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December 23rd, 2011

Flagyl For Sale

[This review was originally posted at the Nieman Journalism Lab Flagyl For Sale, on Nov. 18, 2011.]

A fight for online freedom: A U.S. House committee hearing brought an important three-week old bill on Internet censorship to the spotlight this week. The Stop Online Piracy Act (a companion of the Senate's Protect IP Act), would allow content creators to shut down websites on which people hosted unauthorized copyrighted content, or linked to sites that did. The Atlantic has a good, kjøpe Flagyl på nett, köpa Flagyl online, quick explainer, and the advocacy group Fight for the Future has a sharp video illustrating its implications. If you want to go in-depth, Techdirt has the most thorough continuing coverage of the bill.

I'm only slightly exaggerating when I say that it seems as though pretty much everyone on the Internet hates this bill, Flagyl For Sale. Bunches of Internet giants oppose it — Google was a major testifier at this week's hearing (though its rep referenced the WikiLeaks payment blocks favorably, Buy Flagyl online cod, which concerned some) — Tumblr ran an online campaign against the bill by mock-censoring its users' dashboard screens, and loads of online commentators howled against it.

Here's why they're so upset: This bill could inflict a ton of collateral damage, some of which could be a crucial blow for free speech on the web. The New America Foundation's Rebecca MacKinnon summed up the objections to the bill well, arguing that it would handcuff tech startups, lead to political censorship, purchase Flagyl, and have a chilling effect on speech on the web in general. As Dan Gillmor put it in the Guardian"The longer-range damage is literally incalculable, because the legislation is aimed at preventing innovation – and speech – that the cartel can't control. Flagyl For Sale, If this law had been passed years ago, YouTube could not exist today in anything remotely like the form it has taken."

As GigaOM's Mathew Ingram noted, you can't have the explosion of creative production, individual empowerment, and democratic potential of the Internet without the downsides of rampant copyright infringement. If you take away the latter, he argued, Where to buy Flagyl, you take away the former, too. And venture capitalist Brad Burnham made the interesting point that the architecture of the web is based on the assumption that there are more good actors out there than bad, an idea that this bill runs squarely against.

This bill poses some potential problems for journalism, too. Jessica Roy of 10, get Flagyl,000 Words outlined some of those issues, pointing out that articles could be censored for linking to sites with piracy information, and that citizen journalism and innovation could be stifled.

Twitter as one-way street: The Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism released a report this week on the way news organizations use Twitter, and the results weren't pretty: News orgs, they found, were using Twitter predominantly as a way to simply broadcast their stories online, not taking much advantage of Twitter's interactive capabilities or its ability to link readers to a wide variety of sources, Flagyl For Sale. PEJ said the behavior was reminiscent of the link-phobic early days of the web, and the Lab's Megan Garber called it a "glorified RSS feed."

GigaOM's Mathew Ingram was particularly troubled by how little news orgs and their journalists asked readers for news tips and feedback, Flagyl pharmacy, and media consultant Terry Heaton said this Twitter-as-headline-feed pattern among news orgs is evidence that it really is all about the money. "If influencing public life is the goal, then readership is what matters, and there are many ways to efficiently deliver unbundled content via the Web," he wrote. "When forcing people to read our content within our infrastructure, then it’s clear that monetizing that content is more important than anything else." Amy Gahran of the Knight Digital Media Center, meanwhile, australia, uk, us, usatied the study to another Pew study that reinforced the value of personal recommendations over impersonal ones.

There was also quite a bit of talk on Twitter about the study's weaknesses, led largely by media scholars like USC's Robert Hernandez. Still, one j-prof, Where can i cheapest Flagyl online, Alfred Hermida of the University of British Columbia, pointed out that this report's findings do echo those of several previous studies, both academic and professional.

