Archive for the 'Journalism' Category

Article before-and-after: Publishing Breaking News information

Sunday, March 30th, 2008

It’s Sunday, and talking heads say maybe it’s time for papers to panic… one quote that struck me from that article was the Charlotte copy editor who said “We are all just kind of stuck in that old model and we haven’t figured out how to get out of it yet.”
Advice is cheap, and man […]

Couple thoughts and ideas for Kill The Cliche

Monday, March 24th, 2008

KillTheCliche.com fell into my rss reader today (via delicious’ most-popular journalism-tagged links). It’s an idea I wanted to do myself, but, well, in the war of ideas many fall victim to Mr. Not-Enough-Time’s axe.
Anyway, Kill The Cliche measures cliches in articles from The Boston Globe, New York Times, USA Today, Washington Post, Financial Times […]

Nostalgia is not a business model

Friday, March 7th, 2008

I read another baby-boomer hand-wring piece about the way newspapers used to be on the San Francisco Chronicle’s website tonight. It got me up enough to register for the site, click the activation link in the email and write a comment.
This is what the lady wrote:
Sure, the Internet is a wonderful place to be. […]

Twitter-based local web apps are another way newsrooms can use twitter

Thursday, February 28th, 2008

Last November I mentioned Foamee, the ‘Twitter Piggyback’ web site / service that allows you to keep track of beers you owe people.
Well, there’s another Twitter Piggybacker (hat tip to Adam Howell for the term and the link), this one with a local information bent: Commuter Feed. To quote,
Commuter Feed is a free service that […]

Three ways that online changes the “Where?” question, journalistically

Thursday, January 24th, 2008

I started writing this post Monday, and in the meantime Adrian Holovaty’s Everyblock site launched, which is all about answering the “where” part of information.
It’s funny — I was talking with my coworker Doug today about how newspapers forgot to ask how the “Who / What / Why / Where / How” questions change when […]

A few thoughts and ideas on local web apps

Tuesday, January 22nd, 2008

These a a few local internet / hyperlocal web app ideas that have been stuck in my head:

How The Locals Fared: I went to Portland in December for the holidays, and I was leafing through the sports section of the Oregonian when I ran across a column of agate titled “How The Locals Fared.” In […]

Thinking about a new product? Think about your article page’s needs.

Monday, January 7th, 2008

Online news organizations have plenty of opportunities to launch new products that build on their information, build on their community, or launch distinct information. Many of these products will be useful … not all of them will be successful. For newspaper-dot-coms not sure where to start, I recommend building an app on top of a […]

Getting local, getting small: Two sites doing the small-and-local thing well

Wednesday, November 14th, 2007

First off I’m giving a shout-out to Foamee, the site that helps you keep track of beers that you owe people. It’s not grand, it’s not big, it’s not going to change the world — it’s just small and it’s fun.
There are two sites worth thinking about that do local and do small well: SignalMap […]

Links: On Google’s AP move and newspapers as a “change organization”

Tuesday, September 4th, 2007

Howard Owens has a solid post about five attributes necessary for newspapers to continually cope with the changing information landscape. Number four is my favorite:
Fourth, measuring success won’t be a matter of dollars and sense only. I think Hagel is right on this point: We need to develop metrics that help us gauge our ability […]

BoingBoing says they’re filing a FOIA

Thursday, August 30th, 2007

If I had any numbers on how many bloggers out there have filed a FOIA, well, that would make this post more interesting. No matter. The folk at the popular Boing Boing say they’re doing the FOIA-dance on behalf of some detained-by-TSA air-travelers. This will very likely make FOIA’s popular in the a-list blog crowd, […]

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