In March, Yahoo introduced in limited beta a service called Yahoo 360 whose concept and design are similar to MSN Spaces.
This service comes as no surprise, because Yahoo, like Microsoft's MSN, has a wide variety of online services with which to
surround its blogging service. As two leading Web portals, MSN and Yahoo have an amount and variety of online services under
one roof that few others can rival, and blogging is something they're weaving into their overall fabric.
This clashes with the philosophy of most original blogging services, including Blogger, which Google acquired in 2003 after
it had become popular. Services such as Blogger offer basic blogging functionality but also tend to be open, flexible platforms
that tech-savvy users can extend, build upon, and integrate with third-party services.
"I personally get a little overwhelmed when there are so many things to choose from, and so many different fields, and it's
so loud, and it's asking me so many different questions at once," says Biz Stone, Blogger senior specialist.
"I got into blogging because it was this blank box and I could type a thought into there and press a button. For me that's
almost enough," Stone adds.
For example, Blogger to date has no native way for users to control access to their blogs, nor does it feature native image
uploading, two capabilities core to MSN Spaces and Yahoo 360.
"Once you create [an access controlled] blog and you bring your instant messaging and music playlist and pictures into it,
you wind up with something that is very powerful but that I would argue is not a blog," says Gartner's Weiner. "I would call
it a community content site, and it will be extremely popular, but it is definitely a variant" on the conventional blog concept.
In April, when MSN Spaces exited its beta period, it was already among the most popular blogging sites in the U.S. based on
stats indicating 2.87 million unique visitors, according to market researcher comScore Networks.
MSN Spaces was topped only by blogging stalwarts. Google's Blogger and its accompanying Blogspot hosting site together drew
12.63 million unique visitors, followed by Six Apart's Typepad and LiveJournal services, which together rang up 11.47 million,
and by Xanga.com with 8.26 million.
Microsoft makes no apologies for adopting a different approach. "When you thought of a blogger a year ago, it was someone
writing a blog that they wanted to disseminate to anyone in the entire world. Now we're seeing blogging entering the more
mainstream consumer space, and people are using it to share with a closer, tighter circle of people," MSN's Richardson says.
Surrounding MSN Spaces natively with a variety of vehicles to share and communicate with others helps draw people who may
have avoided blogging out of fear it would require them to generate a large amount of text to post on a daily basis, Richardson
said.
The tradeoff for services such as MSN Spaces that come with native integration of a variety of features and capabilities is
that they can be less flexible and extensible than a service such as Blogger.