Skip to content

Results for: pinoy bloggers community

August 10, 2007

Wash, rinse and repeat…

They say that if you have a proven and tested way of solving things, get on with it and don’t deviate from the usual approach. But what if that doesn’t solve it? Well, think outside the box. Just don’t re-invent the wheel.

See more tidbits after the jump.

Continue Reading

April 15, 2007

5 reasons why you won’t see me on Twitter

For the still uninitiated, Twitter.com is a global community of friends and strangers answering one simple question: What are you doing? In really simple terms, it’s micro-blogging on multiple platforms – the web, your phone or on your IM. So, while a lot of friends and fellow bloggers have already jumped into the bandwagon, and though I sometimes enjoy their twittering, here’s are five reasons why I haven’t joined the fray.
Twitter

  1. It’s so like blogging in 1999 all over again. I think I’ve already got past that stage. When I started HTML blogging (meaning I manually code my post/entries) in late 2000, I was already doing the Twitter one-liners. So, how does my Twitter page looked like in April 2003? (see image on the right.)
  2. I’m always invisible (or offline) in all my Instant Messengers. Why would I want to be visible on Twitter? I don’t even respond to emails and text messages on time (talk about a day late!)
  3. I don’t like to be watched. I look at Twitter and I remember Pinoy Big Brother. Something to do with voyeurism. :D
  4. I don’t have enough time. I can’t even write on all my other group blogs regularly. It could also take away my focus on my own personal blog.
  5. Imagine Twittering on your phone. It could get really expensive.

Now, that doesn’t mean you won’t ever see me on Twitter. With the right conditions, I… just… might.

April 01, 2007

Congratulations to all the PBA ’07 Winners

Today marks the day when we bring blogging into a new level in the Philippines. We will show everyone that we are serious about blogging. That our growth is only matched by our desire to create a unique online identity; our maturity is moved by creativity and the drive to push meaningful content; our credibility is carried by our passion to be heard, to engage and to be counted. The Philippine Blog Awards recognizes this growth and, hopefully, had help spread the word virally. (In short, I hope everybody got more links, more traffic and more subscribers to their blogs!)

I’d like to personally thank everyone who made this event a success. I’m writing it here now if ever I fail to meet and greet everyone tonight.

Our Sponsors
We’ve got tons of them and we’re so glad with the amount of response and press we got for this event. It sure is a hell bigger/grander than what we originally imagined it to be.

Our Volunteers
I’d say I’ve never met a bunch of bloggers as ecstatic, selfless, and hard-working as our team of event volunteers. Without them, I don’t think we could have made it this far nor will I ever know the meaning of ingress & egress.

Our Judges
They’re a busy bunch and we know it’s really darn hard to judge equally talented and active bloggers. We’re all glad they’ve spared their precious time and help us pick the best blogs in their respective niches.

The Filipino Blogging Community
It goes without saying that this event is for all of us Pinoy bloggers. This event is not just about the best blogs out there. This event is a way of celebrating our presence in cyberspace. May we all kick some more butts! ;)

January 06, 2007

Call for Sponsors: Blog Parteeh ’07

During our last Blogger Christmas Meetup we decided to push ahead with the New Year’s party for bloggers this January. I couldn’t make myself to call it a BlogCon 2007 for so many reasons but the main thing is that its too early for a BlogCon. So, we ended up thinking for a new name for this event.

Several bloggers who attended last December’s meetup were willing to help out as part of the Steering Committee and I’m glad to see a lot of hands raised to assist in organizing this party. For me, it’s a true sign that there’s a real community in our little corner of blogosphere. We will need more people to help out though considering it’s just a bloggers’ party for bloggers (or a blog networking night whichever you want to call it).

The most important part, which is what I’ve been rushing lately, is to get sponsors for the party and I’m also glad a lot of people (bloggers and independent publishers alike) were willing to shell out they hard-earn moolah to make this a reality.

Here’s the not-so-complete details thus far:

Blog Parteeh! 2007
Saturday, January 27, 2007
4:00PM to 10:PM
Venue: TBA

We’re now looking for more sponsors but here’s the list of pledges that we have so far:

Cash Sponsors

Donations & Raffle Prizes

Those interested in sponsoring the event may contact me at abeolandres {at} gmail {dot} com. I will outline the blog mileage you’ll get by becoming a sponsor. Donations and items for raffle prizes are also welcome.

