Archive for the 'Most Popular' Category

April 2008’s Most-Popular links from my link library list: Special section traffic, innovation, front- vs. back-end dev, twitter journalism

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

I know I haven’t been writing much here in the past few weeks. Hey, that’s why RSS feeds rock — you don’t have to visit a site that isn’t updated just to see it isn’t updated. I hope you’re reading this in your RSS reader. If not, and if you are one of those clicks […]

March 2008’s Most-Popular links from my link library list: Audience, community, small ideas, excuses, comments, video

Monday, April 7th, 2008

This is what people were clicking on off my reading list from March 2008.

Teaching Online Journalism » An audience is not a community
Reflections of a Newsosaur: Think big, act small: Lots of great examples of things news sites are doing that work here.
CJR: Wiring Journalism 2.0: “How are the media adapting to the new digital […]

February 2008’s Most-Popular links from my link library list: Reinvention, youtube, the geographic web and context

Wednesday, March 5th, 2008

This is what people were clicking on off my reading list from February 2008.

Ten things journalists can do to reinvent journalism
YouTube by the Numbers: “Tim Wintle of Rubberductions forwarded me a pointer to a new piece of research which analyses viewership for YouTube videos in the first month.”
The Pothole Paradox: Why Building The Geographic Web […]

January’s most-popular links: newspapers going online-only, going hyperlocal; newsroom staffing, training, and google apps

Monday, February 11th, 2008

January! 2008! This is what people were clicking on off my reading list from January.

Cincinnati Post Goes Online Only
Nieman Reports: Going Hyperlocal at the Chicago Tribune: Highlight Stats: TribLocal has 7 producer / journalists; more than 1,500 people have registered with them (that seems really, really low); pageviews have increased by double digits every month.
When […]

December’s Most-Popular Links: Swear words, programming, paid content, monsters and mice

Sunday, January 6th, 2008

December, December, December 2007. This is what people were clicking on off my reading list from December.

F*cking programming: “Granted access to billions of lines of code and the awesome power of Google’s search technology, I did what any rational, thinking programmer would do: I typed in some profanity and hit enter.”
Paid Content on the Web […]

November’s Most-Popular Links: Data as journalism, fun CSS quiz, geocoding the news (do it! do it!), eating lunch with your readers

Monday, December 10th, 2007

Hola. Welcome to the next installment of the these-are-the-links-from-my-reading-list-that-got-the-most-clicks-last-month. November, hey, take it away.

Readership Institute: Data as journalism, journalism as data
How Many CSS Properties Can You Name in 7 Minutes?: 59 on this one.
A List Apart: Articles: Graceful E-Mail Obfuscation: This is an excellent way to handle publishing email addresses online.
Ian Davies on the Importance […]

October’s Most-Popular Links: Building successful communities, online journalism pay rates, newspapers’ information problems, McClatchy and URLs

Sunday, November 11th, 2007

These are the links from my reading list that got the most clicks in October (along with any notes I wrote on the link, or sometimes a quote from the linked article).

Nine Steps to a Successful Online Community (whitepaper): “Social media is a powerful way to grow and engage your audience, but it’s even […]

September’s Most-Popular Links: Narrow neighborhoods, funny classifieds, how spammers work, how images work, how Google works

Monday, October 8th, 2007

Okay, I know September was a pretty dead month, and that’s what these link-posts are for: to maintain some life on this blog until the next post strikes me.
These are the links from my reading list that got the most clicks in September (along with any notes I wrote on the link, or […]

August’s most-popular links: Topix, Google Maps, anonymous comments, registration, web-time vs. newspaper-time

Tuesday, September 11th, 2007

These are the links from my reading list that got the most clicks in August (along with any notes I wrote on the link, or sometimes a quote from the linked article).

Topix is not necessarily your friend: “Publishers get quite worked up about Google and Yahoo “stealing” their news, but for the most part, and […]

July’s most-popular posts: Best quotes, blog networks, recognize employees, digital identity management, internship tips

Monday, August 13th, 2007

These are the links from my reading list that got the most clicks in July (along with any notes I wrote on the link, or sometimes a quote from the linked article).

Best. Journalism Quotes. Ever.
Should Newspapers Become Local Blog Networks?: “What’s becoming clear is that blogs are now the organizing principle for newspapers’ original online […]

Copyright 2006-2008 Joe Murphy