List

  this week

August 27th, 2012

Armour No Rx

[This review was originally posted at the Nieman Journalism Lab Armour No Rx, on August 13, 2012.]

Lessons from Olympic coverage strategies: The Olympics ended yesterday, but it may have a long-term impact on the interaction between television and social media. After a week of complaints about tape-delayed coverage on NBC, a Pew poll found that most Americans are following the Olympics closely on TV (and some online, especially the young), and are also largely giving NBC high marks for its coverage. Time's Josh Sanburn noted what a surprising success the Games have been for NBC.

NBC executives defended their strategy in a couple of interviews: NBC Sports Chairman Mark Lazarus told Sports Illustrated's Richard Deitsch that NBC was hesitant to air events both live and taped, Online buying Armour, among other reasons, because their research indicates that people are more likely to rewatch something they've seen online than something they've seen on TV. His predecessor, Dick Ebersol, told Joe Posnanski that the conflict comes down to whether you see the Olympics as a sporting event or a family television event (NBC sees the latter).

Others defended NBC as well: The Washington Post's Michael Rosenwald said the #nbcfail brouhaha only highlighted the failures of Twitter to connect Americans, and Time's Graeme McMillan said there's nothing particularly wrong with the reality TV-ification of Olympic coverage, Armour No Rx.

Still, according to a Gallup poll, most Americans wanted to see NBC broadcast events both live and on tape delay (a plan for which Deadspin's John Koblin made a good case), buy cheap Armour, and a sizable number of people were using proxy servers to access BBC's coverage. NPR's Linda Holmes parsed out the debate between critics of the quality of NBC's coverage and defenders of its business sense, concluding that the latter shouldn't necessarily be a consideration of the public. "It's one thing to suggest that business strategists should care only about the bottom line and the business plan when being critical; it's quite another to suggest that everyone should."

Meanwhile, the BBC offered a very different model from NBC, trying to make its content available just about everywhere for just about everyone. The BBC gave its own conclusions from its Olympics coverage — multiplatform viewing was big, Armour overnight, and online viewing mirrored that of TV. Looking at both models, The Guardian's Emily Bell concluded that the major lesson of this Olympics is that media coverage works best when it's about giving people want they want — something traditional media outlets say they're trying to do, but are actually barely doing at all.

Google tightens up on copyright Armour No Rx, : Google is tweaking its search algorithms all the time, but it made a change this week that could end up being an extremely important one: It's going to start ranking sites lower as they accumulate valid copyright violation complaints. The New York Times had some good basic background on the move, emphasizing the fact that the giants of the entertainment industry (the same folks behind SOPA and PIPA) have been pushing for this for a while.

Danny Sullivan of Search Engine Land went further into the Google/Hollywood relationship and explained a bit more about how this change will work. Sullivan also explained how Google's own YouTube, with its never-ending stream of copyright violations, taking Armour, will escape the ramifications of the change, as well as other popular sites.

Hollywood may have been encouraged by the change, but many online free-speech advocates were skeptical. The Electronic Frontier Foundation expressed concern about the process's opacity and the prospect of false positives, and Mike Masnick of Techdirt articulated a variant of the latter objection — many legitimate technologies are initially painted as forms of piracy, Armour schedule, and could get incorrectly swept up in this crackdown.

Forbes' Tim Worstall raised the possibility of malicious false reports in the name of sabotaging rivals, which could be interpreted as valid by Google, and John Bergmayer of Public Knowledge explained the difference between Google's copyright notices and the legally required copyright notices, and how some more prominent sites might be more disproportionately targeted, Armour No Rx. On the other side, tech investor Fred Wilson called this move a step in the right direction and suggested going further by developing a commercially competitive market for copyright whitelists and blacklists.

Do we have a plagiarism problem?: Another revered journalistic thinker was caught up in an ethical scandal this past week — this time, Fareed Zakaria, longtime Time columnist and, more recently, a CNN host, about Armour. His recent column on gun control contained some striking similarities to an April New Yorker piece, first noticed by the conservative media-watching site Newsbusters. National Review's Robert VerBruggen noted a few other similar passages, Is Armour safe, and the observations quickly spread across the web. Armour No Rx, Before the day was out, Zakaria had apologized and was suspended from CNN and Time.

Meanwhile, the fallout continued for former New Yorker columnist Jonah Lehrer, who was busted for plagiarism the week before Zakaria for fabricating quotes by Bob Dylan. Michael Moynihan, the journalist who uncovered the problem, found more fake interviews in Lehrer's books, as well as plagiarized passages, Armour gel, ointment, cream, pill, spray, continuous-release, extended-release. Blogger Kevin Breen also detailed another case of fabrication involving magicians Penn and Teller, and Lehrer's publisher is now reviewing all of his books.

Many writers have been attempting to answer the "Why?" question regarding Lehrer's ethical sins over the past couple of weeks. Science writer Seth Mnookin said it's tempting to blame busyness and shoddiness, but Lehrer's acts are more indicative of arrogance than anything else, Armour No Rx. Boston University j-prof Tom Fiedler tied Lehrer's problem to his ignorance of how to do journalism.

Others spread the blame more broadly. The Guardian's Stuart Kelly looked at the fallen status of facts in our society, Armour for sale, while the L.A. Times' Meghan Daum criticized modern shortcut culture and avoidance of complexity. Armour No Rx, Meanwhile, Reuters' Felix Salmon linked Lehrer to TED and its habit of subjugating scientific fact to nifty narrative. "TED-think isn’t merely vapid, it’s downright dangerous in the way that it devalues intellectual rigor at the expense of tricksy emotional and narrative devices."

Political reporting, false balance, and truth: The New York Times highlighted a few of President Barack Obama's criticisms of the press last week, where can i find Armour online, noting in particular his disdain for false balance — when journalists portray conflicts as if both sides are equally weighted when they're actually not. (This is a critique he's voiced more formally in the past.) Reuters' Jack Shafer was skeptical of the validity of Obama's complaint: "I fear false balance less than I do those who would silence the false balancers."