Volunteers for the Steering Committee will have a meeting in Makati on Saturday, Jan 13, 2006 at Starbucks Greenbelt 3. If you want to become a volunteer to help out in logistics, program, marketing and welcoming committee, email me and I will connect you to the team leads (Jayvee, Noel, Gail, Carlo, Kiven, Jomar, Jun, Rico, etc. — will complete this list with their roles later.)

More details on the party itself in the coming days. We’ll put up a dedicated blog for it if needed be.

March 21, 2006

Just how many are we?

Every once in a while (esp. during interviews), I have been asked for a guesstimate of the number of Filipino bloggers.

The closest representation of this number would be the registered members of PinoyBlog in the last two years — 2,915. Add that to the total number of blogs tracked in PinoyTopBlogs which numbered 1,188. Then, let’s assume that only 10% of those numbers have cross-membership. We still end up with a count close to 4,000.

Now, that’s not everybody yet.

How about we say that this population is representative of the 10% of total bloggers out there? Would that be a fair guesstimate? That would bring the total Filipino blogging population to 40,000. I think that’s a sizable number already but I doubt we’re really that many.

LiveJournal puts the number of members from the Philippines at 31,881 (6th most popular by country). However, of the total 9,807,917 LiveJournal members, only 1,996,009 are “active in some way” according to their stats. That’s just 20.3% and if we apply that to the Philippine stats, we end up with 6,500 active LJ users.

I’ve also been given insider info that there are around 1,700 i.PH users as of December last year. If we add all that data, we have somewhere in the vicinity of 12,000 bloggers. What we’re missing here are Friendster blogs which I believe could significantly increase the total.

This is where the grey line starts actually. How do we qualify who are active bloggers from those who no longer blogs? A month? Three months? When does the “i’m a blogger” tag expires?

This is one reason why I’ve been putting up dozens of pinoy-focused community blog projects; hoping to get some sort of platform to measure the reach and accessibility (thru some sort of a formula using the 6-degrees of separation) of Pinoy blogs. Maybe, the day will come when we could actually say a good ballpark figure of the Filipino blogging population. Until then, on with the projects.

February 02, 2006

Pinoy BigBrother Fantasy Game

I remember several suggestions before that I could use PinoyBigBlogger.com as some sort of an online contest akin to the popular reality TV show, PBB. I thought it was a novel idea but for months now, I couldn’t think of a good way to implement it.

Continue Reading

January 10, 2006

Rethinking PinoyBlog

In the last year that we’ve been running The Philippines According to Blogs (PinyoBlog), we’ve aggregated over 15,000 entries from 2,640 Pinoy blog members.

Until today, the idea was to allow bloggers to re-publish a summary/excerpt of their blog entry into PinoyBlog and give more exposure from readers and fellow bloggers, especially the less known ones. Submission is time-bound so it’s a first comes, first served basis.

It was good and we’re getting more people joining PinoyBlog. Lately however, we’ve been contemplating on re-hashing the idea of having to just aggregate blogs. (It’s not even automated.) I was thinking of something more useful and more community-driven. Much like Digg.com with a twist. If you have a good blog entry or if you post a breaking blog news, the community will push your entry to the top and allow you to stay there for the week.

We will retain the first come, first serve idea but we would like to add some other way for people to discover and read blogs. Then, there’s the execution part.

I’d like to hear some of your feedback on how PinoyBlog could better serve the Filipino bloggers. :)

November 06, 2005

Insider tips to PinoyBlog’s “Blog of the Week”

I get an email or two once in a while from bloggers wanting their blogs to be featured in PinoyBlog. Likewise, a feedback or two arrives in my Inbox asking if we could review or blog about a certain site or service in Pinoy.Tech.Blog. With PTB, it’s as simple as forwarding the topic to the contributors and hope that one of them likes to blog about it. Most of the time, we pass up on it.

With PinoyBlog, it’s a different thing altogether. See it’s only Connie and I that’s doing alternate check-ups on recently updated entries in PinoyBlog and see which one we like to be featured next.

