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Suw: Neat little Twitter app, based on Adobe Air.
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Suw: Neat little mobile aggregator. Yet to try it out, but looks lovely.
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Suw: Fake blogs are going to become not just annoying, but also illegal. PR companies, beware – your astroturfing days are totally over.
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Kevin: Adam Tinworth posts an excellent response to the NUJ new media flap. I wrote from outside the union, but Adam writes as an NUJ member. It’s thoughtful and balanced and explores the issues. It also speaks volumes to journalists’ thinking.
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Kevin: Stephen Brook liveblogging from the Society of Editors’ conference gives a round up of Gavin O’Reilly’s (no relation to Tim either by blood or thinking) talk about the future of ‘newspapers’. Check out the line about ‘someone with attitude sitting
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Kevin: The Gotham Gazette is launching their first Knight-funded news games. They used OpenLaszlo instead of Flash. More details at the MediaShift Idea Lab.
Author Archives: Kevin Anderson
links for 2007-11-03
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Suw: Chris Anderson pulls no punches, and publishes a list of the email addresses flacks have used to send him inappropriate press releases. Flacks *must* learn to be more careful. Especially, it seems, people from Weber Shandwick and Edelman.
links for 2007-11-01
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Kevin: Joanna Geary, “a twenty-something regional newspaper journalist”, has some thoughts on the recent NUJ Web 2.0 debate. A pragmatic view, saying “I think small teams aggregating and checking the facts of blog posts and forums may well be something we
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Kevin: Chris Lake makes some good points from a perspective outside of journalism about the web, participation and authority. “Authority is earned by experts, whereas it is donated to most journalists by association with a top newspaper brand.”
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Kevin: If you’re working with video formats or taking in contributions from the public, here are some free video encoders and converters. Thanks to the folks at Lifehacker.
links for 2007-10-31
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Suw: This is a very interesting move by Google. I look forward to seeing how this plays out.
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Kevin: Steven Clift at US public broadcaster’s new MediaShift IdeaLab asks for success stories on comments. Watch this space, both the IdeaLab and the comments on this post. Chip in with your success stories.
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Kevin: Matt Waite of the St. Petersburg Times announces his new job: News technologist. “It’s technology. It’s R&D. It’s databases. It’s local, national, mobile. … And then, really, it’s all journalism.”
It’s Halloween, and the NUJ are coming as trolls
There should be a footnote to this National Union of Journalists recruitment poster. Join the union unless you are one of those
“self-serving bloggers who don’t really want to be in a union ‘cos it doesn’t have that ‘I’m a digital revolutionary and I’m out there, doing it’ vibe”
This is a line from Gary Herman on NUJ New Media Industrial Council site. I’d leave a comment, but alas, there are none. Have they ever heard the old adage, when you’re in a hole stop digging? Hey guys, if you want to create an ‘us versus them’ line in the sand, congratulations, you’ve succeeded. And the ‘them’ isn’t The Man in management. There is obviously no room in your union for a “brain dead digital enthusiast” like me. (Just to be fair, lest I’m accused of taking the quote out of context. The full sentence is: “Redundancies at AoL should give the most brain dead digital enthusiast pause for thought.”) And right before that, Herman takes a most unprofessional jab at Roy Greenslade:
At the very best, people like Roy Greenslade who huff and puff and storm out of the union are behaving precipitately. At worst, they’re trying to put the boot in. Probably, they’re just a bit dim.
I’m not anti-union. But how am I supposed to interpret such statements? It doesn’t fill me with the warm feelings of union solidarity. “Sorry, but you’re a bit dim comrade?” Is that the message you really wish to convey? Herman rails away against PR and blogs in his piece, but I’m going to give a piece of advice that I never thought I’d suggest to anyone: The NUJ really needs to work on its PR in terms of courting new media journalists.
Emotive and irresponsible attacks such as those in Herman’s piece have muddled the NUJ’s core argument of maintaining journalistic quality and integrity under challenges not from the internet but from economic pressures of changing business models. We all agree that journalists should be ethical, our journalism of the highest possible quality and that our journalism should serve the public good. I have forgone lucrative opportunities in for-profit journalism and consulting because I believe in the mission of public service journalism and its place in a democratic society. We agree that journalists should be compensated for their work. We are not in disagreement over these points, and I – as a digital enthusiast – am not the enemy.
As for the NUJ, I’m moving on. Jeff Jarvis is right:
It’s a mistake, I think, to let the curmudgeons set the agenda and, for that matter, get the attention. It doesn’t move us forward.
I’ve got plenty of colleagues and collaborators to work with to create the future of journalism. I’m part of the new collective and have been for a long time. Online journalist since 1996 and damn proud of it.
links for 2007-10-30
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Kevin: From the International Herald Tribune’s developer blog, a good discussion not only about how visitors use comments but also tips on how to stimulate discussion.
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Kevin: Richard Sambrook responds to questions about BBC.com. Richard, the head of the BBC’s Global News Division, shows how to be responsive, answering questions from his original post. He talks about ads on BBC.com.
links for 2007-10-29
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Kevin: WBEZ in Chicago reports how the Medill Journalism School at Northwestern University is going multimedia, and not all of the students are happy about it. Understanding the audience is not about undercutting journalism.
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Kevin: Roy Greenslade gives his considered response on why he is leaving the NUJ. “I cannot, in all conscience, remain within a union I now regard, albeit reluctantly, as reactionary. The digital revolution is here and I am digital revolutionary.” Go Roy!
links for 2007-10-27
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Kevin: A good roundup of open source content management systems. I’m a bit baffled why more news organisations don’t go the open source route and instead invest a lot into bespoke behemoths. Is it simply scalability and resiliency?
links for 2007-10-25
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Suw: Khoi Vinh on Lotus Notes and its recent ad campaign: “As if frightening, cross-species aberrations of nature are what we’ve all been looking for in an email and calendaring solution.” Enterprise social software vendors, take note.
links for 2007-10-24
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Suw: There’s a lot more I’d like to say about stats, but til then, here’s a good look at the problem with Google Reader’s stats.
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Suw: Ought to look at this collaborative video editing platform, as well as Jumpcut, in more detail. Haven’t had time though.
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Suw: Amazing video by Michael Wesch. Again, have more to say about this, but just not enoguh time. Great stuff, go watch it.
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Suw: 111 men go shirtless at Abercrombie and Fitch in NY, mimicing A&F’s shirtless branding. Lesson: be careful what you wish for, lest it come true.
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Suw: Anyone with a business blog should read this, and take very careful notes. Scalzi nails it.
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Suw: Interesting use of visualisation to help you understand how your website is performing
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Suw: The attitude of the NUJ towards online is shameful. They are not helping their members progress into the digital era, they are hobbling them, doing more damage than good. Disgraceful.