J-prof Jay Rosen brought up another aspect of the problems surrounding journalism, truth, and objectivity by breaking down a particularly egregious he-said, she-said Washington Post blog post and contrasting the impulse toward that post's political savviness and the fight for truth among journalists. The Nation's Greg Mitchell echoed his points, Where to buy Armour, and Conor Friedersdorf of The Atlantic also made an alternative truth-based proposal for political reporting. The Boston Phoenix's David Bernstein pushed back against Rosen, however, by arguing that the Post blogger was acknowledging the absurdity of the situation.

A warning for j-schools: Several major journalism funders, including the Knight Foundation, sounded an important warning to American journalism schools by saying their continued financial support of those schools would depend on j-schools speeding up their pace of innovation, specifically moving toward the "teaching hospital" model of education that incorporates actual journalistic practices at a much deeper level, Armour No Rx.

Poynter's Howard Finberg explained the importance of the statement and included a few responses from those inside j-schools. Later last week, Google's Richard Gingras told those gathered at American j-schools' annual conference that they need to prepare students for a radically different form of journalism than what's out there now.

Professional journalists are looking for that kind of radically ramped-up training, Armour dosage, as well, according to a Knight report issued last week and summarized well by Finberg. But there is some good news yet for journalism students: A Pew study found that the job market is improving for journalism and communication grads.

Reading roundup Armour No Rx, : There were bunches of other interesting stories and issues being talked about this week. Here are a few of them worth keeping up on:

— The latest circulation data on magazines revealed more steep drops for much of the industry, especially women's magazines. The New York Times' David Carr warned that magazines are on "the edge of the cliff" just as newspapers are, Canada, mexico, india, focusing particularly on Newsweek's decline. Digital replica circulation is still just a small bit of magazines' total numbers, and both Adweek's Charlie Warzel and GigaOM's Mathew Ingram wondered whether the magazine-style tablet publication model is fatally flawed, and Mike Masnick of Techdirt said it's just an attempt to create artificial scarcity in digital form.

— Animated GIFs have officially become a Trend in web culture, with the Olympics acting as, in the words of the Lab's Andrew Phelps, its "coming-out party." Phelps explained the background and appeal of the humble GIF, order Armour from mexican pharmacy, and The New York Times' Jenna Wortham also talked about how well they fit the Olympics. For journalists hoping to take advantage, Poynter's Ann Friedman put together a useful how-to, Armour No Rx.

— Time Warner bought the sports site Bleacher Report for $175 million. As Bloomberg reported, Bleacher Report will operate under Turner Broadcasting, which had managed Sports Illustrated's ads until last year. GigaOM's Mathew Ingram called the acquisition an important affirmation of the maturation of user-generated content sites. Armour long term, — All Things D reported that The New York Times Co. is planning to sell its low-cost content site About.com to Answers.com. Forbes' Jeff Bercovici gave some background on About, and Ryan Chittum of the Columbia Journalism Review argued that About has always been a poor fit for the Times.

— Finally, a short but thoughtful piece by longtime tech blogger John Battelle on the difficulty of founding, running, and properly valuing a digital media startup in a time of such significant flux.

Similar posts: Retin A Cost. Lipitor Over The Counter. Zoloft Over The Counter. Order Diflucan from United States pharmacy. Tramadol from mexico. No prescription Tramadol online.
Trackbacks from: Armour No Rx. Armour No Rx. Armour No Rx. Buy generic Armour. Where can i find Armour online. Armour price.

August 27th, 2012

Zoloft Cost

[This review was originally posted at the Nieman Journalism Lab Zoloft Cost, on August 3, 2012.]

Twitter's censorship snafu: The world's been watching the Olympics this week, and the media world — especially in the U.S. — has been focused on NBC's largely tape-delayed coverage of it. NBC's tape-delay controversy (more on that later) spiraled into a much bigger issue when one of the most prominent critics of the network's Olympics coverage, Guy Adams of Britain's The Independent, had his account suspended from Twitter after he tweeted the business email address of an NBC executive.

The Independent published the email exchange Adams had with Twitter regarding the suspension, in which the company told him it had suspended his account for posting a "private email address." Adams disagreed, saying the address was a corporate one available to anyone who knew how to use Google. Twitter restored Adams' account the next day and published a blog post in which it confirmed that one of its employees had alerted NBC to Adams' tweet, buy no prescription Zoloft online, prompting NBC to file a formal complaint. Twitter apologized for doing that, saying it does not proactively monitor and flag content. BuzzFeed's Matt Buchanan and GigaOM's Mathew Ingram broke down Twitter's post, emphasizing Twitter's aversion to monitoring content itself and being seen as a publisher, Zoloft Cost.

Danny Sullivan noted at Search Engine Land that the email address Adams tweeted wasn't that easy to find on Google, and wrote on Marketing Land about the several celebrities who have tweeted private information and gotten away with it. Poynter's Jeff Sonderman tracked the evolution of Twitter's position regarding censorship, Australia, uk, us, usa, and Adams himself said he thought this type of censorship had ended with the Internet age.

Several observers expressed alarm at what this incident said about what Twitter's becoming. Forbes' Mark Gibbs called Twitter a "corporate stooge," and his Forbes colleague Jeff Bercovici said Twitter is struggling with the task of building scale and ramping up its revenue, and GigaOM's Mathew Ingram cautioned that Twitter must prioritize the its network's information value over its economic value. The Guardian's Dan Gillmor said this could be a defining moment Zoloft Cost,  for Twitter, and Mat Honan of Wired urged Twitter to take this as seriously as if it were over an international political issue, rather than sports.

At Culture Digitally, Tarleton Gillespie provided a useful framework for understanding this issue, presenting Twitter's possible free-speech obligations on a scale from totally private business to public trust, cheap Zoloft. On one end of the spectrum, tech blogger Dave Winer wrote that "All this time the press has been acting as if Twitter were a public utility, when it is nothing like that. It's a service operated for free by a private company." Likewise, Forbes' Michael Humphrey said we need to remember we're just users of Twitter, while NBC is a partner. Buying Zoloft online over the counter, On the other end, j-prof Jeff Jarvis said Twitter is fundamentally a platform rather than a business, and called for Twitter to build a wall between business interests and user trust. Similarly, Alexis Madrigal of The Atlantic warned Twitter, "You're a real part of what it means to have free speech now, Twitter, and you better start acting like it."