Occupy Wall Street and scooping the wire Flagyl For Sale, : New York police swooped in earlier this week to clear Zuccotti Park of Occupy Wall Street protesters, which in itself wasn't surprising: Similar sweeps have been done in numerous American cities. What drew particular attention among future-of-news folks was the way they did it — by blocking journalists from viewing the action and even arresting 26 of them across the country, of whom seven worked full-time for traditional news orgs and seven had NYPD press credentials. The New York Times and the Atlantic have the most thorough accounts of what went on, and you can check out video of one of the reporter arrests at the Times' The Local, buy cheap Flagyl no rx.

One interesting side story to emerge from those arrests began when AP staff members tweeted that their AP colleagues had been arrested before the news hit the wire. The AP sent out a stern memo admonishing its journalists to beat their own wire reports on Twitter, prompting the New York Times' Brian Stelter to ask, "Shouldn't the wire speed up?!" GigaOM's Mathew said news orgs should consider Twitter the newswire now, and Reuters' Anthony DeRosa argued that policies like the AP's (and Reuters') are the products of head-in-the-sand thinking. (The AP sent out another memo the next day explaining that its initial memo was more about the safety of its arrested reporters than anything.)

Elsewhere in Occupy-related media and tech ideas: The Atlantic's Alexis Madrigal kicked off a series of posts on technology's role in the Occupy protests with a creative description of Occupy as a type of API, ReadWriteWeb's Jon Mitchell praised Storify for its role in Occupy coverage, and New York Times freelancer Natasha Lennard explained why she's ditching the objectivity-based paradigm of the mainstream media to get involved with Occupy, Flagyl For Sale. Flagyl forum,

Romenesko and online attribution: A few of the loose ends from Jim Romenesko's unceremonious departure from the Poynter Institute were tied up since last week's review: Poynter renamed Romenesko's blog MediaWire, and in an interview, Romenesko shed some light on his insistence on resigning: "I worked there for 12 years, and I'm supposed to spend my final days being supervised, having a babysitter, whatever. It just seemed a little bit humiliating."

Most notably, Flagyl long term, the Columbia Journalism Review's Erika Fry published the article resulting from the reporting that started this bizarre episode. In it, she argued that the attribution problems aren't limited to Romenesko, but are in part of a function of Poynter's move to longer — and, as she put it — "over-aggregated" posts. Purchase Flagyl online, Several Poynter faculty members also weighed in, with Roy Peter Clark providing the sharpest take: "The standards of attribution we still apply in print may in fact be outdated in the age of sampling, file sharing, and mash-ups."

Other media critics continued to defend Romenesko (Reuters' Jack Shafer) and rip Poynter (Terry HeatonFelix Salmon). Flagyl For Sale, The Gender Report's Jasmine Linabary, meanwhile, wondered why we weren't seeing much attention paid to women commenting on the Romenesko story.

Amazon releases the Kindle Fire: Amazon released its much-anticipated Kindle Fire tablet this week, and the reviews were mixed, Flagyl price. (PaidContent has a quick roundup of some of the big reviewers.) It got panned by a few places (most notably Wired), but the general sentiment was that while the Fire can't match up the iPad and some of the other top-end tablets, it's still a decent deal at $200. As the New York Times' David Pogue put it: "The Fire deserves to be a disruptive, gigantic force — it’s a cross between a Kindle and an iPad, Flagyl without a prescription, a more compact Internet and video viewer at a great price. But at the moment, it needs a lot more polish."

A few other notes regarding the Fire: Time Inc. had five of its magazines on the Fire at its launch after some protracted negotiating, and Amazon has made the Fire's source code available to developers to encourage software experimentation, Flagyl For Sale. Wired's Steven Levy, meanwhile, had an in-depth discussion with Amazon's Jeff Bezos about the state of the company.

Reading roundup: Bunches and bunches of interesting little stories this week, Flagyl natural. Here are a few we haven't hit yet:

— A federal judge ruled late last week that Twitter has to hand over information about possible WikiLeaks supporters, one of whom, Icelandic member of Parliament Birgitta Jonsdottir, expressed her outrage in the Guardian over the decision's threat to civil rights. ReadWriteWeb's John Paul Titlow and GigaOM's Mathew Ingram were also among those concerned about the future of privacy online.

