Many social software experts talk about mapping real world social behaviours onto online spaces. This is a bit of the reverse and shows why some (some would say many) things in Facebook just don’t work.
Author Archives: Kevin Anderson
links for 2008-04-29
-
Kevin: Will YackTrack help solve address the challenge of “conversation fragmentation in the blogosphere and … new services”.
links for 2008-04-28
-
Kevin: Great thinking from Chris Brogan (via Craig McGinty). Tips on management structure for communities as well as metrics and success criteria.
-
Kevin: Madison (Wisconsin) Cap Times stops the presses on their daily newspaper becoming an online only plus twice a week tabloid. But as Jay Rosen says: “The presses have stopped but the press goes on.”
-
Kevin: Interesting article about the Cap Times move to web plus twice weekly tabloid. One investigative journalists worries about feeding the beast, but the ‘beast’ feeds investigations by freeing up journalists. But the beast must be fed.
-
Kevin: Mark Glaser is live blogging a conference at Berkeley called “Crisis in News: Is There a Future for Investigative Reporting?” Great coverage of a conversation amongst senior media executives. Mark asks: “Are these the people who will really see
-
Kevin: When lawyers attack blogs. Thomson rolls out a blogging code of ethics as part of their merger with Reuters. Some of this makes sense such as not using a personal blog to air grievances about colleagues, but I don’t see the logic behind barring emp
Shovelware 2.0
When I started in online journalism, we struggled with aspirations that far out-stripped our resources. We were small teams passionate about creating a new medium but still dependent and subservient to legacy media – newspapers and radio and television stations. We yearned to do original journalism but often had to settle for ‘re-purposing’ other journalist’s content. We did as much as we could that treated the internet as its own medium, that developed multi-media story telling methods that simply weren’t possibly in print or in linear, broadcast radio and television. But most of it was simply shovelware: TV and radio scripts transcribed and thrown up online and print stories chucked on the internet. Or as Whatis.com says:
Shovelware is content taken from any source and put on the Web as fast as possible with little regard for appearance and usability.
It’s sad to see that so-called integration sometimes isn’t really about integration at all. It’s about a maintenance of organisational and internal political status quo. It’s about maintaining the dominance of print and broadcast and the subservient, derivative position of the internet. It continues to miss or ignore the opportunities the internet provides for journalists, which now isn’t defensible in terms of audience numbers, advertising revenue or future prospects for growth. And as my friend and former colleague at the BBC, Alf Hermida, says, it just doesn’t work. The BBC is advertising for a “web conversion producer”. I wonder if this is a position to produce web-literate producers from television and radio journalists. But seriously, Alf says:
This is a flawed concept and risks undermining the reputation for excellent online journalism that the BBC News website has built over the past 10 years. In any case, we tried in the early days of the site when I was a daily news editor, and it didn’t work.
It also implies that online is an after-thought, picking up the scraps off the broadcast table, rather than considered an equal.
Now, I’m not arguing for internet primacy over other media. This is not a zero-sum game. The legacy media still make most of the profits in real money terms, despite the double digit growth rates in online revenue for the past few years. Just as I say that the internet and on demand digital medium need to be understood on the basis of their own strengths, television, radio and print still have unique strengths. As Steve Yelvington says, the internet is one of the centers for a successful media business. He adds:
My rule of thumb is a simple one: Use the right tool for the right job. The Internet’s strength is collaborative interaction; print’s strengths are linearity, focus and serendipitous discovery.
But as news organisations struggle, some for survival, they will fail if, due to organisational in-fighting, they repeat the same mistakes of the late 1990s. Those few of us in online journalism who survived the dot.com crash have seen this before. Unfortunately, while we have a decade or more of experience, we digital natives still don’t have the political capital when we go head-to-head with the powers that be in our own organisations. If media bosses want to engage in Shovelware 2.0, they can use that shovel to bury their own businesses.
links for 2008-04-25
-
Kevin: News organisations need to pay attention to this. Google’s app engine, Amazon’s S3 and EC2 and open source software are driving down the cost of start-up and innovation experimentation. Too many companies suffer from the ‘not invented here’ complex
-
Kevin: Steve Yelvington: “Context creates value. And another way: Loyalty accrues to the place that helps you find things, not necessarily the place that produces things.”
-
Kevin: Yahoo has been building a nice stable of Web 2.0 properties, but they haven’t really done much to connect those dots until now. Yahoo’s embrace of open standards is finally making that possible. Another important lesson in being part of the network
links for 2008-04-23
-
Kevin: Good tips from Nick Booth on building an online community. News organisations want online communities but don’t put enough time, effort and thought into supporting them.
-
Kevin: Sorry to have missed Adam at the Tuttle Breakfast, but he has some great quick notes on the conversation. I like his observation of how titles can be the barrier to organisational change. Also: How to maintain passion as medium endures?
links for 2008-04-22
-
Kevin: Paul Conley says: “No ‘print’ journalist should assume that there’s a place for him in the new world’. Worth the read, but the battle between ‘print’ and ‘web’ people isn’t over.
-
Kevin: Mindy McAdams highlights a post from journalism student Jared Silfies who takes a picture of his mobile backpack. My kit bags in the past actually counted as excess baggage. Things are faster, better, cheaper and much, much smaller.
-
Kevin: WSJ looks at study on blog reading habits. It’s a relatively small study. “Rather than focusing on helping readers wade through a deluge of information content, one could envision tools that focus on the reader’s relationship with the blogger or
-
Kevin: Must read from Q&A with Khoi Vinh, design director of NYTimes.com. “We’re trying to create something that’s true to this medium, that borrows the best of what works in print and that takes advantage of the unique aspects of digital media.” Halleluj
links for 2008-04-21
-
Kevin: Faster, better, cheaper. Audio-video online isn’t about replicating the experience (and economics) of broadcast television. It’s about using lost cost digital tools to change the economics. MediaShift gives you a list of these.
-
Kevin: Interesting acquisition by SixApart. Anyone who has done business with SixApart knows that they have often steered clients to Apperceptive to fine tune their Movable Type installations. Makes sense to bring them into the fold.
-
Kevin: Lisa Williams has a top 10 list for journalists of how to survive in a high-tech industry. I like the one time is on your side but only if you take it. Set aside some time to learn something new.
-
Kevin: Via Mindy McAdams. Journalists can be passionate about journalism and the business. We have to pay the bills. There are very few of us who can rely on public money or trust support. Smart digital journalists are spinning ideas for the future.
links for 2008-04-19
-
Suw: One of the reasons that I’m a stalwart freelance is that I love being able to decide from where I work. Mainly, that tends to be my couch, but perhaps I should get more adventurous.
links for 2008-04-18
-
Kevin: Alf Hermida blogs about the Toronto Star laying off all 10 of the firm’s internet production staff. Sensible integration or short-sightedness?