Friday, May 25, 2007

What Makes a Great Oracle Blog?

Along the side of my page, you'll see my favourite Oracle blogs listed. I carefully maintain this list of fellow enthusiasts whose opinions and insights I most especially want to follow among the seemingly hundreds of Oracle blogs that are out there. Studying them, I think you'll find that each of them share the same core qualities listed below.

1. Accuracy

Accuracy is an absolute must. Just because its an informal blog from an independent individual shouldn't relieve it from the same standard of accuracy that you'd find in a paper published by Oracle themselves.

For just one example, consider Jonathan Lewis' blog, and his track record of reliable solutions. But you don't have to be a guru to be accurate! Indeed, if your articles are targetted to novices, that's even more reason why you should make sure everything you write is fully tested and error-free, right?

2. Relevance

The occasional off-topic article can be a pleasant change of pace, as can writing about some other unrelated technology. But write too many, and then nobody knows if they're going to get an insight into the performance of the MINUS operator, or something about spiders.

A great blog must consistently provide material relevant to the community. Readers can also quickly sniff out and abandon bloggers who are doing nothing more than marketing their products, their books, or their services.

By contrast, consider Pete Finnigan's blog. Each and every visit, I know I'm going to get his latest insight into Oracle security matters. Comb his articles, and I doubt you'll come across any covering the details of his hotel room at UKOUG or a rant about Wordpress.

Bear in mind, that a great Oracle article doesn't necessarily have to be technical to be relevant. For example, consider Coskan Gundogar's recent series aimed at new DBAs, and invalid DBAs, which you'll find to be not only relevant, but also thought-provoking.

3. Genuine Insight

A great Oracle blog has to be more than just a syntax reference. Some crappy blogs do nothing more than recycle someone else's work, either by linking or actually copying it, which falls anywhere between plagiarism, and a complete waste of time.

Instead, a great Oracle article is the one that shows you HOW to solve problems. It teaches you a new approach to using Oracle technology. Among my favourites are the articles that provide insights that I couldn't find anywhere else, and that I'm not likely to have experienced or figured out on my own.

The blogs that compose the list on the side are replete with examples, but consider Andrew "Arfur C" Clarke, and his recent post on the INSERT ALL syntax. His article, which was built on Pythian article about multi-table inserts, guides us through his thinking (with examples), all the way to his neat solution.

4. Readability

Oracle is very complex technology. Some people think that they are impressing everyone by showing how they're capable of coming up with sophisticated and complex solutions. What a load of crap. Anyone can do that, and no one wants to read about it. A great Oracle blog, by contrast, can take a complicated problem and make it look so easy and simple that even Shrek can understand it.

A great Oracle blog uses easy, simple, every day language, and remembers that not all its readers enjoy English as their first language. These blogs rarely forget to explain and define all the acronyms, abbreviations and industry terms used.

As just one example, consider Lewis Cunningham's latest article about implicit vs explicit conversion. A big part of Lewis' popularity is his ability to present his ideas in clear, plain language accessible to readers of all levels. Notice as well that his articles deliver specific, relevant, useful Oracle insights.

5. Posting Frequently

A great blog doesn't need to have a new article each and every day, but if there isn't new material of some kind of regular basis, people may assume its been abandoned. Blogging on a regular basis allows people to become familiar and comfortable with its style and approach, and look forward to its perspective on future topics.

Like most readers, I only have the time to regularly follow a limited numbers of blogs (in my case, up to 20). How many of my favourite blogs did I have to stop following because the author stopped blogging regularly? (Edit: List removed because it was easily misunderstood as criticism)

6. Concise, tested, working examples

Your article may have been accurate for your purposes, for your version, and in your environment, but what about mine? Of course I trust you, but by providing a concise, tested, working example, I can verify if your solutions are accurate for me in my world.

A great Oracle blogger knows that examples are critical for communication. Despite your best efforts, if the reader still doesn't understand the material, they at least have a working example to play with until they do. They can even use it as a basis for future research, including coming back to you with questions. If you need an example, consider Laurent Schneider, who has become famous for helping thousands by posting working solutions, both on Oracle forums and his blog.

7. Googlability.

Within a week, most people have read a newly-posted article. Then it dies off, and is usually forgotten, never to be read again. After all, how often do you find yourself browsing the archives? Never ... not when you're keeping up with all the new articles. This phenomenon is especially tragic for the great articles written by new bloggers before they become popular and/or start appearing on aggregators (for example, Don Seiler, who has maintained an excellent blog for years but was only recently added to some aggregators).

By including searchable phrases within the article and in its titles, there's a good chance that it can be picked up by Google when someone is researching that particular topic. Great articles include common search phrases, like Oracle error messages, specific commands, and popular expressions.

