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Posts Tagged ‘news

17 Jun, 2010

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Posted by: Mark In: this week

[This review was originally posted at the Nieman Journalism Lab Buy Clobazam Without Prescription, on May 7, 2010.]

Has Newsweek's time come?: This week was a relatively quiet one until Wednesday, when The Washington Post Co. announced that it's trying to sell Newsweek, which it's owned since 1961. A possible sale doesn't always signal the demise of a news organization, rx free Clobazam, Clobazam prices, but in this case, as the folks at The Wall Street Journal's All Things Digital noted, real brand Clobazam online, Buy Clobazam no prescription, this move was the equivalent of "hastily scrawling out a 'Going Out of Business–Name Your Price' sign and plastering it on the front window." The New York Times has the details, including a j-prof's pronouncement that "the era of mass is over, Clobazam craiglist, Clobazam from international pharmacy, in some respect."

PaidContent's Staci Kramer talked to Washington Post Co. chairman Don Graham, buy generic Clobazam, Clobazam to buy, who boiled Newsweek's profitability problems to one telling statistic: Newsweek's staff split its time about evenly between print and digital last year, but print brought in $160 million in revenue, next day Clobazam, Purchase Clobazam online no prescription, while the digital side drew $8 million. Newsweek's digital operation was good, Graham said — just not good enough to stand out from the hundreds of other news sites out there, Clobazam gel, ointment, cream, pill, spray, continuous-release, extended-release. Buy cheap Clobazam no rx, Still, he was confident the Post would find a buyer (though he hasn't talked with anyone seriously), order Clobazam from mexican pharmacy, Clobazam overseas, and that Newsweek and newsweeklies in general would live on.

Newsweek editor Jon Meacham talked to the New York Observer, buying Clobazam online over the counter, Clobazam tablets, saying he's going to see if he can save the magazine, possibly by rounding up bidders to buy it, Clobazam medication. Meacham's conversation with Jon Stewart the day the news broke was laced with both optimism and gallows humor, and New York magazine examined Meacham's decision to try to make Newsweek the American equivalent of The Economist, Buy Clobazam Without Prescription. Clobazam over the counter, In a well-written piece, The New York Times' David Carr summed up two bits of conventional wisdom about Newsweek's downfall: The economics of weekly publishing simply aren't feasible anymore, Clobazam to buy online, Buy Clobazam online with no prescription, and the Washington Post Co.'s Slate, with its snarky, Clobazam paypal, Buy Clobazam online no prescription, knowing tone, has taken Newsweek's place, order Clobazam no prescription. Clobazam from canadian pharmacy, MarketWatch's Jon Friedman suggested that the Post combine the two. Slate's Jack Shafer said it wasn't the Internet that killed Newsweek, buy cheap Clobazam, Order Clobazam online c.o.d, but instead an ongoing game of musical chairs that someone had to lose. (Slate and Time, buy Clobazam online without a prescription, Where can i buy Clobazam online, for example, seem to be doing just fine, buy Clobazam from canada, Sale Clobazam, thanks.) Meanwhile, Derek Powazek, buy Clobazam online cod, Clobazam in mexico, who's edited several web magazines, gave his recipe for newsweekly success in the digital age, Clobazam trusted pharmacy reviews. Buy Clobazam Without Prescription, The next question, of course, is who will buy Newsweek. Where to buy Clobazam, News business analyst Ken Doctor examined two possibilities: TV-based news orgs like ABC, CBS and NBC looking for a print distribution point, where can i buy cheapest Clobazam online, Clobazam prescriptions, and "firebrand owners" like media moguls Mort Zuckerman or Marty Peretz. Either way, Clobazam buy, Clobazam discount, Doctor said, Newsweek will probably be all but extinct before long, buy no prescription Clobazam online. Clobazam in india, Poynter's Rick EdmondsMedia Alley and Mediaite all throw out some combination of Zuckerman, online buying Clobazam hcl, Purchase Clobazam online, Meacham, Bloomberg and Rupert Murdoch, fast shipping Clobazam. Ordering Clobazam online, as possibilities.

Committing journalism with Twitter: Many of Twitter's users have understood and used it as a medium for breaking, spreading and consuming news for quite a while now, but some research presented within the past week adds some backbone to that idea, Buy Clobazam Without Prescription. Four Korean researchers collected all of Twitter's data over a month's time last year and released their research on it — the first quantitative study of the entire Twitterverse, order Clobazam online overnight delivery no prescription. Clobazam in uk, What they found, according to PC World, buy Clobazam online without prescription, Clobazam price, coupon, was that both the structure of Twitter (with its asymmetrical following system, creating a world with some incredibly influential users and many other more peripheral ones) and its messages (85 percent are about news) give it more of a resemblance to a news medium than to its fellow social networks online, saturday delivery Clobazam. Buy Clobazam from mexico, MIT's Technology Review zeroed in on two particularly interesting findings illustrating the breadth of this new news system: First, two-thirds of Twitter users aren't followed by anyone that they follow, free Clobazam samples, Where can i find Clobazam online, meaning they use it for information consumption rather than social connections. Second, buy Clobazam without prescription, Over the counter Clobazam, despite the wide disparity between the Twitter "stars" and typical users, anyone's tweet still has the possibility of reaching a wide audience, Clobazam pills, Clobazam in australia, thanks to the usefulness of the retweet function. "Individual users have the power to dictate which information is important and should spread by the form of retweet," the researchers wrote, order Clobazam from United States pharmacy. "In a way we are witnessing the emergence of collective intelligence." Buy Clobazam Without Prescription, Also this week, Canadian j-prof Alfred Hermida put forward his argument in an academic paper for Twitter as an "ambient form of journalism" — a medium in which the former news audience creates, disseminates and discusses news, performing acts of journalism that were once performed only by professionals. Online buy Clobazam without a prescription, In a more technical paper, Alex Burns delved into the definition of "ambient journalism, Clobazam in japan, Cod online Clobazam, " especially as it relates to Twitter. Here at the Lab, buy Clobazam without a prescription, Clobazam for sale, Megan Garber also looked at the way news organizations in several countries are using Twitter and other social media for news.

