Research Blogging
Posted by Urs Schreiber
Clifford Johnson ponders the advantages of research blogging in The Blog as a Sharp Tool for Research and now again in Research Blogging.
Related considerations were voiced by Craig Laughton early this year: Exploring the Blogosphere.
I don’t have much to add to that, except for noting that I used blogging in this sense, and almost exclusively in this sense, from the very beginning.
And I’d guess that, long long before my feeble writings, John’s TWFs served a similar purpose.
One big difference is that Clifford Johnson has a non-public blog for his research, which, as he writes #
[…] is also the place where everyone (including me) can say silly things and ask silly questions if we want to, without the whole world watching. That latter is a very important feature, in fact.
For some reason I have always felt like moving private discussions on technical issues out in the open. For me that’s a matter of increasing the reaction rate of research by increasing the reaction surface. And, looking back, it did work for me #.
With the esoteric stuff we are talking about, this seems more important to me than shielding away insights and hiding mistakes. The game here is not Bingo #.
But I am aware that most people feel quite different about this – and quite possibly for good reasons. But I cannot help it. On the other hand, I am fond of having found philosophical support # # from David Corfield.
While I cannot prove it, I think everybody would benefit from seeing more research-related communication done out in the open. The most valuable aspect of many conferences is the conversation one has in between the talks. And this kind of conversation is what I am after.
Posted at December 20, 2006 4:50 PM UTC
Re: Research Blogging
Hi Urs,
Your comments about privacy vs non-privacy are ironic, given that in the original idea I tried to get going (linked in my recent post) I was advocating a public system with research conversations coordinated between all participating research groups, with different groups leading the conversation at different times, etc, etc - and this public aspect was the one that people most objected to. In the end, it seemed that nobody really wanted to play, so I implemented the smaller-scale private system just for my own lab. Please read the other post for more on what I was suggesting. Sounds like it would fit your wishes rather well.
Cheers,
-cvj