The Indibloggies 2008 Sponsors

Do take a look at the award categories for the upcoming 2008 event. We would only be too happy if you could lend your support to this movement.

Would you like to be a part of the Indibloggies 2008 event? Please write to us with your proposal.

INDIBLOGGIES 2008 SPONSORS LINE-UP

SILVER SPONSORS

Wordpress

Books & Goodies from Hachette India

hachette-india
Hachette India would award:

  • Books worth Rs 3000 to the “Indiblog of the Year 2008″
  • Book Hampers worth Rs 1000 to the winner in each award category.
  • A copy of award-winning blogger Amit Varma’s upcoming book “My Friend Sancho” to the winner in each award category. Amit’s book will be published by Hachette India in April this year.
  • BRONZE SPONSORS

    Scrapture Trophy from Arun Verma

    Arun VermaA special “Indiblogger of the year” scrapture trophy, worth Rs 15,000, designed by Arun Verma Design Studios.

    Problogger Book

    Copies of the book “Problogger: Secrets for Blogging Your Way to a Six-Figure Income” authored by well known professional bloggers Darren Rowse and Chris Garrett. For further details on the book please visit its official website.

    Cash Awards from Zoho

    ZohoZoho would award Rs 2,000 each for the “Best Science/Technology Indiblog” & “Indiblog of the Year” categories. Zoho is a comprehensive suite of online applications (services) that you can easily access from Zoho.com.

    Blog Hosting packages from Web1

    Web1Web1 would award a Blog-hosting package (1 domain name + 1 GB webspace + Latest WordPress + 1 Professional theme worth max $25) worth Rs 6500 to the winner of the “Best Personal Indiblog” and a Blog-hosting package (1 domain name + 1 GB webspace + Latest WordPress) worth Rs 5500/- each to winners of the “Best Designed Indiblog” and “Best Travel Indiblog”.

    ThinkTweet Book by Rajesh Shetty

    ThinkTweetCopies of Think Tweet Book 1, worth $19.95 each, by Rajesh Shetty.

    Surprise Gift from Pothi.com

    Pothi.comA surprise gift to winners (in select 13 categories), worth Rs 155 each, by Pothi.com.

    OTHER SPONSORS

    AWARDS FROM THE BLOGGER COMMUNITY
  • Indian Social Aggregator India Sphere would award $30 to the winner in “Indiblog of the Year” category.
  • A copy of Complete Digital Photography, Fourth Edition (Graphics Series) by Ben Long, worth $26, for the Best Photo Blog from the food-blogger duo Jay & Bee of Jugalbandi.
  • Chetan Bhawani’s thewwwblog would award $15 in cash and a copy of the book Blog Blazers worth $17 to the “Indiblog of the Year”.
  • Cash Awards of $50 for the “Best Science/Technology Indiblog” and $50 for the “Best Designed Indiblog” from techblissonline.
  • Cash Awards of $20 for the “Best Business Indiblog” from Learn QTP.
  • Windows Vista Ultimate x64 licensed DVD worth Rs 12,000, by Anand Khanse, Microsoft MVP of winvistaclub.com for the “Best Science/Technology IndiBlog”. Update [11 Jan 2009]: Anand has informed me that his offer was time-bound (which was not agreed upon when he offered the sponsorship) and that he has given the DVD to “another deserving winner”. Indibloggies apologises to the winner Amit Agarwal for this thoroughly unprofessional behaviour of Anand.
  • Our heartfelt thanks to all the Sponsors!

    Blogging and mainstream media

    In his 2006 piece for Hum Blogistani, titled “Blogs will make MSM honest”, Peter Griffin had predicted that blogs would complement the big media, instead of competing with it. Continuing the 2007 Hum Blogistani essay series we present the second essay by Rohit Pradhan that dwells on Indian mainstream media’s perception of blogging. The mainstream media, he blames, remains unapologetically hostile to blogging, dismissing it as a passing fad and as a giant talking shop by people who seem perpetually on the offensive. He wishes that with the maturing Indian blogosphere the MSM chooses the path of cooperation rather than confrontation.

    Rohit aka Confused lives in Florida and is a doctoral student in Health Services Research. He discovered blogging through online debating forums and now blogs with the passion of a neo-convert. He is interested in Indian politics, current affairs and of course in news which can be best characterized as just plain weird. He blogs at Retributions and Life is a street car named Desire and is a contributing editor for Pragati. Rohit was also part of the Jury at Indibloggies 2006 event.