Here’s an insider tip from me (and I’m sure Connie will laugh at me for posting this one) :

  • Post an update of your blog in PinoyBlog. More than half the time, we feature those who are diligently and regularly posting an update. It’s the easiest way to be spotted.
  • Get to know Yuga & Connie (hahaha!). Obvious ba? We’ll leave it up to you how we notice or spot your blog.
  • Write regularly. We sometimes spot really nice blogs that we’d like to fetaure but if their last post was still a month ago, we skip it.
  • Write really well. Write really funny. Write really scary. Just write!
  • Read the PinoyBlog rules and never break them. We hate those who make sticky posts. I hate it when people don’t double check if their new entry breaks up the css layout of PinoyBlog. It’s a watse of my time which could have been well spent doing a feature of your blog.
  • Don’t be a copycat. Connie hates it when someone copies her content and does not credit her. Be sure to be on her black list if you do.
  • Be humble. If you claim you get lots of traffic and always be on top of search results for this and that, then we think you don’t really need an extra boost in traffic.

Our original goal for The Philippines According to Blogs was to drive traffic down to the individual pinoy blogs for them to get noticed and get involved in the blogging community. A lot of bloggers have told me that they get as much as three to five times their regular traffic when we feature them for the week and I’m really glad about that.

August 04, 2005

The Philippines According to Blogs turns 1.

Today a year ago, Connie and I embarked on a new venture to popularize the Philippine Blogging Community. My original plan for PinoyBlog which I initiated in 2002 got sidelined to make way for a manually aggregated Pinoy Blog Portal. Connie’s pet project, The Philippines According to Blogs got a new home and a spanking new site.

I can still remember that day when it all started. Connie and I were emailing several key bloggers then to meet-up and form the team to establish the portal. The idea was simple and doable but we thought we needed more hands. On the day of the meet-up, it was just me and Connie (along with her husband and kids) at the Starbucks in Emerald Avenue, Ortigas. We were very anxious and had a lot of things in mind. She had already started the project from her site for several weeks and all we needed was to properly (or commercially) deliver it to take the form of a blogging community. the By August 4, we were already aggregating blogs left and right.

A year later, thousands of pinoy bloggers, and millions of pageviews later I now realized that my original intentions did not go far from what it is now — to make the Filipino blogger be heard and recognized.

The year went past so swiftly. I am glad at what we have accomplished here and I am sure there will be more milestones to reach.

August 02, 2005

The Philippines According to Blogs

Blogging is slowly becoming a popular alternative to mainstream media. Even mainstream media has already recognized blogging as a tool for gathering news while others even use blog entries to quote interviews in their news articles. The social phenomenon that is blogging has already made a significant change on how information is disseminated thru the internet.

Before we begin to examine the usual signs how blogging has crept into the arena of mainstream media, we need to understand what blogging is and how it came about.

A blog is a condensed term for weblog, commonly used to describe web sites that maintain an ongoing chronicle of information. Blogs range from the personal, technical, informational to the political, and can focus on one specific subject matter or a whole range of subjects.
Many blogs focus on a particular topic, such as “web design”, “politics”, “sports”, or “mobile technology”. Some are more eclectic, presenting links to all nature of other sites. And others are more like personal journals, presenting someone’s daily life and thoughts which most of them started off first.
Blogs have been around almost as internet was introduced in the Philippines in the early parts of 1995. During those times, the early bloggers didn’t have a name for what they were doing besides calling it a personal website or an online journal.

Back then, if you want to have your own blog, you’d have to learn the basics of HTML and a little bit of the technical aspects like FTP (File Transfer Protocol). Besides that, when one has to publish or update their site, it was done manually – editing the pages, adding links and pictures and then uploading the affected files or webpages. It was a tedious and time-consuming effort, added to that the scarcity of internet connectivity, updating a website or blog takes a great deal of effort and patience. Thus, the frequency of updates was scarce and nowhere near with what we enjoy today. Now, there are blogging tools and services which allow almost anyone who has internet connection to create their own blog in a matter of minutes.

Blogging became so phenomenal because of its viral effect – linking other related blogs, pointing to online sources and digging deep into the issue with a personal touch. It has democratized people thru the internet and allowed regular folks to express their own thoughts and opinions without censor or editorial filters which all professional journalists have go to thru before getting published. In a way, blogging is instant news delivered with a touch of personal opinion.

Blogs will not depose mainstream media, rather it will add to it. News media, despite it’s inherent credibility is still more often than not, bland and too objective. What blogs offer is a taste of personalized news coupled with reader interaction – something which traditional media lack.

In the Philippines, blogging has just begun, yet we now have several prominent people who use blogging as a tool to reach their audience and to freely express themselves.