The paid-content beat goes on: A few quiet indicators this week of the move toward news paywalls: Rupert Murdoch said News Corp, delivered overnight Clobazam. Clobazam in canada, will be announcing their paywall plans in a few weeks. Those plans apparently include anchoring a consortium of paid-content systems across various media companies, using technology that powers the Wall Street Journal's paywall, the Los Angeles Times reported, Buy Clobazam Without Prescription. Meanwhile, Clobazam in us, the number of publications that Journalism Online's execs say they're working with on paywall plans has increased to 1,400, including the sizable MediaNews chain of newspapers.

The Minneapolis Star-Tribune's new publisher/CEO, Mike Klingensmith, talked to MinnPost about his plans for a new metered-model system (like what The New York Times announced in January), and from the sound of it, he's looking at charging primarily for local news — the paper already charges for some of its Minnesota Vikings coverage — and wants to allow traffic from links to come in fairly uninhibited. A decision on the specific plans sound like they're at least a year off, though.

Advertising Age's Nat Ives also took a look at paywalls for smaller newspapers (here's the link, but Ives' article is also under a paywall). Ken Doctor says that for smaller papers, a paywall may be a good short-term wait-and-see strategy, but papers still have to be proactive about ensuring long-term growth.

The pros and cons of Facebook's spread Buy Clobazam Without Prescription, : There wasn't a lot of news involving Facebook this week, but the grumblings about its privacy issues rolled on. The New York Times used Facebook's latest (relatively minor, it seems) privacy glitch to give another overview about those concerns, and TechNewsWorld pegged their overview to a Consumer Reports survey about Facebook information sharing that was released this week.

Social media guru Robert Scoble wrote a depressing piece about why Facebook's disregard for privacy can't be regulated, concluding that Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg "just played chicken with our privacy and it sure looks like he won." New media expert Jeff Jarvis suggested that Facebook turn their bad privacy PR into a service for users (with some help from their ubiquity), offering them a simpler way to see what's being written about them across the web and manage their online reputation.

The New York Times' digital chief Martin Nisenholtz, was pretty impressed by Facebook's spread across the web, giving a sharp analysis of the importance of engagement and identity to publishers online. Those are things that Facebook has mastered, he said, but news organizations haven't, and that's a shame when the Times' most valuable asset is "our audience as knowledgeable participants in the life our web site."

Reading roundup: This week, I've got two news items and a few other good ideas to chew on.

— EBay founder Pierre Omidyar launched his new local news site, Honolulu Civil Beat, this week, Buy Clobazam Without Prescription. It's being run by John Temple, who was at the helm of the Rocky Mountain News when it shut down. The biggest distinctive of this project: It's almost entirely behind a paywall. PaidContent and NPR both have the details.

— The Audit Bureau of Circulations reported the most recent set of newspaper numbers a couple of weeks ago, and here at the Lab, newspaper vet Martin Langeveld punched a few holes in the Newspaper Association of America's declaration that the results are the sign of a turnaround. And after the announcement of the first quarter's newspaper profit numbers, the Lab's Ken Doctor explained why newspapers aren't going to be investment those profits in much-needed innovation.

— Publish2's Greg Linch put together a great case Buy Clobazam Without Prescription, for incorporating more of a computational mindset into journalism, identifying several common elements between journalism and programming and urging the two groups to work more closely together. English professor Kim Pearson followed that post up with some proposals for ways to integrate computational thinking into curriculums.

— We've been hearing a lot about online comments over the past few weeks, and Poynter's Mallary Jean Tenore took a close look at the ways several news organizations are working to improve them.

— I'll close with two simple but thoughtful pieces on online media, one from the production standpoint, and the other looking at consumption. First social media entrepreneur and blogger Ben Elowitz gave a fine summary of the way the definition of quality has changed in online media versus traditional publishing, and Slate's William Saletan had some helpful tips to make your media consumption broader, deeper and altogether smarter. It's hard work, but it's necessary, Saletan said: "In the electronic echo chamber, it's easier than ever to shut out what you don't want to hear. Nobody will make you open the door and venture out. You'll have to do that yourself.".

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26 Feb, 2010

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Posted by: Mark In: this week

[This review was initially posted at the Nieman Journalism Lab Buy Minocycline Without Prescription, on Feb. Cod online Minocycline, 26, 2010.]

