The Economic times has written something on Blooking too. Frankly all these articles is getting quite old, repeating the same blooks over and over again, but its worth a look.

What’s more, many new businesses have sprung up to help scribes turn their blogs into books. Blogbasedbooks.com, specializing in blooks, has even set up an online shop for the same. On it’s homepage, they emphatically claim to “start a new trend that may one day overthrow the traditional publishing world!” and calling blooks or blog-based books “the equivalent of reality TV for the publishing world.”  

Really now? I don’t really don’t it’ll start a ‘new trend that may one day overthrow the traditional publishing world’, although i think it’ll make it easier for normal people to get published. No more unlimited rejection letters from publishing houses.

 

Now wouldn’t that be nice? 

View Comments (0) RSS Feed for Comments on this Post

Interesting question. Why do blooks exist in the first place? Why use blogs? If you take a look at Epiguide, you’ll find a slew of well established (some above 100 chapters) webisodes that run on normal websites.

Blogs give a few distinct advantages over the normal online novel. Let’s have a look at them:

Easier to update

Blogs do not require you to mess with html code everytime you want to update. You just have to create a new post in a Microsoft-Word-like environment. It saves time and prevents you from screaming once your table tags go haywire.

RSS

Billed as the future DNA of web, RSS is a very powerful tool to use when distributing your blook. Blogs automatically create RSS feeds as you update, and instead of visiting your blog (and thousands of others), readers just subscribe and have the feed delivered to their feed reader of choice. With feature rich services like Feedburner, you can even compile these feeds into an email subscription service - all the more to have chapters delivered to your readers’ doorsteps!

The Blogosphere

Writing in a blog automatically makes you part of the blogsophere - a lively, noisy (if you listen to podcasts, that is) ethos of opinionated people. This bodes well for your blook, as blogs trade links and connect to each other fairly fast. Hop over to Technorati to take a peek at all this action

The Coding Community

If you’re stuck building a website, there aren’t many places you can go to for advice. But blogging platforms have the benefit of collaborative users. If you have a layout problem with your blog (common when you’re trying to build a site for multiple browsers), just paste your code and have other users help you out. The Blogger forums are great for those dealing with the Blogger platform, while Wordpress users have their support forums. 

Trackbacks

Blogging is all about conversation. Trackbacks provide a way for you to link to a post you’ve read somewhere, thus helping you to both foster ties with other bloggers as well as driving new traffic to your blog. That’s the rough idea - for more info check out Movable Type’s explanation

The Interaction

Core to the blogging experience is the fact that readers can comment easily on what you write. Fanmail is a thing of the past, and stories could very well be affected by what your readers expect and say on your plot. Draw a line here, however. Writers should determine how the story plays out, not the readers.

The Look, The Feel

Last, but not least, blogs provide an easy way for aspiring authors to present their work ina pleasing format. Websites require some work before they look good - blogs have ready-made, one-click templates. I admit things get a little more complex with some of the better blogging platforms (AJAX, anyone?) but overall blogs are a lot more accessible to the guy who knows how to write better than he codes.

View Comments (0) RSS Feed for Comments on this Post