Comm. Dondi Mapa of the CICT could probably be the first high-ranking government official to put up a public blog (http://1mjobs.blogspot.com). His blog aims to reach the relevant sectors and the general public to the importance of CICT in in generating jobs. The blog allows direct interaction with the readers and Comm. Mapa likewise gets suggestions and comments direct from his readers and the general public.

There is also a blog entitled “Philippine Debt Management Issues” (http://lowerphildebt.blogspot.com) which was published by former Philippine Treasurer, Nina Lasala. Her blog was meant to server as an open forum for investors, fellow finance officers, and other interested parties to discuss the state of Philippine Debt Management.

One of the most popular Filipino blogs today is HouseonaHill.net (www.houseonahill.net) of Connie Veneracion, a retired lawyer now currently staying at home and working full time with her blogs. Her blog topics spread from photography to politics. She also runs a cooking blog at PinoyCook.net which has been popular with a lot of OFWs around the world.

Dean Francis Alfar, a seven time Carlos Palanca Awardee, also runs his own personal and literary blog called “Notes from the Peranut Gallery” (deanalfar.blogspot.com). Jim Paredes of the Apo Hiking Society has been blogging since November 2003. His blog is entitled “Writing on Air” (http://haringliwanag.pansitan.net/).

Former Inquirer columnist Dean Jorge Bacobo was the first Filipino journalist who started to blog (deanjorgebocobo.blogspot.com) though he has not been publishing anything on his blog for a while now. Joey Ararilla (http://babelmachine.blogspot.com/) of Inq7.net now holds that spot. Manuel L. Quezon III, also a columnist of Inquirer and curator of the Ayala Museum, also has a blog at www.quezon.ph/blog as well as technology columnist Chin Wong (hwww.info.com.ph/~chinwong/) of the Manila Standard (www.manilastandardonline.com).

Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ) has also recently put up their very own blog at www.pcij.com/blog. For some months now, Inq7.net (www.inq7.net) has been maintaining a blog-hybrid on their news website, entitled “Talking Points”. They also ran a section featuring interviews with regular bloggers, YOU Blog Addict (http://you.inq7.net/gear/index.htm), and another one for HackenSlash (www.hackenslash.net/gameblog/), the game blog. Likewise, Manila Bulletin Online (www.mb.com.ph) also created a feature in their Technology section specifically for blogging and Filipino bloggers called “Blog-O-Rama”.

The blog portal “The Philippines According to Blogs” (www.pinoyblog.com) is a collaborative blog that aims to serve as a starting point for any Filipino blogger and even regular blog readers to explore the Philippine blogging scene. The PinoyBlog portal enables regular blog members to re-publish a short summary of their entries with links pointing back to their own blog site. Likewise, casual readers will only need to browse to one site, read the summaries and click on the entries which interest them. This blog aggregation service is what converges the bloggers and their readers in the portal which in turn creates the blog community.

Last May 7, 2005, the 1st Philippine Blog Summit (www.iblogph.org) was held at the NISMED Center of UP Diliman. Over 150 bloggers and blog enthusiasts attended the summit which was covered by news media GMA 7 and ABC 5. This event initiated the evangelization of blogging in all sectors of society. Prominent speakers and presentors at the summit included Comm. Dondi Mapa, Dean Alfar, the delegates from Philippine Center for Investigative Journalism (PCIJ).

Though blogging is still in it’s infancy in the Philippines, we may someday find more and more people, especially those from the government sector, to use weblogs as a tool to reach their constituents. Presidential candidates in the recent US elections have their own blogs that acts as a marketing tool and a portal to for their constituents during the election period. Who knows, maybe some time in the near future, the President of the Philippines will also have a blog of her own?

August 02, 2005

Tracing Back the Philippine’s Blogging History

Blogs have been around almost as internet was introduced in the Philippines in the early parts of 1995. During those times, the early bloggers didn’t have name for what they were doing besides calling it a personal website or an online journal.

Back then, if you want to have your own blog, you’d have to learn the basics of HTML and a little bit of the technical aspects like FTP (File Transfer Protocol). Besides that, when one has to publish or update their site, it was done manually – editing the pages, adding links and pictures and then uploading the affected files or webpages. It was a tedious and time-consuming effort, added to that the scarcity of internet connectivity, updating a website or blog takes a great deal of effort and patience. Thus, the frequency of updates was scarce and nowhere near with what we enjoy today.