A meter for the Times’ blogs: Plenty of stuff happened at the intersection of journalism and new media this week, Minocycline over the counter, Real brand Minocycline online, and for whatever reason, a lot of it had something to do with The New York Times, Minocycline in mexico. Delivered overnight Minocycline, We’ll start with the most in-depth piece of information from the Times itself: A 35-minute Q&A session with the three executives most responsible for the Times’ coming paywall (or, more specifically and as they prefer to call it, Minocycline in australia, Minocycline trusted pharmacy reviews, a metered model) at last Friday’s paidContent 2010 conference. No bombshells were dropped — paidContent has a short summary to go with the video — but it did provide the best glimpse yet into the Times’ thinking behind and approach to their paywall plans.


The Times execs said they believe the paper can maintain its reach despite the meter while adding another valuable source of revenue, purchase Minocycline online no prescription. Minocycline in usa, Meghan Keane of Econsultancy was skeptical about those plans, saying that the metered model could turn the Times into a niche newspaper.


Reuters’ Felix Salmon started one of the more perplexing exchanges of the session (starting at about 18:10 on the video) when he asked whether the Times would put blogs behind its paywall, order Minocycline no prescription. The initial response, from publisher Arthur Sulzberger Jr., was “stay tuned,” followed shortly, from digital chief Martin Nisenholtz, by “our intention is to keep blogs behind the wall.” A Times spokeswoman clarified the statements later (yes, blogs would be part of the metered model), and Salmon blogged about his concern with the Times’ execs’ response, Buy Minocycline Without Prescription. Minocycline craiglist, He was not the only one who thought this might not be a good idea.


My take: Salmon has some valid concerns, and, buy Minocycline online cod, Where can i order Minocycline without prescription, piggybacking off of the ideas he wrote after the paywall’s initial announcement, even the Times’ most regular online readers will be quite hesitant to use their limited meter counts on, sale Minocycline, Online buy Minocycline without a prescription, say, two-paragraph blog posts on the economics of valet parking. Times blogs like Freakonomics and Bits are a huge part of their cachet on the web, saturday delivery Minocycline, Where to buy Minocycline, and including them in the meter could do them significant damage.



The iPad and paid content: We also saw another aspect of the Times’ paid-content plans at a conference in Australia, where Marc Frons, next day Minocycline, Minocycline tablets, the paper’s chief technology officer, talked about the Times’ in-progress iPad app, order Minocycline online overnight delivery no prescription. Buy cheap Minocycline, Frederic Filloux, another one of the conference’s speakers, Minocycline buy, Minocycline price, coupon, provided a useful summary of publishers’ attitudes and concerns about creating apps for the iPad, including their expectation that Apple will provide some sort of news store built on the iTunes framework.


Two media vets offered a word of caution to news organizations excited about the iPad’s possibilities for gaining revenue for news: Kara Swisher of The Wall Street Journal’s All Things Digital blog said that “with their hands on none of the key technology and innovation levers online … media giants continue to be without even a pair sticks to rub together to make digital fire.” And citizen journalism pioneer Dan Gillmor wondered whether news orgs “should get in bed with a company that makes unilateral and non-transparent decisions” like the ones Apple’s been making for years.


For those following the future of paid news content, buy Minocycline without a prescription, Buy Minocycline from mexico, we have a few other new data points to consider: The stats-heavy sports publication The Sporting News will begin charging for its daily digital edition, and a small daily newspaper in Washington State says the first year of their paywall has been a tentative success, Minocycline prescriptions, Minocycline in india, with less effect on traffic than expected. Also, free Minocycline samples, Minocycline discount, Alistair Bruce of Microsoft has a thorough breakdown of who’s charging for what online in a slideshow posted last week. It’s a wonderful resource you’ll want to keep for future reference.



NYT, ordering Minocycline online, Minocycline in usa, NYU team up on local journalism: The Times also had one of the week’s big future-of-journalism announcements — a partnership with New York University to create and run a news site devoted to New York’s East Village, Minocycline in us, Minocycline discount, where NYU has several buildings. NYU professor Jay Rosen has all the details you’ll need Buy Minocycline Without Prescription, , including who’s providing what. (NYT: publishing platform, buy Minocycline online no prescription, Order Minocycline from mexican pharmacy, editorial oversight, data sources, Minocycline pills, Minocycline in canada, inspiration. NYU: editor’s salary, buy Minocycline online cod, Cod online Minocycline, student and faculty labor, offices.)


The partnership raised a few media-critic eyebrows, Minocycline trusted pharmacy reviews, Delivered overnight Minocycline, mostly over the issue of the Times using free (to them, at least) student labor after buying out and laying off 100 paid reporters. The Awl, Minocycline in japan, Where to buy Minocycline,  BNETThe New York Observer, order Minocycline online overnight delivery no prescription, Buying Minocycline online over the counter, and Econsultancy all have short but acerbic reactions making just that point, with The Awl making a quick note about the professionalization of journalism and BNET speculating about the profit margins the Times will make off of this project.



Innocence, buy no prescription Minocycline online, Where can i buy Minocycline online, objectivity and reality in journalism: Jay Rosen kicked off some conversation in another corner of the future-of-journalism discussion this week, bringing his influential PressThink blog out of a 10-month hiatus with a post on a theme he’s been pushing hard on Twitter over the past year: Political journalists’ efforts to appear innocent in their reporting at the expense of the truth.