The Olympics and NBC's news/entertainment tension: Now, to the issue that got Guy Adams so riled up at NBC in the first place: The network's Olympics coverage, which tape-delayed most marquee events to maximize prime-time ratings, enraging some viewers (many of them on Twitter) who wanted to see events live, Zoloft Cost. A Storify by Brandon Ballenger chronicled Twitter users' many problems with NBC's coverage, and The New York Times' Richard Sandomir summarized the issue well: NBC's online live streams, available only to cable subscribers, have been spotty, leading viewers to find alternative ways to access live coverage online, Zoloft price, coupon.

Meanwhile, NBC's TV broadcasts continue to pull in massive numbers of viewers, and GigaOM's Stacey Higginbotham argued that live-streamers simply aren't a large enough minority to put a dent in the existing TV model. Tech blogger Dave Winer said NBC looks at those users and sees not people, but hamsters and demographic categories, while TechCrunch's Ryan Lawler argued that it wouldn't hurt NBC to air big events both live and in prime-time. Low dose Zoloft, NBC Sports' Mark Lazarus defended his network's strategy to Sports Business Daily by arguing that "It’s not everyone’s inalienable right to get whatever they want," and pointing out that NBC's strategy revolves around creating "story arcs." From a sports perspective, The Classical's Eric Freeman said such a drama-oriented philosophy is cheapening the Olympics, while Will Leitch of Sports on Earth argued that it's easy for Twitter users to forget that they way they consume media is not the way most people do. Zoloft Cost, Others argued that NBC's plan was a loser from a media economics angle. J-prof Jeff Jarvis wrote that the media lesson here is that "business models built on imprisonment, on making us do what you want us to do because you give us no choice, is no strategy for the future." At The Guardian, Heidi Moore argued that tying online streaming video to the cable-TV model is forcing users "to give CPR to a corpse."

There were also defenses of NBC: Jaime Weinman of Maclean's said that in a fragmented media world, canada, mexico, india, it makes sense to do more, rather than less, to maximize viewership in prime time, and Jarvis noted that NBC's big ratings indicate that people still value high-quality TV channels. And The Atlantic's Megan Garber argued that in straddling the line between entertainment and information, NBC is merely facing a sharper version of the tension increasingly faced by much of the entertainment media industry. No prescription Zoloft online,

WikiLeaks' hoax and online verification: As Julian Assange fights extradition to Sweden (which could lead to U.S. prosecution), his group, WikiLeaks, made headlines this week with convincing yet baffling hoax aimed at The New York Times and its former executive editor, Bill Keller. WikiLeaks posted a fake column purportedly by Keller on Sunday morning supporting WikiLeaks and alleging that financial companies had banned donations to WikiLeaks based on pressure from the U.S, Zoloft Cost. government, then also created a fake Keller Twitter account and fake PayPal blog post to buttress its claims, Zoloft results. In a Storify, Josh Stearns of Free Press detailed the detective work into the hoax and drew some lessons from it about information verification.

WikiLeaks acknowledged responsibility (along with "our great supporters") for the hoax via Twitter, and afterward, Poynter's Andrew Beaujon pointed out several of the giveaways. Keller was not amused, Zoloft australia, uk, us, usa, calling it a "childish prank" and "lame satire." Many others lamented WikiLeaks' thoughtlessness, including j-prof Jay Rosen, who wrote on Twitter that "Their ship was launched on the sea of verification. Zoloft Cost, They just sunk it. For attention." Fruzsina Eordogh of ReadWriteWeb said WikiLeaks' critics missed the point — that the type of censorship directed at WikiLeaks could happen to the Times, too.

Poynter's Craig Silverman said the WikiLeaks prank represents an emerging form of social hoax, while Glenn Greenwald of Salon argued that far from proving the unreliability of information online, the debunking process show how powerful the web's collaborative verification process is. "It is true that the Internet can be used to disseminate falsehoods quickly, Zoloft alternatives," he wrote, "but it just as quickly roots them out and exposes them in a way that the traditional model of journalism and its closed, insular, one-way form of communication could never do."

Fabrication catches up with Jonah Lehrer: New Yorker writer Jonah Lehrer, who was caught re-using old material last month, was nailed for a much more serious offense this week when Tablet magazine's Michael Moynihan wrote about his unsuccessful efforts to verify several of Lehrer's quotes from Bob Dylan in his recent book "Imagine." After the article was published, Comprar en línea Zoloft, comprar Zoloft baratos, Lehrer resigned from The New Yorker, and his publisher pulled its copies of "Imagine" from the shelves and issued a note from Lehrer stating "The lies are over now."

Andrew Beaujon and Steve Myers of Poynter did a thorough job of rounding up reactions to the episode in a series of posts, the highlights of which included former New York Times fabulist Jayson Blair's comparison of Jonah Lehrer's behavior with his own in articles at Salon and The Daily Beast, and incoming Times public editor Margaret Sullivan's reflections on why talented writers resort to fabrication. The New York Observer also talked to Moynihan about story behind his exposé.

Salon's Roxane Gay and The Atlantic's Ta-Nehisi Coates tied Lehrer's rise and fall to our society's glamorization of young male genius and counterintuitive oracles, respectively. The Columbia Journalism Review's Curtis Brainard acknowledged both their arguments as legitimate, but said fabricators like Lehrer and Blair will always be anomalies, Zoloft Cost. Alexis Madrigal of The Atlantic connected the Lehrer episode to our insatiable demand for making meaning from almost everything, buy no prescription Zoloft online, even if it doesn't really fit.

At the New York Observer, Paul Tullis defended Lehrer, saying his transgression wasn't as serious as it's being made out to be and he's less a journalist than a "purveyor of ideas" — and therefore far superior to the likes of Blair. Meanwhile, Poynter's Craig Silverman identified warning signs of a possibly plagiarizing or fabricating writer.