8. Opportunity for Discourse

A great article is one that covers an interesting topic that not only ties into the work of other bloggers, but even stimulates further discussion. All the blogs in my list allow comments, and in every case the comments are read and followed up upon.

Writing articles that generate discussions makes us more than just a collection of random observations, and into a true Oracle blogging community. It evolves us into a community with articles that build on the ideas of others, and that becomes more than just the sum of its blogs.

9. Pointers to more information

Typically the restrictions imposed by the blogging medium allows only a short look at a particular topic. Therefore, in anticipation of the thirst for more information that it stimulates, a great blog consistently directs the reader to such sources. Furthermore, this helps readers who are experiencing similar problems (but not the exact same one).

For a great example, look no further than the 2006 Oracle blogger of the year Eddie Awad. His recent article on forward declaration and mutual recursion not only contains information hard to find elsewhere, working examples, and an active discussion, but Eddie also unfailingly links to Oracle documentation.

10. Enthusiasm, and Humour

Oracle can be dry, I admit it. It can sometimes feel like a big, complex, bloated mass of three-letter initials and acronyms. That's why it's a treat to catch the humour and/or enthusiasm a colleague might have for a particular topic.

Don't forget that the most popular Oracle blog of all is undoubtedly Tom Kyte's, who is well-reknowned for both his tireless enthusiasm, and his entertaining style (and wit). As for humour, the perfect example is the Oracle WTF maintained by William Robertson et al.

But the energy doesn't necessarily have to be humourous, nor positive and uplifting. Negative, critical or cynical rants written with equal energy can be highly captivating, such as Dizwell's Howard Rogers' rants, which are the stuff of legends. (As are Tim Hall's)

Great Oracle Blogs

I would like to thank my fellow Oracle bloggers listed to the side, both past, present and future. Your insights have consistently improved my understanding, interest and appreciation for Oracle. That is certainly the hallmark of a great Oracle blog. Furthermore, you have all been a great influence in my own blog (ie THIS blog), which surely wouldn't have been this much fun to write without you.

With that in mind, I just updated my list with another great Oracle blog, that of Chris Foot. I recommend reading his latest series on his favourite features in Oracle 10g.

Comments:
ow!

mea culpa - for reasons I will blog about - mea maxima culpa.

word verification jmklbxdm a java class shortly to be introduced in EBS 12 methinks.
 
thank my fellow Oracle bloggers listed to the side

And I would like to thank you for this nice article and for being part of a growing Oracle bloggers community that is leading the Oracle online community in general.
 
How many of my favourite blogs did I have to stop following because the author stopped blogging regularly?

Well, using any RSS reader, you can still follow up blogs with one post per month/quarter without any overhead on your side so reading 10 mostly idle blogs would be just like following up one active.
 
Very nice post. This is one to bookmark. I do however, take one tiny exception to something you said under "Readability". Sometimes I like to find a complex solution even when a simple solution would suffice, provided that the complex solution demonstraits how to combine features in novel ways.
 
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Great metablog!

I too have been saddened when great posters (not just blogs) go into cloaked mode. Never know what to say, since there are so many possible reasons.
 
It was meant as praise, not criticism. I wouldn't mind decreased blogging if they weren't such fine blogs.

Yes, I still quasi-follow them all on the various RSS aggregators, but I hope I'm not too far on a limb when I say that a great Oracle blog has more than a handful of topical posts per year!
 
Yeah, I've been working to increase my frequency and, hopefully, relevance. I'm up to 1 post every 3-4 days now.
 
Good post, good timing !

I'm starting blogging again - as of yesterday in fact! Hopefully I'll keep going a little longer this time. I've got a few subjects planned to get me started.

I'm now at ...
http://oracleandy.wordpress.com/

Andrew Campbell
 
I was pleasantly surprised and humbled to see my name among others such as Sue Harper, Mogens Norgaard, Anjo Kolk, etc. I don't mind that it was in a negative sense; I agree, I don't post very often.

I guess my personal belief is only to post if I think I've got something interesting to say - which means no annoying "sorry I haven't blogged for a while" blog posts.
 
This comment has been removed by the author.
 
I also do not care if a blog post happens only once in a long while. My feed reader will let me know when there is a new post, so it would not be a problem for me to subscribe to many blogs that only posted a few times a year. Hopefully, technical bloggers, will not feel obligated to say something just because it's time. Many blogs with differing objects and publishing frequencies and skill levels are a 'good thing'. This way, there is always a chance that I will find one crappier than my own! ;-)
 
Ok does everyone at least agree I was 9 for 10? :)
 
I'd say 9.9 for 10. Hope to read more like it.
 
great post Robert and thank you for including mine too :)

Keep blogging
 
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Hi Robert,

Nice article and suggestions for new bloggers. Noted !!

Saurabh
 
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