Rosen seizes on a line in a lengthy Times Tea Party feature on “a narrative of impending tyranny” and wonders why the Times wouldn’t tell us whether that narrative was grounded in reality, buy Minocycline without a prescription. Minocycline in uk, Journalistic behavior like this, Rosen says, Minocycline tablets, Real brand Minocycline online, is grounded in the desire to appear innocent, “meaning a determination not to be implicated, where to buy Minocycline, Minocycline to buy online, enlisted, or seen by the public as involved.” That drive for innocence leads savviness to supplant reality in political journalism, Minocycline san diego, Buy Minocycline from canada, Rosen said.


The argument’s been made before, by Rosen and others such as James Fallows, Minocycline price, coupon, Free Minocycline samples, and Joey Baker sums it up well in a post building off of Rosen’s. But Rosen’s post drew a bit of criticism — in his comments, Minocycline in australia, Buy Minocycline online without prescription, from the left (Mother Jones), from the libertarian right (Reason), buy generic Minocycline, Order Minocycline from United States pharmacy, and from tech blogger Stephen Baker. The general strain running through these responses was the idea that the Times’ readers are smart enough to determine the veracity of the claims being made in the article, Buy Minocycline Without Prescription. (Rosen calls that a dodge.) The whole discussion is a fresh, purchase Minocycline online, Minocycline from canadian pharmacy, thoughtful iteration of the long-running debate over objectivity in news coverage.



Where do reporting and aggregation fit?: We got some particularly valuable data and discussion on one of journalism’s central conversations right now — how reporting will work in a new ecosystem of news. Here at the Lab, order Minocycline online c.o.d, Minocycline prices,  Jonathan Stray examined how that new landscape looked in one story about charges of Chinese schools’ connections to hacks into Google. He has a fairly thorough summary of the results, headlined by the finding that just 13 of the 121 versions of the story on Google News involved original reporting. “When I think of how much human effort when into re-writing those hundred other unique stories that contained no original reporting, I cringe,” Stray writes. “That’s a huge amount of journalistic effort that could have gone into reporting other deserving stories. Why are we doing this?”


Buy Minocycline Without Prescription, Also at the Lab, CUNY professor C.W. Anderson spun off of Stray’s study with his own musings on the definition and meaning of original reporting and aggregation. He concludes that aggregation/curation/filtering isn’t quite original reporting, but it does provide journalistic value that should be taken into consideration.


Two other interesting pieces on the related subjects of citizen journalism and hyperlocal journalism: PR/tech blogger Darren Barefoot raises concerns about citizen journalism’s ability to do investigative journalism, and J-Lab’s Jan Schaffer makes a strong case for the importance of entrepreneurs and citizen journalists in the new system of news.



Reading roundup: I’ve got two news developments and two thoughtful pieces for you. First, BusinessWeek reported on AOL’s efforts to build “the newsroom of the future,” a model largely driven by traffic and advertising data, not unlike the controversial Demand Media model, only with full-time journalists.


Editors Weblog raises some questions about such an openly traffic-driven setup, and media/tech watcher Tom Foremski says AOL should be focusing on creating smart news analysis. Social media guru Chris Brogan likes the arrangement, noting that there’s a difference between journalism and publishing.


The second news item is ABC News’ announcement that they’re looking to cut 300 to 400 of its 1,400 positions and move toward a more streamlined operation built around “one-man band” digital journalists. The best examinations of what this means for ABC and TV journalism are at the Los Angeles Times and the Poynter Institute.


The first thoughtful piece is theoretical: CUNY professor Jeff Jarvis’ overview of the evolution of the media’s “spheres of discovery,” from brands to algorithms to human links to predictive creation, Buy Minocycline Without Prescription. It’s a good big-picture look at where new media stand and where they might be going.


The second is more practical: In a Q&A, Howard Owens of the award-winning upstate New York hyperlocal startup The Batavian gives an illuminating glimpse into life in hyperlocal journalism. He touches on everything from advertising to work hours to digital equipment. Building off of Owens’ comments of the personal nature of online news, Jason Fry muses about the uphill battle that news faces to win our attention online. But if that battle is won, Fry says, the loyalty and engagement is so much greater online: “I chose this. I’m investing in it. This doesn’t work and wastes my investment — next. This does work and rewards my investment — I’m staying.”

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22 Feb, 2010

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Posted by: Mark In: this week

[This review was originally posted at the Nieman Journalism Lab Buy Acular Without Prescription, on Feb. 19, Acular to buy, Order Acular no prescription, 2010.]

Building news apps for the iPad: The buzz from the tech crowd about Apple's iPad has died down, but the iPad is beginning to get more interesting for the journalism world, Acular buy. Acular paypal, That's because we're starting to see news organizations unveil their iPad apps: Wired showed off its app — being developed with Adobe — this week, and as this Advertising Age article points out, sale Acular, Purchase Acular, we've already seen what will likely end up being iPad apps for magazines like GQ, Esquire and Sports Illustrated (in the form iPhone apps, Acular craiglist, Acular medication, in the former two cases).