Though there is no accurate and definite way of determining the timeline of blogging in the Philippines, it is a great help that Internet Archives’ The Wayback Machine (http://web.archive.org/) is able to recover websites and blogs from way back in 1996. Thru the Wayback Machine, we can verify the existence of blogs from 1996 up until today.

The record for oldest and probably the first blog that ever existed (which was created and maintained by a Filipino) is currently held by Lauren Dado. She was only 10 years old then. Her online journal (http://www.worldkids.net/kids/lauren/journal) was first published online on December of 1996, almost 9 years ago. The Wayback Machine was only able to archive Lauren’s online journal from October 1997 but her very first entry was dated on December 22, 1996. It is still up until now though she has a new blog site at nimrodel.net.

The term “weblog” was coined by Jorn Barger in December 1997. The shorter version, “blog,” was coined by Peter Merholz, who, in April or May of 1999, broke the word weblog into the phrase “we blog” in the sidebar of his weblog (http://www.peterme.com/archives/00000205.html). This was interpreted as a short form of the noun (http://www.bradlands.com/weblog/1999-09.shtml#September%2010,%201999) and also as a verb, to blog, meaning “to edit one’s weblog or a post to one’s weblog.”

It was only in 1999 that the usage of the term blog spread and became popular. It was also the same year that Blogger.com launched its hosted blog tools providing one-click publishing for bloggers and run their blogs on BlogSpot.com. A few months earlier, LiveJournal (or more commonly referred to as LJ) also launched their online journal service catering to students and friends. It was only then that blogging became an online fad, with anyone having internet connection can create a Blogger or LJ account and publish their own blog in a matter of minutes. Pinoy bloggers started to get noticed.

In late 1999, the IndayWorks.com (Inday@unforgettable.com) was the first blog site that won the People’s Choice Award (under Family & Personals category) of the 2nd Philippine Web Awards. The regularly updated (and dated) content of her site was the very recipe why her blog was voted as most popular site. Though it did not provide any commenting system, her guestbook and forum became the avenue for feedback and comments from her regular visitors. The site went to win again the following year and in 2002, under the same category.

In October 2002, PinoyBlog (www.pinoyblog.com) was launched to provide online resources to bloggers. The site offered custom-made blog scripts (plogBox, plogBack and plogCount) with commenting along with a hosted shoutbox. PinoyBlog was the first one to initiate a blogger community thru it forums which numbered about 236 by December 2003.

The first local full-service Filipino blog hosting was offered by plogHost (www.ploghost.com) on January 2003. Though there were already several other local web hosts existing during that time, plogHost was the one who pushed for the hosted blogs thru it’s auto-installer scripts for b2, and later on extended it to other blog CMS like WordPress, Drupal, TextPattern and Nucleus. Several other local web host followed suit offerring from free to paid blog hosting services.

By February 2003, Philippine Blog Awards (www.philippineblogawards.com) was put up to recognized Filipino bloggers. A similar awards site, Philippine WeBlog Awards (www.philippineweblogawards.com), was launched on May that year. Only the Philippine Blog Awards continue to exist and is now on its 3rd year of awarding and recognizing blog sites.

In January 2004, the HouseonaHill.net (Connie Venaracion) was the first Filipino blog that was nominated and eventually made it to the finals of the 4th Bloggie™ Awards (http://www.fairvue.com/bloggies/) under the Best Asian Weblog category. The Bloggies™ are publicly-chosen awards given to weblog writers and those related to weblogs in 30 categories. Started in 2001 by Nikolai Nolan, it’s now the biggest and most popular blog awards in terms of prestige, coverage and community participation. Connie did not win the award but now holds the undeniable title of most popular Pinoy blogger with her cummulative blogs getting a quarter of a million pageviews and over 1 million hits every month.

In August of 2004, The Philippines According to Blogs project was re-launched at PinoyBlog (www.pinoyblog.com) which now serves as the first and only blog community portal with over 1,500 pinoy blog members. Two months later in October, Inq7.net launched their own blog, entitled Talking Points. It drew much attention from bloggers which raised the question as to what technically constitutes a real blog.

The following month, November 2004, i.PH (www.i.ph) was launched primarily as a low-cost personalized domain name integrated into a blogging system called Calliope. This was the first time a local company introduced a customized blog product and hosting service both for free and paid.