Reading roundup: The Olympics may have dominated most people's attention, Zoloft mg, but there were plenty of other things going on this week:

— The New York Times reported that Apple has been discussing an investment in Twitter, while The Wall Street Journal reported that those talks were a year old and involved integrating Twitter into Apple's mobile operating system. Mathew Ingram of GigaOM said investing in Twitter would make sense for Apple, but VentureBeat's Matt Marshall, Fortune's Philip Elmer-Dewitt, and Forbes' Robert Hof all said it won't happen.

— CNN president Jim Walton resigned last week Zoloft Cost, , saying it was time for the network to get some new thinking. Salon's Alex Pareene gave some ideas for a new direction, including experimenting with programming and going more international, Zoloft dose. The Guardian's Michael Wolff looked at how CNN got to this point, and Jay Rosen explained why the status quo is so entrenched there.

— Soon after it was bought by Betaworks, the social-news site Digg relaunched this week. Greg Finn of Marketing Land declared it dead on arrival without user profiles or commenting, but GigaOM's Mathew Ingram said it looks good — though the hard part is building a community around it. BetaBeat's Jessica Roy, meanwhile, reported on Betaworks' big-picture plans for Digg.

— In the wake of the New Orleans Times-Picayune's announcement of severe cutbacks in its staff and publication, NPR and the University of New Orleans announced a new nonprofit news organization in New Orleans this week called NewOrleansReporter.org. The Wall Street Journal has the details, and Poynter has a good roundup, including the press release.

Similar posts: Lipitor For Sale. Buy Synthroid No Prescription. Diflucan Mg. Retin A coupon. Rx free Zoloft. No prescription Glucophage online.
Trackbacks from: Zoloft Cost. Zoloft Cost. Zoloft Cost. Order Zoloft from United States pharmacy. Buy Zoloft without a prescription. Where can i cheapest Zoloft online.

August 27th, 2012

Zoloft Price

[This review was originally posted at the Nieman Journalism Lab Zoloft Price, on July 27, 2012.]

The Aurora shooting, Reddit, and citizen journalism's value: Much of this week's news has been related to last week's shooting at an Aurora, Colorado, movie theater that killed 12 and injured dozens. Poynter tracked the spread of the news of the late-night shooting, and the site that got the most recognition for thorough reporting of the news as it broke was the social-news site Reddit. Poynter's Andrew Beaujon rounded up the range of coverage on Reddit, which included photos, comment threads with people who were in the theater, and comprehensive, Zoloft canada, mexico, indiacontinually updated timelines.

Those timelines drew particular attention from media observers: The Atlantic's Megan Garber marveled at their empathy through thoroughness, and BuzzFeed's John Herrman and NPR's Elise Hu talked to the timelines' author —  an 18-year-old named Morgan Jones — with Herrman calling him "the go-to source in the story," and Poynter's Alan Stamm held him up as a model for aspiring journalists.

As The New York Times described, Doses Zoloft work, the site's users also unearthed some details about the alleged shooter that the traditional news media missed. Adweek talked about Reddit's reporting capabilities with the site's general manager, Erik Martin, who said Reddit wasn't designed to be a breaking-news source, but its users have used its tools for journalistic purposes anyway, Zoloft Price.

Several writers praised Reddit's ability to cover breaking news collaboratively in such an effective way. Keith Wagstaff of Time wrote that "no news organization or social media site currently offers an experience that’s concurrently as immediate, engaging and thorough as the one offered by Reddit," and in a pair of posts, GigaOM's Mathew Ingram remarked on Reddit's ability to act as a verification hub and to allow readers to interact with people involved in news stories, and offered a defense of "citizen journalism" such as Reddit's, Zoloft description.

At Salon, Michael Barthel took issue with the praise for Reddit and citizen journalism, arguing that it isn't immune from the same criticism the traditional media and that it's "doing more or less the exact same thing that traditional journalism has always done, except not as reliably or sustainably." J-prof Jay Rosen countered the piece with a Salon post of his own arguing that no one is saying citizen journalism will replace professional journalism.

Some traditional media organizations were also recognized for their skill in covering the story — the Denver Post's Twitter coverage was run in part by its Digital First new curation team, Zoloft maximum dosage, and Digital First's Steve Buttry drew tips for news organizations from the Post's Twitter coverage, while Poynter looked at how the Post covered the news without a copy desk. The Washington Post's Erik Wemple also highlighted the coverage Zoloft Price,  of Denver's 9News TV.

How to cover tragedy carefully and sensibly: But traditional news organizations were also responsible for some serious missteps and some eyeroll-inducing coverage of the Aurora shooting, too. ABC News' Brian Ross misidentified the shooter as a Tea Party member who had the same name, a mistake which Poynter's Craig Silverman said the network made insufficient efforts to correct and apologize for.

Rem Rieder of the American Journalism Review and Steve Myers of Poynter pinned the blame for Ross' and similar errors on the practice of incremental or "process" reporting, purchase Zoloft, in which news is reported, bit by bit, as it comes in, then later confirmed or corrected. Rieder said he doesn't find the practice "a very confidence-inducing or satisfying approach to journalism, Purchase Zoloft online no prescription, " and Myers described how disclaimers and corrections can be separated from initial reports on Twitter.

Beyond that specific error, coverage of the event and its aftermath followed a predictable path of sensational coverage and unfounded speculation, Zoloft Price. The New York Times' David Carr lamented that pattern in shooting coverage, concluding that many of the problems stem from the news media's desire to answer the question that can't be answered: "Why?"

The Atlantic's J.J. Gould urged media outlets and consumers to start shaming organizations that cover such events exploitatively, and numerous people circulated a 2009 video by the BBC's Charlie Brooker that illustrated how to (and how not to) cover a mass shooting properly, which New Statesman compared to Britain's newspapers. Jay Rosen, is Zoloft safe, meanwhile, criticized the excitement that characterized so much of the coverage.