We saw The New York Times' iPad app, over the counter Acular, Buy Acular from mexico, of course, at the iPad's introduction last month, Acular overseas. Buy Acular online with no prescription, But this week, Gawker reported rumors of a battle within the Times over the app's control and price: The print folks want see it as another way to distribute the paper and want to charge up to $30 a month, online buying Acular hcl, Where can i buy cheapest Acular online, while the digital side says it'll be designing the interactive content anyway and wants to price it at $10 a month. (Gawker also explained how this all relates to the Times Reader.) Color Apple-watcher John Gruber and former Salon editor Scott Rosenberg unimpressed, Buy Acular Without Prescription.

The Lab has two thought-provoking posts on different aspects of the iPad: First, saturday delivery Acular, Buy cheap Acular,  John-Henry Barac, who designed the iPhone app for the leading British newspaper The Guardian, fast shipping Acular, Where can i order Acular without prescription, has some fascinating thoughts about news design for the iPad. He sees the element of touch as being particularly important, ordering Acular online, Buy Acular no prescription, describing it as a more focused, physically direct means of obtaining information, online buy Acular without a prescription. Buy cheap Acular no rx, "I think you don’t want it to feel just like a great big PDF that you’re dragging around," Barac says.

Second, rx free Acular, Acular prescriptions, former newspaper publisher Martin Langeveld examines the business impact of the iPad on publishers, concluding that the iPad will "bring an enormous increase in online shopping." He has several practical tips for publishers on building strategies for the iPad era, Acular for sale, Purchase Acular online no prescription, focusing on creating new types of content for mobile devices and personalizing advertising to create new mobile-based revenue streams. As Ken Doctor put it, buy Acular online without a prescription, Acular from international pharmacy,  "The tablet is not a repurposing platform, to regain the old business, Acular gel, ointment, cream, pill, spray, continuous-release, extended-release. Buy Acular Without Prescription, It’s a great, new opportunity to reinvent the business."

Google backtracks on Buzz: Much of the talk online this week was once again about Buzz, Google's new real-time social media platform. Acular in india, Since that talk didn't have much to do with journalism, I'm not going to spend a whole lot of time on it, next day Acular, Acular in mexico, but here's the light-speed wrap-up to keep you up to speed: Buzz came out last week with a lot of problems — it was called awkwardconfusing and, Acular over the counter, Where can i find Acular online, most commonly, an invasion of privacy, buy Acular without prescription. Real brand Acular online, Google quickly announced some changes based on that negative reaction, and acknowledged that it probably wasn't tested enough before being released "in the wild." Google's CEO, buy Acular without prescription, Acular pills, Eric Schmidt, downplayed the privacy issue, Acular in uk, Where can i find Acular online, saying Buzz had harmed no one. If you want the details, Acular to buy, Acular in canada, Silicon Alley Insider has a quick timeline of Google's various responses.

One thoughtful take I want to highlight, buy no prescription Acular online, Order Acular online c.o.d, particularly for those interested in theory: Software engineer Kevin Marks compares the theoretical structure of Buzz to that of Twitter, noting in particular that Buzz can't match the subtle effectiveness of Twitter's "overlapping publics, order Acular online overnight delivery no prescription, Fast shipping Acular, " thereby leaving Buzz conversations dominated by people we don't necessarily want to hear.

Plagiarism's online migration: For the second straight week, we saw a primarily web-based journalist resign after being caught plagiarizing: New York Times DealBook reporter Zachery Kouwe had plagiarized from The Wall Street Journal and Reuters and resigned after an internal investigation, where to buy Acular, Acular prescriptions, a week after Daily Beast investigative reporter Gerald Posner's plagiarism of the Miami Herald was uncovered.

I mention this not because two back-to-back cases of plagiarism are necessarily related to the future of journalism per se, but because a worthwhile conversation about ethics and plagiarism in the internet journalism era has sprung up around Posner's and Kouwe's responses, Buy Acular Without Prescription. Posner in particular blamed "the warp speed of the net, buy Acular online without prescription, Buy generic Acular, " and Kouwe referred to the speed with which he felt compelled to blog for the Times in his rationale.

The Columbia Journalism Review sees in all this the danger of increasing news productivity demands, purchase Acular online, Buy Acular online with no prescription, not just in ethical lapses but in the lack of quality — "what’s not getting out because it doesn’t pass the time/productivity stress test." After Posner's resignation last week, True/Slant's Michael Roston noted that you'll seldom see plagiarizing bloggers because they "don't need to" — the ethic of the link that reigns in the blogosphere makes it easy for bloggers to make points by openly building off of others' work while giving appropriate credit. Finally, Acular in usa, Order Acular from United States pharmacy, Poynter's Kelly McBride offered some web-oriented tips for writers and editors on avoiding plagiarism.

