Posts tagged disqus
Comment Portability: The Commenting Standard of the Future
27Disqus, IntenseDebate, and SezWho. 3 commenting systems that currently don’t work together, but here’s how they could.
Testing Disqus Trackbacks vs WordPress Trackbacks
27The Case for Distributed Conversations
http://www.scribkin.com/2008/06/18/trackback-this/
http://scribkin.disqus.com/trackback_this/trackback/
Pinged these URLs:
- http://www.sheysmith.com/2008/06/17/download-firefox-3-today/
- http://www.sheysmith.com/2008/06/13/to-comment-or-not-to-comment/
- http://www.sheysmith.com/2008/05/29/the-case-for-distributed-conversations/
- http://introspectivesnapshots.disqus.com/testing_disqus_trackbacks_vs_wordpress_trackbacks/trackback/
- http://introspectivesnapshots.disqus.com/download_firefox_3_today_84/trackback/
- http://www.sheysmith.com/2008/06/01/social-media-in-plain-english/
- http://introspectivesnapshots.disqus.com/friendfeed_stats_may_30_2008_11/trackback/
- http://www.scribkin.com/2008/06/18/trackback-this/
- http://scribkin.disqus.com/trackback_this/trackback/
To Comment or Not to Comment
17
Just when you thought this topic was dead, I’m here to drudge it back up again. I’ve attempted to analyze my commenting behaviour; I want to explain the situations in which I’m more likely to comment on original blog posts versus on FriendFeed.
The Case For Distributed Conversations
14
A lot is still being made of the discussions happening in FriendFeed that some feel should belong on the actual post. Recently, the discussion over "fragmented comments" has been revived in posts from Fred Wilson, Matthew Ingram, and Allen Stern. Allen suggests that when FriendFeeders see the content, they should go back to the original post, comment there, and then have their comment pulled back into FriendFeed. I still don’t agree with centralizing comments on the blog post or any one place, and here’s why:
YackTrack: A Tool To Quiet Bloggers’ Whining About Distributed Comments?
6
YackTrack is the next step in the evolution of the conversation.
I just read about this on Regular Geek via Corvida and Rob Diana. The service allows you too see comments on your post across a variety of services including Digg, Disqus, FriendFeed, Mixx, StumbleUpon, Technorati, and WordPress blogs, with plans for expansion.
