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  • The Long Tail
    'm Chris Anderson, editor-in-chief of Wired Magazine. The Long Tail, which first appeared in Wired in October 2004 and then became a book, published by Hyperion on July 11, 2006.
  • Ray Ozzie
    Serving as a Chief Technical Officer of Microsoft.
  • BuzzMachine
    JEFF JARVIS blogs about media and news. He is associate professor and director of the interactive journalism program the City University of New York’s new Graduate School of Journalism.
  • Ajaxian
    Because after 10 years, we’re still hand-coding.
  • Scripting News
    Dave Winer
  • Web 2.0 Workgroup
    A network of premium weblogs that write content about the new generation of the Web. Combined, these sites reach a large readership of influential technology and media professionals.
  • Scobleizer
    Came to prominence during his tenure as a technical evangelist at Microsoft. He is also author of Naked Conversations: How Blogs are Changing the Way Businesses Talk with Customers.

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« Web2.0 Research: 2007 digital outlook report | Main | Blogger's Code of Conduct - Tim O'Reilly's Draft »

über bloggers

It's no secret that bloggers are becoming increasingly influential. But Arrington is part of an emerging crowd of writers who use their narrowly focused blogs, such as hyperlocal real estate reports, green guides, or Web 2.0 startup reviews, to establish themselves as thought leaders. These new influencers are taking a page from the blog networks Gawker and Weblogs Inc. and turning rapid-fire, around-the-clock blog patter that makes and shapes the news into a hot new online media model.

Companies are directing more efforts toward buttering up these New Media players, often feeding them exclusives that play well with their targeted audiences. And for marketers who are increasingly comfortable with spending money on blogs, advertising with these opinion leaders provides instant cachet.

Think of these as the digital version of potent, passionate trade press writers. They swarm every novelty in areas like tech, creating problems and buzz for companies and innovations. They report news and publish it alongside analysis of newspaper stories and company releases. These posts are salted with strong doses of personality, sparking discussions across the Web. By melding their own insights and opinions with the aggregated views of others, they're starting to gain leverage. "In a time-starved world, people—especially decision-makers—have very little time, but do not want to miss being in the know," says Rishad Tobaccowala, chief innovation officer at advertising firm Publicis Groupe Media.

» Business Week

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