— A few advertising-related tidbits: Reuters' Felix Salmon summarized a fascinating talk Flagyl For Sale, he gave on the woeful state of online advertising and what to do about it, Wired looked at Twitter's efforts to make serendipity pay as an advertising model, and the Lab examined newspapers' advertising efforts on Twitter. Meanwhile, the New York Times ran an innovative cross-platform interactive ad that also mimicked its news content, which led ACES' Charles Apple and the Columbia Journalism Review's Clint Hendler to question its ethics. The Times told Hendler the ad couldn't realistically be confused with actual Times content.

— The Columbia Journalism Review explored a crucial issue in the changing news ecosystem — what happens to all the communities that aren't hubs for innovation? — with a series of pieces on Modesto, California.

— Also in CJR, Megan Garber wrote a fascinating article looking back at how journalism has viewed its future over the years. The University of Colorado's Steve Outing decided to add to that tradition of journalistic fortune-telling with his set of predictions about what online news will look like 20 years from now.

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December 23rd, 2011

Cephalexin For Sale

[This review was originally posted at the Nieman Journalism Lab Cephalexin For Sale, on Nov. 11, 2011.]

Google+ courts businesses: After banning businesses for its first four months, Google+ finally let them in this week, launching Google+ Pages, which gives accounts to business and groups. (Danny Sullivan of Search Engine Land put together the best walkthrough of what Pages are and how they work.) Businesses jumped right in, including, About Cephalexin, of course, news orgs: Breaking News put together a running list of news Pages, and one Fox News show announced it would do Hangouts with presidential candidates, starting with Mitt Romney next week.

As Business Insider explained, Google has a big carrot to draw businesses in: Direct Connect, which allows users to go directly to a business's Google+ Page if they the business's name preceded by a "+". Lost Remote's Cory Bergman (who also runs the Breaking News Google+ account) said businesses should also get some SEO mojo from users clicking +1 on their Google+ account, which he argued was enough of a payoff to justify maintaining a Google+ account — at least for now, Cephalexin over the counter, anyway.

Social media guru Robert Scoble, on the other hand, was disappointed in Pages, calling them clumsy and difficult to manage, Cephalexin For Sale. Fast Company's Mark Wilson brought up the same point and added that since Google gives individuals two options of how to engage with businesses instead of Facebook's single "Like," most people will choose the weaker option. TechCrunch's Jason Kincaid wondered what exactly that weaker option, giving the business a +1, will do.

For Slate's Farhad Manjoo, Doses Cephalexin work, the addition of Pages was too little, too late for Google+. He declared the social network dead, a victim of Google's launch-then-fix-it model that has worked so well for most of its products. "But a social network isn’t a product; it’s a place Cephalexin For Sale, ," Manjoo wrote, arguing that Google should have let its users be more free to experiment to make up for its initial deficits. Mathew Ingram of GigaOM and the New York Times' Nick Bilton countered that it's too soon to give up on the network, because Google+ is designed to be not just another social network, but instead the connective tissue integrating an entire way to experience the web. Google has some pretty good cards still its hand that can help it reach that goal, too, he said.

Romenesko, attribution, and hair-splitting: Jim Romenesko, the dean of media bloggers soon to semi-retire from the Poynter Institute, was pushed into a bizarre little controversy yesterday when his editor, Cephalexin without prescription, Julie Moos, wrote a post taking him to task for "incomplete attribution" in his posts — essentially, using language from the posts he's summarizing (and linking to) without putting it in quote marks. Moos wrote the post in response to questions from the Columbia Journalism Review as it develops an article on the subject.

Romenesko wasn't asked to resign (he offered his resignation twice but Moos rejected it), but he will have to follow stricter attribution guidelines and have his posts edited before they go up. 10, Is Cephalexin addictive, 000 Words' Elena Zak praised Poynter's transparency, but to most observers, this was ethical hairsplitting run amok.

