-
The blue markers pinpoint the publishing centres for the country’s regional morning daily newspapers, the red markers signify evening papers, and the yellow markers represent weeklies.
-
Some folks experienced a more dramatic error which had them accidentally updating other people’s Twitter—this is a more serious issue which crosses into the realm of security.
-
“Social” anything can’t be programmed. Geek culture doesn’t accommodate the social ranges of human behavior.
Author Archives: Joanna
Birminghampost.net goes live!
So… there it is. The shiny new Birmingham Post website is now up and running.
We also have a blogs section covering news, business and lifestyle. Those be the bits I’ve helped to organise.
There’s still a lot to do and more bloggers to add tomorrow (!) but I’m pretty pleased. We’ve all worked really hard…
…which is why I am now going to go home and sleep.
Night!
links for 2008-02-27
-
The mainstream news isn’t going away, but with tools like Twitter, Jaiku, Seesmic, Kyte, blogs, IM, social networks, etc. breaking down the news cycle to seconds, they have to pay attention or continually fall behind.
-
Impressively, within ten minutes of the tremors, CSEM (EMSC), the European-Mediterranean Seismological Centre, revealed the cause: a 5.4 magnitude quake with an epicentre 10 miles north east of Lincoln, in the East Midlands.
-
Special shout-out to the Lincolnshire Echo. Not only did they post this story in double-quick time, but someone has clearly hit the social-networks to spread the link.
-
OH MY WORD!
WHAT DO WE DO!?
I know… we change our Facebook status…. -
I prepared a cheatsheet on how to successfully produce a multimedia story.
It goes over the need for planning, collaboration, innovation and interaction, and offers some tips on the use of video and data. -
So I think that education has a rude shocking coming unless it gets ahead of this change and figures out how to become less of an institution and more of a platform.
-
Kudos to two of my student journalists who had the nous to report on last night’s earthquake as soon as it happened, using Twitter, blogs and the website.
Earthquake!
So I was woken up an hour ago by shaking walls and the crashing of books falling off their shelves. It looks now as if the UK has been hit by an earthquake. Reports so far vary suggesting its magnitude was between 4.7 and 5.3 [edit: modified to 4.9 at 0245].
It’s the second time the earth has moved for me in Brum – the first being the Dudley earthquake in 2002.
The difference this time (as well as it being bigger – rumours are that this one was the largest earthquake in the UK for 20 years) was that I could confirm instantly that there had been a quake by logging on to Twitter, whereas I spent hours in 2002 convinced the rumbling must have been an explosion. As my Twitter account demonstrates, there were a fair few of us wondering what had shaken us out of our slumber.
It was interesting too that the first report I saw about the earthquake from a news organisation was via a tweet from Bounder. Through Twittersearch he had found a report from Twitter-based Dutch news service BreakingNewsOn. I then found other links to sites including a Seesmic (apt name for this) video blog from Midlands-based Documentally. [this was blogged seconds after the quake, I am told] I even tried to put my not-so-great skills into a Google map of the epicentre. [which, according to Podnosh, scooped Sky News!]
More on how the story unfolded from ReadWriteWeb. I’m off back to bed!
links for 2008-02-26
-
“After rolling around on the floor in tears, I realized that that a rebuttal is in order, so I offer this little clip in response.”
-
“…while the rest of us kept refreshing our browsers and cursing, David Ulevitch sprang into action. David, CEO of networking startup OpenDNS, noticed the outage and posted about it on his Twitter account.”
-
“That relationship between IT and news and the interactivity that affords for viewer relationship – the whole media industry needs to look at far more carefully. It is not a threat but a liberation.”
-
“Please add “blog posts should make frequent reference to the evolution of the web and recently launched Apple devices to encourage people to comment and link” and also “please allow people to trackback without having to login in to your stupid sit
-
“There is, presumably, a limited supply of reputation and attention in the world at any point in time. These are the new scarcities — and the world of free exists mostly to acquire these valuable assets for the sake of a business model”
-
Yahoo is set to launch Yahoo! Buzz on Feb. 26, a news and headline aggregator based on online buzz, which aims to compete with Digg, Newsvine and the like.
-
Yahoo! Buzz features the most popular stories right now, determined by people around the Web. A story’s Buzz Score is based on your votes, searches, emails, and more.
-
Alley startup BricaBox opens its Web app to the public today. What is it? Think of it as a tool to make your own version of Yelp, YouTube, or any other site with a mix of content (text, maps, videos, etc.) and community (comments, etc.).
links for 2008-02-25
-
I guess someone had to be first to hold a blog strike. Step forward you militant bloggers of the Honolulu Advertiser and take a bow as the world’s first digital newspaper strikers.
-
Thanks for all the suggestions that have come in so far – it’s clear that many journalists (and I’ve probably been as guilty as any in my time) are often lapsing into lazy cliches that have little or no relation to the way people speak in real life.
-
Innovation can come from any where. You don’t need dedicated staff driving innovation. Creative people are innovators. It doesn’t matter what their job descriptions are. It’s a cop out to say, “I don’t have time to be an innovator.”
-
“..the recent release of forms for Google Spreadsheets means it is now possible (with just a tiny bit of hacking and wizardry) to create a user contributed map without any server-side scripting and with the added bonus of Google hosting the data for you.”
-
“…what if link journalism could transform the newspaper archive from a dusty locked vault to a vibrant, dynamic part of up-to-the-minute news reporting?”