    Blogs vs MSM

    T

    he Indian media’s reaction to blogging has been marked by two divergent trends. On one hand, almost all major Indian media houses, especially television channels, have embraced blogging by hosting blogs on their site while many top journalists utilize popular blogging platform like Blogspot and WordPress. No doubt, some of the blogs are merely a placeholder for columns; nevertheless, a few of them, at least, carry genuinely interesting articles.

    Hum Blogistani!Despite this reluctant embrace, the mainstream media remains unapologetically hostile to blogging as an independent concept. Columnists in the Times of India and Outlook have dismissed blogging as a passing fad; a giant talking shop by people who have little knowledge about real India and who seem perpetually on the offensive. Leading media luminaries like Barkha Dutt have made sweeping generalizations about bloggers as if they are a monolithic voice with no disagreements or divergence of views. While bloggers would be the first to accept the importance and relevance of mainstream media (MSM), it would be hard to find an Indian journalist who would praise bloggers, even in the passing.

    The number of serious Indian bloggers can be counted in thousands, yet, it appears as if the MSM thinks that blogging is a serious threat to its future.

    Prima facie, the MSM’s unwarranted hostility to blogging is surprising. The number of serious Indian bloggers can be counted in thousands and those who comment on current affairs, MSM’s bread and butter, constitute a miniscule minority. Bloggers remain dependent on MSM for hard news and no serious blogger talks about replacing the MSM, rather, they see blogging as complementary to newspapers and television channels. Yet, it appears as if the MSM thinks that blogging is a serious threat to its future especially by a certain class of bloggers who have the temerity to comment on current affairs. MSM has many times featured personal bloggers or technology specialists, but I am yet to come across an instance when a blogger was quoted on politics, strategic affairs or economic development. An entire one hour episode of “We the People” on NDTV featured only bloggers who write about personal experiences, mainly sex, as if that is what the blogosphere is restricted to! Why?

    India has been a proud democracy since its independence in 1947. Yet, it is only in the last two decades that true democratization of Indian society has taken place. Economic reforms have increased the number of Indians able to live above subsistence levels. Old power structures have crumbled, in politics, sports, and business, replaced by those whose achievements are a nod to their hard work and ambition and not family names. Knowledge in this globalizing, modernizing India, more than at any point in her history, is power. The rapidly increasing reach of internet has challenged the traditional limits and controls placed on acquisition of knowledge. Future generations may remember Wikipedia, despite its flaws, as the largest and most successful democratic experiment in the history of humankind. Information is no longer the monopoly of the privileged or solely a function of geographic location.

    The MSM however has retained its monopoly in influencing and shaping opinions, the real source of its power and privilege. It may or may not influence electoral performance but it definitely affects public mood. Bloggers have challenged this intellectual hegemony by relentlessly questioning, probing, and critiquing journalists and columnists. In many cases, they have offered alternative stories and policy formulations. The intellectual dinosaurs who continue to cling to a set of archaic beliefs find it extremely unpalatable to be challenged by a group of passionate upstarts.

    In the high stake medium of MSM, it would be rare to find a columnist who directly challenges the ideas of a fellow journalist…Bloggers have no such inhibitions.

    In the high stake medium of MSM, it would be rare to find a columnist who directly challenges the ideas of a fellow journalist. In this cosy world, The Hindu can sell it self a liberal voice while furiously editorializing in support of the brutal and repressive Chinese regime. It is hard to imagine a Barkha Dutt or Rajdeep Sardesai or even the self-proclaimed classical liberal newspaper calling its bluff; they have plenty of skeletons of their own. Bloggers have no such inhibitions; N. Ram is not likely to be too pleased with Nitin Pai’s brilliant exposure of his intellectual dishonesty. That many such bloggers might be specialists in their own field as opposed to journalists who, at least in India, tend to be generalists simply adds to the discomfiture. It is hard to pretend to be all knowing when arguing with someone who may have years of experience in a particular field. Granted that many such critiques are over the top and the language employed may be too colorful, a fact which the MSM has cleverly exploited to dismiss the dissenters as dysfunctional ranters. Yet, the stridency of the tone cannot subtract from the message. Bloggers may not have won this battle of ideas, that has never anyway been the intention, but there is little doubt that they have mounted a serious challenge.

    As the blogosphere continues to grow and develop, the MSM faces two stark choices: It can either continue in its present state of denial or it can accept that bloggers have managed to carve their own niche and are unlikely to disappear. It is a choice between confrontation and cooperation. We can only hope that, for once, MSM would display wisdom and humility.