A win for citizen journalism: We saw what may be a first in the journalism-prize world this week with the prestigious George Polk Awards when the award in a new category, purchase Acular, Acular to buy online, videography, went to an anonymously produced video of the death of a young Iranian woman, buy Acular online cod, Acular in us, Neda Agha-Soltan, during protests last summer, Acular from canadian pharmacy. Acular for sale, The video went viral on the web, getting millions of views and helping spark worldwide support for the Iranian resistance movement, Acular buy. Buy Acular Without Prescription, Polk Awards curator John Darnton considered it a statement on the power of citizen journalism: "This award celebrates the fact that, in today’s world, a brave bystander with a cellphone camera can use video-sharing and social networking sites to deliver news,” he told The New York Times. Buy Acular from mexico, NPR's David Folkenflik still gave credit to professional journalists for verifying, curating and sifting through video like this and establishing its newsworthiness, Acular medication. Buy Acular online no prescription, Former Wall Street Journal online reporter Jason Fry compared the Neda video to two other famous new videos shot by "ordinary citizens" — the Zapruder film and Rodney King video. The biggest difference in what the Neda videographer did, buy cheap Acular, Fry argues, was not so much in the video's shooting, but in its distribution: Both Zapruder and George Holliday needed gatekeepers to disseminate their videos, but Neda's videographer needed none. That difference is a radical one, Fry says — it "changes not just how news is found and made, but how it is shared and therefore defined."

Google opens Living Stories to the masses: Another quiet development that could prove to be monumental in the long run: Google News opened up the code to its Living Stories format to anyone on the web. The project was launched in December with The New York Times and The Washington Post, but this move will allow any news organization to incorporate Living Stories into its site.

Living Stories allows readers to follow a large story with lots of developments in one place, sort of like a "personalized RSS feed reader, but customized to pay attention to just that one story," as ReadWriteWeb put it, Buy Acular Without Prescription. We've been seeing calls, particularly in the last several months, for news organizations to make these "explainers" central to the way they communicate news, and this could be a key tool in making those types of pieces more accessible to news orgs everywhere. At O'Reilly Radar, Mac Slocum urges news sites' developers to start incorporating Living Stories immediately.

Reading roundup: I've got four pieces that are well worth your time this week. First, in a lecture at USC, Columbia professor Michael Schudson offered a thorough historical case that journalism in many areas is getting better, not worse. Buy Acular Without Prescription, This is not naive, Pollyanna-ish optimism; this is a sensible, studied survey of why the future of journalism is fundamentally a hopeful one.

Second, a French journalism site proposed a vision for a "Google newsroom" — a newsroom divided into halves focusing on creation and curation of journalism. It's a great starting point for discussion about what the newsroom of the future should look like.

Third, speaking of curation, this Robin Good post has a pretty comprehensive look at what it looks like in journalism — Good calls curating journalists "newsmasters." The post is a little unwieldy, but it offers a good overview of what news curation is all about.

Finally, a Time foreign correspondent Jeff Israely gives 11 valuable lessons from a year working on an in-progress news startup in a post here at the Lab. It's a must-read for anyone thinking about going into a new journalism venture — which, these days, might include a lot of ex-print journalists.

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22 Feb, 2010

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Google Buzzes social media: For the second week in a row, buy Claritin online without a prescription, Buy Claritin without a prescription, the biggest story at the intersection of journalism and new media is an innovation by Google: This week, the talk was about Google Buzz, online buying Claritin hcl, Online buy Claritin without a prescription, a real-time program for sharing status updates, links and media through Gmail’s platform, next day Claritin. Order Claritin no prescription, You can find helpful summaries of how Buzz works at The Official Google BlogO’Reilly Answers, buy Claritin from canada, Where can i order Claritin without prescription,  Mashable and Search Engine Land. A theme that’s clear especially from the Google blog and Search Engine Land: Google sees Buzz as a big part of its effort to organize the “torrent” that is the web’s social information with the help of the same algorithms that gave Google its search primacy.

The most important stuff first: As for Buzz’s implications for journalism, Claritin over the counter, Buying Claritin online over the counter, the two best quick guides are by Will Sullivan at Poynter and Google-watcher Jeff Jarvis at BuzzMachine. Jarvis sees Buzz as a major step toward the “hyperpersonal news stream” that Google’s been visualizing and magnifies the value of voice and local news, Claritin trusted pharmacy reviews. Sullivan focuses largely on Buzz’s impact on adding the element of location to news and advertising, Buy Claritin Without Prescription. Order Claritin from mexican pharmacy, (The local media site Lost Remote touches on this, too.) By the way, Claritin from international pharmacy, Sale Claritin, I’m with Sullivan on this — I think Buzz’s greatest impact on journalism may be as an incremental step in the development of mobile news, a sort of early bud in the ecosystem of location-based news.


The initial response from the tech crowd tended to be negative, buy Claritin no prescription. Claritin in australia, RSS and blogging pioneer Dave Winer declared it a dud, and PR exec Steve Rubel called it “Google Wave light, Claritin overseas, Claritin in japan, a non-starter.” Others saw major privacy issues with Buzz revealing your email contacts to the world, though Google gave us a fix Thursday afternoon.


Much of the discussion around Buzz, Claritin tablets, Claritin gel, ointment, cream, pill, spray, continuous-release, extended-release, though, was about which social network it will or won’t tear into, Claritin in india. Where can i buy cheapest Claritin online, Before it launched, it was called a “Twitter-killer, Claritin in mexico, Claritin discount, ” and DigitalBeat countered that it wouldn’t kill Twitter, while telling us what role itwould play, saturday delivery Claritin. Ordering Claritin online, (Meanwhile, Dave Winer opined on what a social-media platform would have to have in order to kill Twitter.) Several others noticed its similarity to Facebook, Claritin craiglist, Buy cheap Claritin no rx, and in a smart post at The Big Money, Chris Thompson explained where it might have an advantage, Claritin price, coupon. Buy Claritin Without Prescription, And at the tech blog ReadWriteWeb, Frederic Lardinois has a great list of improvements Buzz could make.