-
An online international survey of the perceptions of newspaper journalists regarding value-based journalism finds that 96.2% of respondents considered “truth and accuracy” as their top core value.”” [and this is surprising…????]
-
“The Internet should be a natural home for the Oscars, which are basically a series of Web-length clips. But ABC and the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences seem determined to keep the show a secret from Web watchers.”
-
Why regional press owners need to do better with online journalism | Greenslade | Guardian Unlimited“If we want reporters to be innovative, to push the boundaries by finding new ways of engaging online audiences, then they must be given the time and space to experiment.”
-
“I believe we will be seeing more and more news and other content presented as feeds rather than as packaged products.”
-
“Ever wondered exactly where The Guardian has people stationed around the world? You can now find out with a GoogleMap “mash-up” showing where the paper’s correspondents are all based.”
-
Once I stopped being a newspaper editor, I began to notice a discrepancy between the sorts of things journalists were interested in and what their readers liked. (via Greenslade)
-
“…print photogs are discovering a new way to visualize and they are not tied to the broadcast model (reporter, standups, live shots). They bring their own vision to video – a vision that is excited about exploring the limits of video…”
Enviromental journalism: question for BCU students
This afternoon I’m popping down to Birmingham City University to meet Paul Bradshaw‘s group of online journalism students.
They’ve been doing some fascinating work on developing an environmental news service, with each of them specialising in a different subject area.
Environmental news is close to my heart. I would love The Post to be giving more coverage to stories on sustainability.
But it’s also one of those subject areas that many readers regard with great suspicion. Look at The Times guide to the most popular environmental stories of 2007 and you’ll see what I mean.
So, I guess the big question is, can you write environmental stories in a way that builds trust between you and the reader? Is the current suspicion surrounding climate change – for example – caused by media sensationalism or poor scientific reporting? Perhaps it’s neither, maybe it’s just human nature to respond to environmental stories with suspicion.
I certainly don’t know the answer. But in a world where the hegemony of large news corporations is increasingly challenged, the issue of maintaining trust as a way to maintain audience is critical.
And, I suspect, if you find a way to crack the hardest nut of trust and environmental reporting, then you have probably struck gold.
links for 2008-02-24
-
the Wiki Finder searches every wiki on Wikia, pbWiki, Stikipad, WikiSpaces and WetPaint, as well as Wikipedia.
It was put together by Dave (davepress.net) -
OpenID is a handy system which allows you to have one log-in on multiple websites and is a way of counteracting the ‘oh now what was my password on this website’ problem. The slight difference being that you can choose which website you would like to
-
Wikileaks is developing an uncensorable system for untraceable mass document leaking and public analysis.
-
Make requests for information from the UK Government
Explore information that others requested -
Every action of a journalist online is an act of distribution, and because they’re not doing those things, great stories aren’t being read as much as they should, or told as well as they could…
-
There are a number of different blog post ‘types’ and it’s best to use a number of them regularly, otherwise your blog might end up a bit of a one-trick pony. Here I go through seven different types of post that I have identified.
1. List posts
-
The Dallas Morning News has put up PDFs of the boxloads of documents about the JFK assassination just released and asked the public to help find the stories therein.
-
…observing a Total Eclipse of the Moon. My immediate reaction was to reach into my pocket, take out my Nokia N95-3, turn on my personal Wi-Fi hotspot, launch Qik and shared the experience with some of my friends on twitter.
-
It’s hard to take claims that newspapers are taking the Digital Age seriously when they have so under-invested to compete in it.
-
Research shows that among the youngest Internet users, the primary creators of Web content (blogs, graphics, photographs, Web sites) are digitally effusive teenage girls.
Guten tag
As the countdown to the website launch begins, I don’t expect to be getting much opportunity to blog over the next few days.
Yesterday was spent tagging up some of the stories that have been imported over from the old CMS. It’s a funny job – my instinct is to just tag everything and anything that is mentioned in the story. But, when you remember that these will appear in the “related stories” box on the page, you have to be a bit more tactical with your tags.
Steve (our multimedia editor) and I have been building up a few internal rules as we go along. As, when the website launches, journalists or sub-editors will tag the story, I imagine we’ll develop a stronger set of tagging conventions. Apprently this, according to people wiser than I, is called a folksonomy. But, of course, it’s a folksonomy that will be created only by the content creators, rather than the users.
I am curious to know if this will effect the way things are tagged and, if it does, whether that is a bad thing or not? Should there be a way for readers to submit tags? Would they even want to? And, if they do, how would you stop that creating a tag cloud as large as the moon?
This ties in to a conversation Marc (my editor) and I were having the other day about the transparent newsroom. He’s written about it on his blog. I have been really taken with what the Spokesman Review is doing in the US (see right hand column on their homepage). They have been experimenting with a variety of different techniques to open up the process of newsgathering and writing, with varying degrees of success. [found via the World Editors’ Forum weblog]
I love the idea that I am not only directly answerable to the people who sign my pay check, but also to the people I purport to be writing for and, if we would make any of the things the Spokesman Review is doing work on our paper, I’d love to try them.
But, as with the tags, would anyone really be interested in taking part? If so, how?
What is going on with WordPress Stats?
I clicked on my blog stats today and got this rather odd graph:
What does it mean?! What are Region A and Region B? And why were they doing something in 2003 – 2005 when my blog wasn’t even a twinkle in my eye?!
When I refreshed the graph went back to normal, but I’d love to know if anyone else has had something similar or knows why it might have happened.