In March 2005, Manila Bulletin (www.mb.com.ph) also launched Blog-O-Rama for both their online website and their Sunday technology edition. The column is handled by Annalyn Jusay (www.annalyn.net) which features articles and interviews about Pinoy blogs and bloggers both local and abroad.

The latest historical event in the Philippine blogging scene was the recently concluded 1st Philippine Blogging Summit (www.iblogph.org) held at the UP Diliman last May 7, 2005. It was organized by Internet Society Program (ISP) of the U.P. College of Law, headed by Atty. JJ Disini (disini.i.ph). With over 150 participant bloggers and blog enthusiasts, the event aimed to spread awareness of blogging and it’s socio-political relevance in the country. Guest speakers included famous bloggers like Dean Alfar(deanalfar.blogspot.com) and Comm. Dondi Mapa (1mjobs.blogspot.com) of the CICT.

In the last couple of years, the pinoy blogging community grew from a few hundreds to a couple of thousands. This is good indication that this geometrical growth will bring blogging almost at par with mainstream media. Blogging is still in it’s infancy in the Philippines but recent developments show that it has potential to grow and revolutionize our medium of communication, and probably influence Philippine society.

July 19, 2005

Pinoy Top Blogs

This page will serve as an ad-hoc blog for the Pinoy Top Blogs Project.

What do we hope to accomplish with all these?

Well this is a two-pronged project and I hope most of the pinoy bloggers would agree with me on these points.

For Individual Bloggers:

  • Provide an independent public metric system to compare blog traffic among fellow pinoy bloggers.
  • Enable a feedback system independent of the individual blogs.
  • Promotion and additional exposure.
  • Independently verified bragging rights. :D

For the Blogging Community:

  • We can show everyone that the pinoy blogging community has the numbers and traffic.
  • Enable us to collect verifiable metrics to profile the average pinoy blogger.
  • Provides an avenue for commercial exposure and potential local revenue for bloggers. (under study)

What you need to do to be included and tracked by the system?

You need to register first, then add your sites. You can have as many as 10 blogs as entries to the system. Generate the HTML code to paste in your blog. Remember, that only pages that have the code will be tracked so it is possible that your own stats will differ with our published stats.

On the technical side, here are some explanations about the rankings.

  • Rankings are based on unique hits or visitors. This is tracked by the system using the IP and the cookie. The same goes for voting or ranking a blog.
  • Rankings are refreshed back to zero on midnight at the end of each month. This will allow potentially popular blogs that have only been included later have the chance to get on top of the list. Thus, the time you joined the system will not be a factor in your rating.
  • Rankings will monitor all blogs but will only display the rankings of the Top 100.
  • Ranking cycle at the moment is set monthly. Once the number grows, we can reduce it down to a weekly reset.
  • All blogs are allowed a banner of 234 x 30 pixels to be displayed along with the listing. Maximum file size is 30 KB.

What do these stats mean?

Votes – number of votes made by the public by clicking the PinoyTopBlogs button from your blog. This is refreshed monthly.
Total Votes – total number of votes made by the public by clicking the PinoyTopBlogs button from your blog.

Unique Hits Today – number of unique visitors on your blog for the month cycle.
Hits Today – number of (non-unique) visits on your blog for the month cycle.
Total Hits – total number of (non-unique) visits on your blog for the month cycle.
Total Unique Hits – total number of unique visitors on your blog since start of tracking.

Out – referrals from PinoyTopBlogs to your blog. Refreshed monthly.
Total Out – total referrals from PinoyTopBlogs to your blog.

Rating – blog rating made by the public on your blog.

For private communication, email me at abeolandres@gmail.com.

Thanks,
Abe Olandres

May 06, 2005

1st Phil. Blogging Summit

Tomorrow is the day every pinoy blogger (and would-be bloggers) have been waiting for — the 1st Philippine Blogging Summit. I will be there as a speaker and will discuss about the basics of blogging and some other interesting topics.

About 300 people have signed up for this event and I believe this is the biggest gathering so far in the pinoy blogging community. Likewise, I will be meeting a lot of people whom I’ve known in the blogosphere but have not had a chance to meet face to face – Prem, Markku, JonLao, Rain, Tala, Ederic, Carlos, Mickey, and still more that I have already met and knew for years.

Everybody will be blogging about it live from event center at NISMED. See you all there!

Note to self: Finish my presentation outline and materials for the seminar.