Demand’s plan for publishers: Four months after Wired brought the business model of online content producer Demand Media to light, the conversation about the company remains on a slow burn. Claritin prices, We’ve been hearing lately from several Demand execs; most newsworthy is the revelation that Demand is experimenting with several major publishers and plans to move into the business of selling their original content to supplement publishers’ websites.

Why does this have people worried, over the counter Claritin. Free Claritin samples, Because Demand Media is being held up as the poster child for so-called “content farms” that flood the web with content of dubious quality and pay their freelance writers a pittance to do it. (Last week, rx free Claritin, Purchase Claritin online no prescription, news business expert Alan Mutter stirred the pot by telling freelance journalists to refuse to work for so little, and j-prof C.W, Claritin san diego. Anderson noted that just because someone will work for that kind of money doesn’t make it right.


Demand Media’s Richard Rosenblatt and Steven Kydd both defended themselves against those charges in interviews with GigaOM and Beet.TV, respectively, Buy Claritin Without Prescription. Where to buy Claritin, A bit more surprisingly, they got some support from New York Times media columnist David Carr, where can i buy Claritin online, Cod online Claritin, who quoted several Demand Media freelancers who said, among other things, Claritin paypal, Claritin price, coupon, “Demand has been as close to a safety net as anyone gets in this business.” As for consumers who are frustrated by the lack of quality content, Carr says, fast shipping Claritin, Order Claritin no prescription, “ignore the loudmouth and ask someone else.”


Are people paying for news — or relationships?: There was no single major news item on the paid-content front this week, but we did get a handful of interesting pieces of news and conversation on the subject, Claritin prescriptions. Claritin craiglist, First, on the newsier side: An exec with the recently bankrupt newspaper chain MediaNews told Poynter’s Steve Myers they plan on rolling out their new paywall at two papers in the next few months, order Claritin online c.o.d, Over the counter Claritin, and gave him a loose description of what it will look like. (Summary: A metered model, buy cheap Claritin, Buy Claritin online without prescription, like the Financial Times or The New York Times’ plans; breaking news and multimedia will be free; enterprise reporting, columns and reviews will be behind the paywall.) Another exec in the paid-content business, where can i buy cheapest Claritin online, Claritin buy,  Journalism Online’s Gordon Crovitz, says the unnamed publishers they’re working with are also leaning toward metered models, where can i order Claritin without prescription. Purchase Claritin online no prescription,

On the discussion side, two sharp pieces were written this week about what will sell online, Claritin in mexico. Buy Claritin Without Prescription, First, CUNY j-prof and web guru Jeff Jarvis tells us what won’t sell: Scarcity. Buy Claritin without prescription, In media, Jarvis says, Claritin in australia, Claritin overseas, that means content and information aren’t scarce and can’t be sold as such. Instead, Claritin in canada, Claritin in india, he advises news orgs to base their business on relationships with readers and marketers, saying, order Claritin online overnight delivery no prescription, Buy Claritin online cod,  “We must also align our interests with those of the community … helping them do what they want to do, adding value and recognizing it that way.”


Second, where can i buy Claritin online, Claritin pills, PBS MediaShift’s Chris O’Brien notes that quite a few people are spending $1 to buy each other virtual beers on Facebook and wonders what it might mean for news. He theorizes that it indicates that true value lies “not in the thing itself, Claritin for sale, Buy Claritin online without a prescription, but in something adjacent to the thing, some feeling you have about it, or something you can do with it in terms of expressing yourself.” In a brilliant post, former McClatchy exec Howard Weaver takes the idea a step further, arguing that what people value is the community that they’re helping enrich and sustain by buying the virtual good. News orgs, he says, need to nurture the consumption of news as a social act, to create “an ecology where caring about the news becomes satisfying and rewarding social behavior.”


Gauging Facebook’s expansionLast week’s discussion about Facebook’s potential power as a news and information source spilled over into this week, spurred on by reminders of Facebook’s furious rate of expansion: Sharing on it has quintupled in the last six months; it’s developing webmail to compete with Gmail; it’s creating its own targeted display ad system; and it’s hoping that Facebook Connect will become the web’s universal login. (As an added bonus, the latter article also has a wildly entertaining comment thread of people who thought they were logging into Facebook instead of commenting on a tech blog.)

Steve Rubel gives a vision of where Facebook might be headed next — business networking, helping developers build mini-sites within its networks, and ramping up search — and sums it up with a sweeping statement: “Facebook is becoming the web for millions and millions of people, Buy Claritin Without Prescription. … Facebook is unstoppable. They aren’t just the next Google. They’re the next web.”


Reading roundup: We’ve got quite a few (mostly short) miscellaneous items that are well worth a read this week. I’ll give them to you in no particular order:

— Here at the Lab, Martin Langeveld breaks down the 2009 fourth-quarter results from several of the nation’s largest newspaper companies, discerning a few interesting trends (advertising revenue and total revenue are down, but profits are generally up).


— Missouri j-prof Clyde Bentley lays out a step-by-step three-year plan for newspapers to prepare for a world in which mobile Internet access is the modus operandi, rather than PCs. It’s a great jumping-off point for newsroom innovation.