Media consultant Mark Potts hit many of the main points in his defense of Romenesko, noting that no one has complained to Poynter about this in the decade he's been blogging for them. Reuters' Felix Salmon pointed to Romenesko's stature in the blogosphere and his role in establishing the field's norms: "If your guidelines go against what Jim is doing, then there might well be something wrong with your guidelines."

The Awl's Choire Sicha took the opportunity to level a more serious charge at Poynter's handling of Romenesko's blog, saying that "Poynter has worked systematically to erode a fairly noble, not particularly money-making thing as it works to boost 'engagement'" and other online-media buzzwords, Cephalexin For Sale. For his part, Romenesko himself expressed his frustration in typically understated fashion in an email to the New York Times, then tweeted that "I feel it's time to go."

Is future-of-news talk hurting journalism?: This week, we got the rare opportunity to have a substantive, big-picture (meta)discussion about the way we think about the future of news when the Columbia Journalism Review published a thorough critique by Dean Starkman of 'future of news' thinkers like Jeff Jarvis, Clay Shirky, Cephalexin alternatives, and Jay Rosen.

The piece is quite long, but worth a close read: In short, Starkman argued that these thinkers are undermining the most valuable form of journalism — public-service journalism — by disempowering journalists and their institutions and by wasting their limited time (and the public's) with endless, mostly useless experimentation and busywork. Instead, Starkman proposed a model built around maintaining journalism's most valued institutions, Buy Cephalexin without a prescription, arguing that "journalism needs its own institutions for the simple reason that it reports on institutions much larger than itself."

Several people objected to Starkman's argument, starting with media strategist Terry Heaton, who countered that it's not institutions the future-of-news people have a problem with, but hierarchical institutions, and former Wall Street Journal writer Jason Fry, who said that some forms of news are indeed a commodity. A few others, like Mathew Ingram of GigaOM and Steve Buttry of the Journal Register Co. Cephalexin For Sale, argued that deep reporting vs. new media mastery isn't an either/or proposition, Cephalexin no prescription, pointing to examples of news organizations like the Guardian who do both well.

Former Guardian digital editor Emily Bell also wrote about her old paper's efforts in making a similar point, arguing that the spirit of muckraking is being carried on in these digital, networked initiatives. "The opening of electronic ears and eyes is not a replacement for reporting. It should be at the heart of it. And if it is not, then the institutions that Starkman laments might be to blame," she wrote, Cephalexin For Sale. Starkman responded by arguing that it all boils down to stories, Cephalexin maximum dosage, but the future-of-news folks want to talk about something else, and here at the Lab, C.W. Anderson weighed in on with a smart post on the ways in which institutions can be forces for both good and ill.

A force for digital change in the newsroom: The New York Times announced this week the retirement (effective the end of the year) of one of the pioneers of news on the web — Martin Nisenholtz, a senior vice president at the paper. As the Times noted, Nisenholtz has been intimately involved in just about every major technological initiative the Times has undertaken since he came on board in 1995: Launching the website, moving it into mobile media and tablets, Cephalexin description, and instituting its paywall earlier this year.

Poynter's Julie Moos put together a greatest-hits of commentary Cephalexin For Sale, by and about Nisenholtz over the years, including his prediction in early 2004 that smart phones would be a particularly influential force in changing news delivery. PaidContent's Staci Kramer talked about his lasting impact: No matter how slow (or fast) the transition seemed, "the NYT has an integrated newsroom with an understanding that digital, while it may not always be first, is equal."

Dave Winer, who helped create RSS, pointed out that Nisenholtz made the Times the first major publisher to license its stories for RSS, Cephalexin images, making a significant contribution to the growth of the open web in the process. The Lab's Joshua Benton used that story to illustrate thateven if news orgs can't invent these transformative web tools, they can still play a big role in their evolution and adoption. Media prof C.W. Anderson also noted another contribution Nisenholtz made — by allowing a scholar access to study his paper's digital efforts, he helped revitalize the field of digital media sociology.

