Commenting to 17 Bloggers

Despite top 10 prediction lists for 2010 and Christmas content bogging up the intertubes over the past seven days, my eyes wandered over many fine blog posts and commented on a fair number of them.

For my second installment of Satisfying Saturday, I share a selection of online eyeball candy from numerous bloggers who inspired me to add a comment over the past week:

Dave Doolin: Why your blog may fail
Dragan Mestrovic: What every blogger should know
Adriel Hampton: How to write a viral blog post
Kirsten Wright: Where to find new blogs to read
Peter Kim: Thoughts on blogging
Matt Stigliano: Why sharing where you are is good
Stephen Hale: Why websites are less important today
Rachel Levy: How to create a Twitter name
Jay Baer: How to think about social media
Lisa Barone: Distinguising brand from reputation
Wil Wheaton How our lives are different
Chris Brogan: Do what you need to do today
Dennis Howlett: How cloud computing confuses people
Steve Radick: Why Santa Claus is tracked online
Estaban Kolsky: Buzzwords that deserve to die in 2010
Doug Haslam: Buzzwords that will never die online
Kate Carruthers: Business predictions for 2010

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About Ari Herzog

Ari Herzog teaches digital marketing and is available to speak to you or your organization. He is looking for a full-time position in communications. Connect with him on LinkedIn and Twitter.

Comments

  1. Thanks for dropping by, Ari, and for featuring my post! It’s great to see that so many bloggers used the holidays to keep pushing out useful original content.

  2. I ussually relax on saturdays from commenting, but look like I need to spend a little time or I will miss out on some great content.
    .-= New from John Paul Aguiar: Happy Holidays and My Personal Thank You =-.

  3. Ari,

    Brian Solis wrote an interesting piece on “The Predictive Web”

    “Good friend Jeremiah Owyang recently wondered whether or not the real-time Web was fast enough to keep pace with our insatiable appetites for information and connectivity. As such, Jeremiah introduced the emergence of what he refers to as the “Intention Web.””

    http://www.briansolis.com/2010/01/the-predictive-web/

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