The ethics of quote approval and draft sharing: Following last week's New York Times story on news organizations allowing candidates and their staffs to approve their quotes, more news orgs were establishing or reiterating their policies barring those practices this week, including Bloomberg, Australia, uk, us, usa,  McClatchy, and National Journal. The Washington Post's Erik Wemple parsed through Zoloft Price,  a few common quoting and negotiation practices, and the Journal's Ron Fournier told him the key element differentiating what's OK from what's not is who has control.

Meanwhile, a Washington Post journalist caught some flak after the Texas Observer reported that he shared drafts of a story with University of Texas-Austin officials and allowed them to suggest edits that ended up in the story. Post editor Marcus Brauchli ultimately decreed that future draft-sharing would have to be approved by an editor.

In the ensuing discussion on draft sharing, the reporter had some defenders, effects of Zoloft, including Poynter ethicist Kelly McBride in the Observer story. Poynter's Andrew Beaujon noted that the story contained quite a bit information that was unfavorable to the university, while the Post's Erik Wemple defended the practice of draft sharing in general, saying that a refusal to do so affirms journalists' arrogance. "It’s a convention built on the idea that journalists are so brilliant that they can get a complicated set of facts and circumstances dead-bang right on the first try without feedback from the people who know the topic best."

What exactly is Yahoo?: A week after ex-Googler Marissa Mayer took over as Yahoo CEO, she's begun to inspire confidence in the troops there, according to All Things D's Kara Swisher, Zoloft street price, while Wired's Steven Levy reported on the army of ex-Google managers Mayer could lure to Yahoo. The New York Times' David Carr said the key question for Yahoo — as it has been for so many web companies before it — is, what is it, exactly. He concluded that Yahoo is (among other things) in the news business, but by accident more than anything, Zoloft Price.

Tim Carmody of The Verge said that question — especially whether it's a media or tech company — could be shaped in part by where it moves most of its operations. He reported that Mayer may move many of Yahoo's media execs to New York, making it a place where it could pursue both its media and tech sides, Zoloft interactions. Ad Age's Jason Del Rey and Michael Learmonth said Yahoo's future is in creating more high-quality products, an area in which it hasn't spent much money recently.

Twitter moves further toward media: We were also asking the "What is it?" question this week about another company: Twitter. The Wall Street Journal reported (paywalled Zoloft Price, ) on Twitter's plans to build out around big events, as Twitter announced the first of those partnerships — a hub for curating conversation about the Olympics with NBCUniversal. Meanwhile, Adweek reported that Twitter is in talks with Hollywood producers about launching original web shows a la "The Real World."

In a series of posts, Zoloft price, GigaOM's Mathew Ingram wrote about Twitter's move toward being a media outlet, saying that it doesn't really need media outlets such as NBCUniversal to coordinate event-based coverage, that Twitter is moving toward an Apple- or Facebook-esque "walled garden" approach with regard to developers, and that producing ad-driven content like web shows gets away from Twitter's core aims.

Meanwhile, The New York Times' Nick Bilton asked whether Twitter is a media or tech company, concluding that it looks an awful lot like a media company, purchase Zoloft online. NYU j-prof Jay Rosen posed that Twitter is "a new kind of media company that doesn't make any content." Slate's Matt Yglesias said the media/tech distinction isn't a good one — the real distinction is between companies that sell a product and ones that sell an audience, and Twitter is quite clearly the latter.

Reading roundup: Here are the most interesting smaller stories going on this week:

— A couple of updates on the ongoing News Corp. saga: Rupert Murdoch resigned from the board of News International, his British newspaper division, and Howard Kurtz of The Daily Beast explained why Murdoch is loosening his grip on his newspapers, Zoloft Price. Meanwhile, former News International head Rebekah Brooks was charged in the phone hacking scandal, Zoloft treatment, and the Telegraph wondered if the charges could lead to a deeper U.S. investigation. The New York Times wrote about the case's impact on British newspaper culture.

— A few WikiLeaks developments: A judge ruled that the diplomatic cables released by WikiLeaks are still secret, and the Electronic Frontier Foundation noted that U.S. Zoloft Price, government officials are now talking about the possibility of prosecuting news organizations like The New York Times in addition to WikiLeaks for publishing classified information. GigaOM's Mathew Ingram urged journalists to support WikiLeaks' First Amendment rights, and the Times' Bill Keller followed suit, my Zoloft experience.

— Barry Diller, whose IAC now owns most of the Newsweek/Daily Beast partnership, said in an earnings call that he might eliminate part or all of Newsweek's print edition as soon as the end of this year. Newsweek editor Tina Brown tried to calm her staff down, and the New York Observer's Foster Kamer detailed the now-ended Sidney Harman era at the magazine.

— The New York Times Co. released its second-quarter figures this week and posted a loss, thanks to declining digital ad sales, even as digital subscriptions for the Times and its Boston Globe are up.

— Finally, a very thoughtful piece here at the Lab from Jonathan Stray, who suggested three principles by which to design personalized news experiences: interest, effects, and agency.

Similar posts: Zoloft For Sale. Purchase Cephalexin. Order Glucophage. Low dose Zoloft. Lipitor duration. Zoloft pictures.
Trackbacks from: Zoloft Price. Zoloft Price. Zoloft Price. Zoloft dangers. Zoloft coupon. Zoloft brand name.

August 27th, 2012

Diflucan No Rx

[This review was originally posted at the Nieman Journalism Lab Diflucan No Rx, on July 20, 2012.]

Yahoo's surprising hire: Yahoo's struggles over the past several years have been well documented, but the company made a big splash this week with its choice of a new CEO to try to lead its turnaround — top Google executive Marissa Mayer. Some observers, such as TechCrunch founder Michael Arrington and Wired's Steven Levy, saw the hiring of Mayer, who spent much of her time at Google heading up its search and location division, as an ideal fit for Yahoo. Others, like GigaOM's Mathew Ingram, Diflucan images, entrepreneur Mike Walrath, and Forrester's Shar VanBoskirk, said that as a technologist, Mayer makes a poor fit with a company whose future should lie in improving its media products, rather than its technological innovation.