A neutral way to tweet: If a few of the most recent sets of social media guidelines are any indication, news organizations are really struggling with the concept of their journalists' retweets on Twitter, Cephalexin For Sale. Several of those organizations have asked journalists not to retweet opinionated content without comment, lest they be thought of as biased themselves. Poynter's Jeff Sonderman tried to resolve that problem with an idea for an NT, Cephalexin from mexico, or neutral tweet, which people could use to retweet something while declaring their neutrality about it.

Most journalism folks on Twitter didn't like the idea, as Sonderman himself showed in his fine roundup of reaction. Many of them saw it as a way to avoid interacting naturally on Twitter, a "pacifier" or "high tech milquetoast," in the words of j-profs Jay Rosen and Matt Waite. Cephalexin For Sale, GigaOM's Mathew Ingram expanded on the idea, calling it a solution to the wrong problem. "By pretending that their journalists don’t have opinions, when everyone knows that they do, mainstream media outlets are suggesting their viewers or readers are too stupid to figure out where the truth lies," he wrote. Buy no prescription Cephalexin online,

Reading roundup: Lots of smaller stories and discussions popping in and out of the future-of-news world this week. Here's a few of them:

— This week in News Corp. scandal: Rupert Murdoch's son, James, told British Parliament he didn't mislead them last time he talked to them. Or, as Gawker put it, he asserted that everyone's a liar except him. The Guardian's Roy Greenslade doesn't believe him, Cephalexin For Sale. Murdoch also said the company might still close its British newspaper, Cephalexin canada, mexico, india, the Sun. And we also found out News of the World hired people to spy on their hacking victims' lawyers. Guardian editor Alan Rusbridger put the scandal in perspective in a lecture.

— New York Times media critic David Carr mused on the decline of WikiLeaks as an organization and its implications for radical transparency as a movement. Dave Winer and Mathew Ingram responded by questioning why the Times hasn't supported WikiLeaks more itself.

— Andy Rooney of CBS' 60 Minutes, one of the icons of American broadcast television, died late last week at age 92. Cephalexin recreational, You can check out the obituaries from CBS and the New York Times, a set of his classic essays at Gawker, and a thoughtful remembrance by tech entrepreneur Anil Dash.

— Finally, two great pieces of advice for two groups of people: Longtime News & Record editor John Robinson for newspaper editors, and MIT's Ethan Zuckerman for media consumers (read: all of us).

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September 16th, 2011

Bactrim Dosage

[This review was originally posted at the Nieman Journalism Lab Bactrim Dosage, on Aug. 26, 2011.]

Apple begins life after Jobs: This week in the media and tech world was defined by three men's departures, all announced on Wednesday. By far the biggest was Steve Jobs' resignation as CEO of Apple, 35 years after he founded the company. The decision was largely health-driven, as Jobs was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in 2004, Bactrim dosage, underwent a liver transplant in 2009, and has been on medical leave since January. Jobs will continue to be Apple's chairman, and as the Wall Street Journal reported, he'll still be involved in product development.

The announcement has drawn a massive amount of commentary, and Techmeme is the best place to gorge yourself on it — or you can read Adam Penenberg's mashup, Bactrim Dosage. Here's a small selection of some of the most interesting stuff, Bactrim canada, mexico, india, starting with the reflections on Jobs' legacy: All Things Digital's Walt Mossberg put together a sharp little rundown of the ways Jobs has changed the computing, animation, music, and mobile media industries. (TV is next.) Tech blogger John Gruber marveled at the company Jobs has built, saying, "Jobs’s greatest creation isn’t any Apple product. It is Apple itself."

