This is basically a "me too" post. Dave Winer has a blog post entitled Blogging is part of life where he writes
I agree with the author of the Slate piece
that’s getting so much play in the blogosphere, up to a point. The
things that called themselves blogs that came from Denton and Calacanis
are professional publications written by paid journalists that use
blogging software for content management. That’s fine and I suppose you
can call them blogs, but don’t get confused and think that their
supposed death (which itself is arguable) has anything to do with the
amateur medium that is blogging. They’re separate things, on separate
paths with different futures.
To say blogging is dead is as ridiculous as saying email or IM or
the telephone are dead. The blog never belonged on the cover of
magazines, any more than email was a cover story (it never was) but
that doesn’t mean the tool isn’t useful inside organizations as a way
to communicate, and as a way for businesses to learn how the public
views them and their competitors.
Whenever Dave Winer writes about blogging I tend to agree with him
completely. This time is no exception. Blogs are social software, they
facilitate communication and self expression between individuals. Just like with email and
IM, there are millions of people interacting using blogs today. There
are more people reading and writing blogs on places like MySpace and MSN Spaces than the populations of a majority of the countries on this planet. Blogs are here to stay.
Debating on whether companies that build companies around blogs will
survive is orthogonal to discussing the survival of blogging as a
medium. It's not like debating whether companies that send out email
newsletters or make mailing list software will survive is equivalent to
discussing the survival of email as a communication medium. Duh.