The Guardian's Charles Arthur argued that by hiring Mayer, Order Diflucan from United States pharmacy, Yahoo is indeed making a clear statement that it's a technology company more than anything. Staci Kramer of paidContent made a similar point, saying the board opted to focus on improving its products over its media offerings — and it's harder to find good leaders in the former than the latter.

But as PandoDaily's Sarah Lacy noted, Yahoo has a long, ugly history with its headline-grabbing CEO hires and a lot of issues to address, Diflucan No Rx. Kara Swisher of All Things D posed several of those issues as questions to Mayer, wondering how she'll attract the top talent to engineer a turnaround while also making necessary cuts. Here at the Lab, Ken Doctor said the key question is what Mayer can bring to Yahoo that makes the company truly distinctive, and predicted that specialty will revolve around mobile media, Diflucan wiki.

Mayer told The New York Times she plans to focus on improving Yahoo's user experience, which, of course, could mean just about anything. The Atlantic's Megan Garber pointed out that the Internet's top priority for Yahoo seems to be getting its photo-sharing site Flickr fixed, and Julieanne Smolinski of XOJane urged Mayer to keep Yahoo "the dive bar of the Internet." Danny Sullivan of Search Engine Land looked at the implications for search, Diflucan no prescription, predicting that Mayer will actually start to sunset Yahoo's search effort.

The mixed legacy of Digg Diflucan No Rx, : Digg, the social-news network that had been considered at one point the vanguard of the movement into social media, reached what will probably be seen as its nadir last week when it was sold for a reported $500,000 to the tech firm Betaworks. (Including the prior sales of some of its assets, the total was probably actually at least $16 million.) The sale marked the end of a long downfall for Digg, which Megan Garber of The Atlantic chronicled by the numbers.

Betaworks plans to incorporate Digg into its personalized news aggregator, News.me, in an effort to reinvent both products, according to Mathew Ingram of GigaOM, Diflucan used for. Betaworks CEO John Borthwick said his company plans to revert Digg to startup mode. If Betaworks succeeds in reinvigorating Digg, PandoDaily's Erin Griffith noted that it could become the web's first full turnaround story.

The main questions that emerged in the wake of the deal had to do with why Digg fell so far, and what other organizations could learn from its demise, Diflucan No Rx. Digg's founder, Kevin Rose, argued that Digg failed because social media "grew up" as platforms like Facebook and Twitter did what Digg attempted to do, Generic Diflucan, only better. Paul Tassi of Forbes disputed that idea, arguing that Reddit is filling the exact niche Digg had hoped to fill.

Both Patricio Robles of Econsultancy and Jeff Bercovici of Forbes put together lists of lessons from Digg's collapse, with the importance of listening to your product's users emerging as a theme. That point was put most forcefully by Alexis Madrigal of The Atlantic, who wrote that Digg broke down because its community broke, meaning that "the technology that powered a once-massive social network is worth about $500, Diflucan duration,000. All the rest of the value derives from the people that use it."

A few writers pointed out that Digg did accomplish some important things during its run: Om Malik of GigaOM praised Digg Diflucan No Rx,  as a company that "opened our eyes to the potential of the social web," and former Digg employee Aubrey Salaba of TechCrunch and former Digg devotee MG Siegler gave more personal appreciations of the site. Brian Morrissey of Digiday noted another important innovation Digg helped develop — ads that were actually a native part of the site's structure itself.

Journalism's dirty little quote approval secret: The New York Times reported this week on an alarming practice that's becoming commonplace among American campaign journalism — allowing sources to review and even change tape-recorded quoted comments. Several of the country's premier news organizations quickly responded to the exposé: Reuters and AP condemned the practice, The New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Where can i cheapest Diflucan online, and websites Buzzfeed and RealClearPolitics began reviewing their practices, and Politico's editor-in-chief expressed his concern.

The practice drew virtually universal disapproval from media observers. Perhaps the strongest condemnation came in The Guardian from Jeff Jarvis, who wrote that "When journalists give sources the opportunity to fix up what they've said, we become complicit in their spin, Diflucan No Rx. When we do so without revealing the practice, we become conspirators in a lie to the people we are supposed to serve: the public."

Others made similar points: Mother Jones' Kevin Drum said reporters are edging toward stenography, Dan Rather argued at CNN that this should prompt the public to question their trust in reporters, and Time's James Poniewozik and former newspaper editor John L. Robinson (among others) countered the objection that reporters get valuable stories through this tactic, Diflucan without prescription.

The Guardian's Ian Traynor warned American journalists with examples from Germany where requiring quote approval is standard practice. New York magazine's Joe Coscarelli said this gives live television the upper hand as "the real gladiator arena in today's YouTube-able, gaffe-centric political culture," and Carl Sessions Stepp of the American Journalism Review looked at the issue from sources' perspective, urging us to cut them a bit more slack when they do commit gaffes.

A new public editor at the Times: Marissa Mayer wasn't the only high-profile media/tech hire this week — The New York Times hired its first woman public editor Diflucan No Rx, , Margaret Sullivan, executive editor of the Buffalo News. Sullivan signed on for four years, Order Diflucan online overnight delivery no prescription, longer than any previous public editor. Poynter's Bill Mitchell and the Columbia Journalism Review's Sara Morrison talked to Sullivan about her plans for the position, which includes engaging in a more regular conversation with readers through the blog while keeping the more in-depth focus of the print column. You can also see a new Nieman Reports story of hers on the way the News handled a controversial crime story.

Sullivan told Mitchell and Michael Calderone of the Huffington Post that her experience as a woman would inform her perspective generally, but not in any specific way. Poynter's Mallary Jean Tenore argued that Sullivan's role as a woman may be more important than she's giving it credit for, and Sullivan wrote a blog post of her own what role her gender will and won't play in her public editing philosophy, Diflucan No Rx.

