I’ve posted podcast #157 to the “RobCasts” section of the site. It’s called The Personal Finance Blogosphere Can Save Us or Ruin Us.
Blog authors are not part of The Stock-Selling Industry. So they are free to tell the straight story about how stock investing works, right?
Sometimes yes, sometimes no.


A new community member named Larry Weber last night asked a good question about Valuation-Informed Indexing on an earlier blog entry thread:
http://arichlife.passionsaving.com/2009/07/28/bogle-says-valuation-informed-indexing-can-work/
Rob
Rob,
I enjoyed this walk through of the various sites.
I was not familiar with the term “Carnival.” Is that unique to one site or is it a general internet term that I just have not picked up?
Have fun.
John Walter Russell
“Carnival” is a blogging term.
Different bloggers set up different “carnivals.” There might be a “Frugality Carnival” and a “Early Retirement Carnival” and a Personal Finance Tips Carnival.”
Bloggers with recent articles on those themes submit them to the owner of the carnival and he compiles one long blog entry providing links to all of the entries submitted that he finds suitable. The carnival might come out once per week or something like that. Readers get access to lots of blog entries in a single place. It’s a way for new blogs to get a little recognition because people who wouldn’t know about the new blogs see them in the carnival and then bookmark them and come to follow them regularly.
Here’s a weekly carnival done at the “Political Calculation” blog (I like this one more than some others because it is more selective):
http://politicalcalculations.blogspot.com/2009/09/on-moneyed-midways-september-25-2009.html
Rob