Om Malik of GigaOM said Jobs taught us that building the future requires taking the long view, buy Bactrim from mexico, and tech guru Robert Scoble praised Jobs as a CEO who genuinely cared about his products, not just profits. If you're looking for more on Jobs himself, Byliner highlighted seven definitive profiles of the man from the past 15 years. Bactrim Dosage, Jobs' successor is Tim Cook, an Alabaman who joined Apple in 1998 and has been the company's chief operating officer since 2007. Cook has served as interim CEO twice, and he's essentially been acting as CEO throughout Jobs' medical leave this year. My Bactrim experience, Reuters profiled Cook, and All Things Digital's John Paczkowski said that while he's not going to be the visionary leader that Jobs was, he's the steady hand that Apple needs right now. The Atlantic's Nicholas Jackson said that Cook has learned to emulate Jobs as well as anyone could and noted all of the successful launches he's presided over. Wired's Tim Carmody wrote the most thorough defense of Cook as Jobs' successor, detailing his history with the company and his logistics innovations in particular.

The consensus on the Jobs-to-Cook transition seemed to be that Apple is losing a uniquely influential, irreplaceable CEO, but that the company is strong enough to stay well ahead of its competition anyway. Business Insider's Matt Rosoff cataloged what Apple will lose with Jobs, and msnbc.com's Wilson Rothman took stock of where Apple stands as Jobs leaving, suggesting that it might need to start working harder to fight for market share, Bactrim Dosage. Slate's Farhad Manjoo argued that Jobs has set his company up perfectly to continue his success, and Reuters' Felix Salmon predicted this transition will go down as a textbook example of a well-executed succession plan, what is Bactrim. Cook, for his part, assured Apple employees that the company's not going to change.

Two media legends leave their posts: The other two men to depart were in the media world: Poynter's pioneering media blogger Jim Romenesko and Slate media critic Jack Shafer. Romenesko, who's been running the definitive blog for news on the journalism business since the late '90s, Bactrim used for, will be semi-retiring in January, occasionally contributing reported media pieces to Poynter and doing some writing on a new personal site. The Huffington Post's Michael Arrington broke the news Bactrim Dosage, , and Romenesko's editor, Julie Moos, explained it from Poynter's perspective, detailing their ongoing transition of Romenesko to a group blog.

Poynter's Bill Mitchell told the story of Romenesko's tenure at Poynter, and touched on some of the enormous influence he's had: He chronicled one of the most important eras in journalism, helped aggregation be seen as a journalistic craft, and "brought transparency to newsrooms, equipping readers and staffers alike to hold those organizations accountable in the way that they scrutinize the operations of others."

The American Journalism Review's Rem Rieder also reflected on Romenesko's impact, and others chimed in on Twitter: Rare Planet's Patrick Thornton said he "showed journalists that good curation is journalism, get Bactrim," and the New York Times' Brian Stelter (who founded TVNewser) and paidContent founder Rafat Ali said he inspired them to start their sites. And while Wired's Tim Carmody called him "Twitter before Twitter," Romenesko himself told the New York Times he found himself disoriented by the rise of social media, saying, "My role kind of vanished."

Shafer was one of four laid off from Slate, where he had written about media since 1996, Japan, craiglist, ebay, overseas, paypal, the year the site was founded. Just hours before the news came down, the American Journalism Review had posted a profile of Shafer, with several luminaries praising his fearlessness and his meticulous research and reporting.

The layoff spurred a lot of confusion and complaints on Twitter and elsewhere, led by AJR's Rem Rieder, who called the decision "befuddling and disappointing." Northeastern j-prof Dan Kennedy also questioned the move, calling Shafer a "dogged reporter in a field where too many media critics would prefer to sit back and pontificate" and praising his iconoclastic perspective in an environment dominated by lockstep liberals and conservatives, fast shipping Bactrim.

Media critic Erik Wemple of the Washington Post said the layoffs weren't so preposterous given the financial struggles of Slate's owner, the Washington Post Co., but Forbes' Jeff Bercovici wondered if Slate's general-interest approach to the web still makes sense, Bactrim Dosage. Hamilton Nolan of Gawker used the occasion to opine on the decline of the media critic. Shafer, meanwhile, talked to Adweek about how he approached his job and what's next for him.