Sullivan also addressed the most controversial column of her predecessor, Arthur Brisbane, Diflucan dosagetelling Media Matters' Joe Strupp that she does indeed believe the Times should be a "truth vigilante." Isaac Chotner of The New Republic urged her not to follow Brisbane's example in indulging the inane complaints of readers. But tech pioneer Dave Winer, however, argued that the Times' public editor should identify more closely with the public, rather than the paper. "A good Public Editor is over-the-top critical of the news organization. He or she errs on the side of being fair to the Public and unfair to the news organization. The Public Editors the Times has hired have flipped it the other way around, Kjøpe Diflucan på nett, köpa Diflucan online, " he wrote.

A place for outsourcing in journalism?: Things just keep getting worse for local content provider Journatic in the wake of the revelation a few weeks ago that it's been using fake bylines on some pieces. Diflucan No Rx, The Chicago Tribune, which has invested in Journatic and had turned its TribLocal content over to the company, suspended its use of Journatic content after discovering some plagiarism in it. (Its newsroom is taking back over the TribLocal work.) Poynter also found more than 350 Journatic pieces for the Houston Chronicle with fake bylines, prompting internal reviews of Journatic content by both the Chronicle and its sister paper, the San Francisco Chronicle.

Meanwhile, Journatic sent an internal memo urging writers not to plagiarize or lie about their names or where they're working from. And one of Journatic's executives said he resigned because of conflicts over the company's ethical values, Diflucan brand name, though Journatic said it was about to fire him anyway. (Virtually all of those links are via Poynter's excellent coverage of the saga.)

Opinions on the dangers of semi-automated, outsourced journalism like Journatic's continued to flow in, including a discussion on the Bay Area's KQED radio and a Miami Herald column by Edward Wasserman. Others cautioned not to dismiss outsourced or content-farmed journalism out of hand: Poynter's Craig Silverman said this type of model is inevitable but needs to be done better, and GigaOM's Mathew Ingram said Journatic is just one (very flawed) way of trying to solve the problem of paying for commodity journalism, Diflucan No Rx. Spot.Us founder David Cohn outlined some lessons for journalists about the difficulties of building a content business on local data while trying to negotiate long-held journalism customs.

Reading roundup: It's been a really, Where can i buy Diflucan online, really busy week in media and tech. Here are a few of the stories that might have gotten lost in the shuffle:

— I noted last week that News Corp. is considering shutting down its daily tablet publication, The Daily. The publication launched a weekend edition Diflucan No Rx, , WKND, last weekend, and several analysts looked at why The Daily has struggled: The Next Web looked at the money, paidContent looked across some of the deeper issues involved, and Gawker's Hamilton Nolan offered a simpler rationale. Media analyst Frederic Filloux gave the most thorough explanation, calling The Daily "a sophisticated container for commodity news."

— NBC completed its divorce from Microsoft late last week, with msnbc.com becoming NBCNews.com. The New York Times reported that Microsoft is planning on forming its own online news team, real brand Diflucan online. NBCNews.com now has a long transition in front of it, and the Lab's Adrienne LaFrance looked at the changes in the new site's privacy policy.

— This week's paywall notes: A report found that half of the revenue in a newspaper paywall comes in the first three months, and the Australian site Mumbrella questioned whether paywalls are changing the way reporters write. Meanwhile, Washington Post publisher Don Graham explained why his paper will never institute a paywall.

— A new study by Pew's Project for Excellence in Journalism detailed the news environment that's emerging on YouTube. The Washington Post focused on the rise of news' popularity there, and the Lab's Adrienne LaFrance offered a great analysis of what works and what doesn't for news on YouTube.

Similar posts: Lipitor Price. Flagyl For Sale. Bactrim Mg. Kjøpe Lipitor på nett, köpa Lipitor online. Zoloft pics. Canada, mexico, india.
Trackbacks from: Diflucan No Rx. Diflucan No Rx. Diflucan No Rx. Diflucan from canadian pharmacy. Diflucan no prescription. Diflucan dosage.

August 27th, 2012

Glucophage Cost

[This review was originally posted at the Nieman Journalism Lab Glucophage Cost, on July 13, 2012.]

Evaluating newspapers' various strategies: Several wide-ranging strategies in the newspaper industry have been making headlines lately (Newhouse's draconian cuts in New Orleans, Warren Buffett's aggressive newspaper purchases, outsourcing hyperlocal news to Journatic), and The New York Times' David Carr tied a lot of them together in a sharp column identifying the severe financial difficulties facing the newspaper industry. The piece of news he reported was the fact that pension funds at major newspaper chains like Gannett and McClatchy are underfunded by hundreds of millions of dollars. Gannett Blog's Jim Hopkins said that finding deserves some attention.

One of the most prominent responses to these financial threats has been the implementation of online paywalls, a strategy that eByline's Peter Beller reported is more common at larger papers, to the point where it now affects a third of America's daily newspaper readers, buy Glucophage online no prescription. Closely tied to that strategy is a doubling-down by publishers on "original reporting" online, which media analyst Frederic Filloux contended is a losing proposition, because aggregators' tech- and marketing-savviness are trumping the quality of traditional publishers' work in the battle for online readers. British journalist Adam Tinworth said part of the problem is that publishers are trying out and pitching new digital strategies far too often, instead of being patient enough to see one through, Glucophage Cost.

Here at the Lab, Where can i find Glucophage online, Ken Doctor responded to all the hand-wringing with a list of reasons for hope in the news industry, including the potential in digital circulation, the growth of tablets, community blogs, and customer data.

Elsewhere, where can i order Glucophage without prescription, media analyst Alan Mutter categorized three strategies for newspapers dealing with the new digital environment — keeping up the status quo as long as possible ("farming" it), accepting print's decline and extracting as much money as possible before it finally goes ("milking" it), and leveraging old media resources to aggressively invest in digital innovation ("feeding" it). He mapped a different publisher to each approach — Buffett to farming, Online buying Glucophage, Newhouse to milking, and Rupert Murdoch to feeding — and ultimately endorsed Murdoch's plan.

