog/laura/200512/civicspace-0-8-2-released-with-crm" />
    <id>http://pingv.com/blog/laura/200512/civicspace-0-8-2-released-with-crm</id>
    <published>2005-12-02T22:32:44-06:00</published>
    <updated>2005-12-03T00:02:17-06:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>Laura</name>
    </author>
    <category term="CivicSpace" />
    <category term="Drupal" />
    <category term="Open Source" />
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[ <p>After much anticipation, the <a href="http://drupal.org">Drupal</a> distribution for community and campaign websites, <a href="http://civicspacelabs.org/home/developers/download">CivicSpace, has released its new version</a>. The exciting development here is the integration of <a href="http://www.openngo.org/">CiviCRM</a>, the Open Source Customer/Client/Community/ "Constituent Relationship Manager." While a <a href="http://drupal.org/node/33464">Drupal module</a> managing such integration is available, what's new is that CivicSpace has it integrated in the basic installation already.</p>
<p>The trend online is towards more use of online applications to do our work. Adding a CRM may seem odd to folks who think of websites still as being just brochures or blogs. But when you have a community site with dozens or hundreds or more people using the same data core, it's a natural development for community sites to start empowering users with collective information and networking tools that traditionally have remained in the realm of intranets.</p>
<p>If you're curious about CiviCRM, <a href="http://demo.openngo.org/civicrm/drupal-php5/">check out the demo</a>. Maybe it's something you want to implement on your website.</p>
<p><i>[Note: This new release incorporates the latest <a href="">Drupal security updates</a>. (Supported hosting clients: your sites have already been updated.)]</i></p>
     ]]></content>
  </entry>
  <entry>
    <title>The Gender Gap in Blogging</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://pingv.com/blog/katherine/200511/the-gender-gap-in-blogging" />
    <id>http://pingv.com/blog/katherine/200511/the-gender-gap-in-blogging</id>
    <published>2005-11-28T15:02:54-06:00</published>
    <updated>2005-11-28T15:38:57-06:00</updated>
    <author>
      <name>katherine</name>
    </author>
    <category term="Press" />
    <category term="blogging" />
    <category term="Blogher" />
    <category term="Bloghercon" />
    <category term="CivicSpace" />
    <category term="Drupal" />
    <category term="trends" />
    <content type="html"><![CDATA[ <p>
One of the questions <a href="http://ponzarelli.com/blog">Ponzi</a> asked me during a webcast interview was, "Why is there a need for a separate conference for women bloggers?"
</p>
<p>
I am not sure of the reasons - I have some hunches - but the preliminary data suggests for whatever reasons, a gap exists.
</p>
<p>
As a co-moderator for the <a href="http://www.pingv.com/personal-blog-entry/laura/200507/blogher-chatroom-transcripts">on-line portion</a> of the Blogher Conference, I met Ponzi on line. She subsequently interviewed me for the <a href="http://chris.pirillo.com/">Chris Pirillo Show</a> and I got even more tied onto the ongoing conversations around blogging and where world of the internet is going.
</p>
<p>
I was not familiar with IT Conversations until the <a href="http://www.blogher.org/">Blogher Conference of 2005</a> when my business partner, and Drupal maven, <a href="http://www.pingv.com/about/people/laura-scott-president">Laura Scott,</a> sent me some links to it.
</p>
<p>
<a href="http://www.itconversations.com/index.html">IT Conversations News</a> is an excellent source of information. They have a great pulse on the internet. That's because conversations are outstripping books and even magazines as the best souces of timely information. IT Conversations is a treasure trove of conversations that make excellent listening during drive-time or other times when we are starved for content and want to put our time to maximum use.
</p>
<p>
It was through IT Conversations that the following information was called to may attention, forwarded to me by <a href="http://www.rds.com/blogs/doug/index.php">Doug Kay</a> who writes, in part
</p>
<blockquote><p>
I've just created a new survey for IT Conversations listeners. It would be a huge help to us if you would spend five minutes and take the survey. Not only will it help us attract underwriters and sponsors (and therefore keep the content free), but it will also help us set the direction for new programs.</p>
<p>Some very interesting early results from the survey:</p>
<p>* 92% of you are male<br />
<br />* 40% of you have a Master's degree or higher (that surprised me)<br />
<br />* 76% have at least a four-year degree<br />
<br />* 47% of you are outside the U.S.</p>
<p>The results are well beyond the statistically significant threshold.
</p></blockquote>
<p>
What surprised me was not the educational level. And I did suspect men would be the majority - but 92%?
</p>
<p>
Certainly the subscribers to IT Conversations do not correlate one-to-one with the all the blogging world, but it does show that women may well not be accessing valuable resources available to them.
</p>
<p>
One of the questions <a href="http://ponzarelli.com/blog">Ponzi</a> asked me during a webcast interview was, "Why is there a need for a separate conference for women bloggers?"
</p>
<p>
I am not sure of the reasons - I have some hunches - but the preliminary data suggests for whatever reasons, a gap exists. To test this, I looked a bit further. An article in<a href="http://www.clickz.com/stats/sectors/traffic_patterns/article.php/3502201"> ClickZ </a>appeared last May.
</p>
<p>
The number of people, irrespective of gender, who have "created a blog" is nine percent. Younger people (18-29) are more likely to have created a blog than people older. Males more than females.
</p>
<p>
Hopefully the internet will turn out to be its own answer.
</p>
<p>
Those already on the internet now have to help others get on board. Becoming a blogger is relatively easy for someone already on the internet. The big problem is how to reach people who are not on the internet, which might well be through traditional channels.
</p>
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