What should online identity be?: As Google+ grows, it's also drawing its share of detractors in the tech world, Online buying Bactrim, with various gripes about the new social network. Tech guru Robert Scoble, one of Google+'s heaviest users, also said it won't be ready to go beyond the tech crowd until it finds a way to cut down on the noise. GigaOM's Mathew Ingram echoed that thought and added a complaint about the difficulty of finding new users to connect with. Others are pushing back against that: The Huffington Post's Craig Kannalley said Google+ has all the building blocks Bactrim Dosage, of a successful platform, and MySpace founder Tom Anderson said you'll eventually be using it.

One of the primary complaints about Google+ since its launch has been its real-names policy, and Mathew Ingram continued to beat that drum this week, saying that Google lacks transparency about its motives, suggesting that Google allow any pseudonym users desire but also offer verified identities for users that request it, Bactrim mg.

Web editing veteran Derek Powazek defended Google, arguing that the notion that no one on the web uses their real name is dead: "Outside of a few legitimate edge cases and the occasional sci-fi fantasy, who we are online is simply who we are." Even though there's still a need for a space for anonymous speech online, he said, it's not up to corporations like Google to provide it for us.

The discussion about real names also extended again into the area of comment sections this week, Where can i buy Bactrim online, with Time's Graeme McMillan arguing that Facebook comments make those sections more civil, and the Huffington Post's Mandy Jenkins noting that Facebook comments don't necessarily solve the anonymity problem. Echo's Chris Saad said real names aren't the real issue with comment sections for media companies, and an Ad Age survey found that most online readers don't care about comments.

Integrating new media into journalism training: A note from across the pond: In a survey released this week, members of Britain's National Council for the Training of Journalists cast an emphatic vote for traditional media skills over new media expertise when it comes to the group's prestigious National Certification Examination, Bactrim Dosage. (The exam is used as a qualification for newsroom positions, and helps determine pay in some cases.)

Those results upset a number of British journalists who saw them as evidence of a technology-averse media establishment. The Guardian's Martin Belam worried that today's young journalists are being "encouraged to pay for qualifications that will equip them to work in a 90s newsroom, because the people designing the courses and the industry input they receive are all from people who cut their teeth in a 90s newsroom." J-prof Andy Dickinson called the group's desires journalism training for the common denominator, buy no prescription Bactrim online, not the future.

Numerous other journalists — Wales Online's Alison Gow, Reed Business Information's Adam TinworthDavid Higgerson of Trinity Mirror, and American Kerry Northrup — made a similar point: It's a fallacy, they said, Rx free Bactrim, to think of social media, multimedia and web proficiency as separate skills from the classic skills of reporting and storytelling — they're just other platforms on which to apply those skills.

Reading roundup: Really, there was other stuff going on this week than important people leaving their jobs. Here's a taste:

— A site called The Daily Dot Bactrim Dosage, launched this week with the goal of being "the web's community newspaper." So what does that mean. It's trying to cover the web's social networks, like Facebook, Twitter, Reddit, cheap Bactrim, and YouTube with reporting like a small-town paper might do. AdweekMashable, and VentureBeat have features on it, and one of its founders, Nicholas White, gave some lessons from his experience.

— The long-hated rule known as the Fairness Doctrine was officially taken off the books by the U.S. Federal Communications Communication this week. Mother Jones' Kevin Drum said goodbye.

— A few News Corp. notes: The (News Corp.-owned) Wall Street Journal looked at how the plans to tap the phone of a 13-year-old murder victim went awry at News of the World, the Daily Beast's Brian Cathcart focused on the investigator at the center of that scandal, and the Los Angeles Times' Joe Flint looked at News Corp.'s influence-peddling game here in the U.S.

— Two posts to leave you with: Maria Popova's fantastic post here at the Lab on the new rarity in the information abundance of the web, and some more great advice for journalism students from the Online Journalism Review's Robert Niles.

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