Peter Kirwan of The Media Briefing also praised Murdoch's efforts to turn up the pressure on his print properties to start making money through digital innovation: Some of the experiments might backfire, he said, but "whatever it takes, speeding up the pace of digital transition can only be a good thing."

Newhouse's detractors and defenders: One of those newspapers has drawn particular attention over the past month or so — the New Orleans Times-Picayune, buy Glucophage from canada, which has now undergone its drastic layoffs and plans to cut down its publishing three days a week this October. Glucophage Cost, This week, the Newhouse family, which owns the paper, rejected a request by several New Orleans bigwigs to sell the paper to an unnamed buyer whom they have reportedly lined up. One local court also moved its public notices from the TP to the weekly paper the Gambit, and the paper is also receiving rants from its reporters about its poor website.

Newhouse's moves continue to draw strong criticism from media observers, Online buy Glucophage without a prescription, including former newspaper editor John L. Robinson, who attributed the changes to the fundamental conflict between public service and profits. "Profit trumps readers every time. The owners may appreciate the public service journalism the paper may produce, but it isn’t what they value the most," he wrote. And former Baltimore Sun reporter and "The Wire" creator David Simon argued in the Gambit that what's being lost in newspapers' evisceration is the public accountability provided by beat reporting, Glucophage from mexico.

But Newhouse has its defenders, too, including Digital First CEO John Paton, who argued that while the company is handling the transition poorly, it's still making the type of difficult, digitally centered change that's necessary for the business to survive, Glucophage Cost. GigaOM's Mathew Ingram concurred. Rem Rieder of the American Journalism Review acknowledged that arduous change is necessary for newspapers, but said the clumsiness with which Newhouse has handled its moves in New Orleans has swallowed up its goodwill and set the cause of change back.

Two studies with good news for mobile news: Two studies with interesting implications for digital news were released this week, Glucophage class, one on mobile news consumption and the other an international study on digital and mobile news consumption. The first, conducted by the Reynolds Journalism Institute, found that users of large tablets (i.e. Glucophage Cost, iPads and the like, rather than Kindle Fires) were older, more likely to pay for digital news, and particularly enjoyed reading on the tablet compared with other media. Poynter's Jeff Sonderman noted that those results makes "tablet readers seem the best hope for print publishers that want to make a digital transition based on paid content."

Slate's Will Oremus echoed that idea, though he cautioned that tablets may do more to eat into evening news' audience than help the traditional publishing industry, Glucophage without a prescription. This study was the final part of a three-part study on mobile media, and Amy Gahran of the Knight Digital Media Center gave some suggestions for future mobile news research, including focusing on community news in particular.

The second study, Ordering Glucophage online,  issued by Oxford's Reuters Institute, looked at digital news use in the U.S. and four European countries, with findings focusing on the rise of smartphones and tablets, as well as young people's changing news consumption habits. PaidContent's Robert Andrews highlighted the increasing willingness to pay for news among young smartphone and tablet owners, Glucophage Cost. J-prof Alfred Hermida dug into the numbers and pointed out that while the use of social media for news is up sharply, Glucophage for sale, it's driven by a small core of heavy news sharers.

Does outsourcing have a place in local news?: Last week's controversy regarding fake bylines at the hyperlocal content provider Journatic continued to generate debate this week, especially for newspaper columnists who defended the value of locally produced news (such as, say, Glucophage reviews, the news that appears in their newspaper). WNPR public radio hosted a discussion on outsourcing local news, and while former Patch editor-in-chief Brian Farnham didn't defend Journatic (he said it "gives me a cheap feeling"), he did say the overwhelming nitpicking and self-criticism coming from within journalism makes it difficult for any digital journalism initiative to survive.

Danish j-prof Rasmus Kleis Nielsen argued that with news' business model collapsing, the question isn't whether some aspects should be outsourced, cheap Glucophage no rx, but what and when. Glucophage Cost, If this episode illustrates that the article is untouchable, though, the scale of news production is going to have to decline, he said. "Cottage production works for the few, I don’t see how it will work for the many."

Reading roundup: No big stories this week, but lots of smaller ones to keep up with:

— Some continued discussion about CNN's (and others') Supreme Court reporting fiasco: The New Republic's Amy Sullivan urged journalists to stop caring about scoops, and reporters responded by defending the importance of speed in news. Sullivan replied that it's not really about speed per se, but obsession with being first with information that will become widely distributed almost immediately anyway. Poynter's Craig Silverman pulled some lessons for newsrooms from the fiasco. Buy cheap Glucophage, — Next Issue Media, a digital media joint venture among several top media companies, issued its iPad edition, which allows subscribers to read all they want of 39 magazines for a flat monthly fee — what Shawn King of The Loop and others called the Netflix model for magazines. Time's Harry McCracken said its audience will probably be limited to print magazine junkies, and GigaOM's Mathew Ingram was skeptical of the plan as a way to emulate print reading experiences, Glucophage long term.

— A group of media moguls met this week in California to talk about a variety of issues, one of which was the defeat this winter of their SOPA/PIPA anti-piracy laws. The New York Times and Forbes have more details about how that fight between media and tech is progressing, and Bloomberg broke down some of the other issues the executives would be discussing.

— The New York Observer's Kat Stoeffel reported that News Corp.'s money-losing tablet news publication, The Daily, has been placed "on watch," to be evaluated (and possibly killed) after November's election. Business Insider's Henry Blodget said The Daily has failed because it failed to carve out a niche or a distinct perspective.

— A few thought-provoking pieces that deserve a read this week: Two from the Columbia Journalism Review on making freelancing sustainable in the digital world and on the battle over the network nightly newscasts, and one here at the Lab by Jonathan Stray on getting ourselves out of like-minded "filter bubbles" in our online information consumption.

Similar posts: Lipitor Cost. Cephalexin No Rx. Buy Retin A No Prescription. Armour results. Synthroid price, coupon. Armour price, coupon.
Trackbacks from: Glucophage Cost. Glucophage Cost. Glucophage Cost. Glucophage trusted pharmacy reviews. Glucophage canada, mexico, india. After Glucophage.