I like the blog idea for a newsletter. The existing page that Russ
directs us to could easily be reproduced as a sidebar on the front
page of the blog site, while the main space could be used for
announcements and interesting current items. The blog makes it easy
for people to comment on any of these posts. It's true that the
formerly current items and announcements sink down, but they are quite
easy to retrieve through the archives of the site - typically through
an archive index or a search box, which also appear in the blog sidebar.
So to answer Russ' question - I would say that the blog offers at
least two things:
1. An easy means to indicate the newest additions to the site,
2. An easy means to comment on items on the site.
It is also possible to use RSS with the blog so that one knows anytime
a new item has been added to the site.
ron
Ron Sheese
Department of Psychology, and
Chair, Writing Department
York University
Toronto
On Jun 9, 2011, at 8:36 AM, Russ Hunt wrote:
> It's not clear to me what a blog (e.g., Wordpress) offers that
> we don't already have here:
>
> http://inkshed.ca/
>
> (Leaving aside the fact that inkshed.ca was never actually
> designed visually, but assembled by someone who only deals with
> text.)
>
> I'm especially interested in making sure that the archive of
> Inkshed Newsletters remains accessible (and I'd be even more
> interested in making the scanned pdfs from 1982-94 more
> accessible). My understanding of FB and blogs suggests that the
> past sinks inexorably down into oblivion . . . but I've been
> wrong before.
>
> -- Russ
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