— The new director of BBC Global News challenged the network’s reporters and editors to deepen their engagement with social media and other web tools. Meanwhile, USC j-prof Robert Hernandez advises journalism students that the most essential 21st-century journalism skills are still the basics.


— Two interesting studies: A Penn study of The New York Times’ most-emailed list provides some clues to what kind of news people most like to share online, and research by social media consultant Jamie Beckland hints that in Portland, at least, policy-oriented journalism is thriving more in the local blogosphere than traditional media.


— Finally, UT-Dallas j-prof David Parry turns some keen observations of his students’ media habits into an insightful argument that “new media” aren’t all that new — in fact, they’re now “a fundamental part of our cultural, legal, and social institutions. It is time we started treating them as such.”

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22 Feb, 2010

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[This review was first posted at the Nieman Journalism Lab Buy Meclizine Without Prescription, on Jan. 29, Meclizine buy, Order Meclizine no prescription, 2010.]

The iPad’s big reveal: Apple unveiled its new tablet — the unfortunately named iPad— on Wednesday, a week before the Super Bowl, order Meclizine from United States pharmacy, Online buy Meclizine without a prescription, and the buzz was as least as big: The Internet practically broke under the weight of the hype for Apple’s latest product. Rather than bury you in opinions about the specs and perks of the iPad, buy Meclizine online no prescription, Ordering Meclizine online, I’ll focus on what people are saying about the gadget’s potential impact on print and online media, especially journalism, over the counter Meclizine. Order Meclizine online c.o.d, Here goes:

Let’s start with the runup. Print media folks had high hopes that the iPad would revolutionize their industries — even, Meclizine in india, Meclizine overseas, as The New York Times put it, giving old media “a chance to undo mistakes of the past, buy Meclizine without prescription. In three smart posts, the tech sites TechCrunchGizmodo and Wired said the iPad could be a tool to change publishing, but, as Jason Kincaid in TechCrunch wrote, “someone will need to deliver the content.” Then there were the pre-emptive debunkers, who argued that the iPad would be “just another distribution platform,” merely a circulation tool for journalism, and a “massive distraction” for newsrooms.


After the announcement, the overwhelming reaction from the tech world was one of disappointment, Buy Meclizine Without Prescription. Meclizine prices, The Guardian has a roundup, and you can itemized lists of iPad beefs by the web giants Mashable, buying Meclizine online over the counter, Meclizine over the counter,  Gizmodo and Gawker, as well as new-media-watcher Steve Yelvington, fast shipping Meclizine. Meclizine from canadian pharmacy, But there were a lot of people wowed and encouraged by the iPad announcement: A lot of them were old media people — publishers, as this MediaWeek roundup especially shows, buy Meclizine from canada. Meclizine for sale, As MediaCritic’s Scott Rosenberg observedthe iPad demo played largely to the delight of those who want to mimic the paper experience, Meclizine paypal, Sale Meclizine, but those who see the web as bringing in a new relationship with news seemed to expect more.


Wired and The Big Money gave us a medium-by-medium look at the iPad’s potential impact, and neither was blown away by its possibility for newspapers and magazines, next day Meclizine. Meclizine in us, Between the roundups of Poynter and Alan Mutter and the thoughts of Nieman Journalism Lab director Joshua Benton, we have a pretty good spectrum of sensible takes from media-watchers from a variety of backgrounds.


A few points in the discussion worth highlighting: A number of tech writers — Twitter engineer Alex Payne, Meclizine in australia, Online buying Meclizine hcl,  Rafe Colburn and j-prof C.W. Anderson — have noted that  Buy Meclizine Without Prescription, the iPad is fundamentally a closed platform, designed more to secure market share for Apple than to perpetuate the web’s openness. (They’ve got a point.) Second, Meclizine to buy online, Rx free Meclizine, quite a few others have pointed out that the iPad is a content consumption device, not a content creation one, real brand Meclizine online. Purchase Meclizine online, This has several implications: It appeals to a different audience than most new tech products (the casual, “lean-back” user, buy Meclizine without a prescription, Meclizine in mexico, says Jason Fry; the content-inhaling youth of the world, says David Carr), Meclizine medication. Where can i find Meclizine online, It makes content creation critical (see TechCrunch and Wired), and, Meclizine in uk, Meclizine trusted pharmacy reviews, as NYU professor Jay Rosen put it, it turns the nature of the Internet from the “read write web” back into the “read only” web.


Ultimately, Meclizine to buy, Buy Meclizine online without prescription, the iPad’s utility for journalism is going to come down to the quality of content that news organizations create for it. Is that content going to be regressive, trying to recreate a print experience and neutering the power of a new tool, buy Meclizine online cod. Buy cheap Meclizine, Or is it going to be rich, web-native and innovative, Meclizine craiglist, Meclizine prescriptions, giving users an experience and value they haven’t had until now. (Will BunchJudy Sims and Alan Jacobson make similar points quite succinctly and eloquently.)


How leaky will the Times’ paywall be?: The biggest topic in journalism B.T, Buy Meclizine Without Prescription. (Before Tablet) was The New York Times’ proposed paywall, Meclizine from international pharmacy, Meclizine gel, ointment, cream, pill, spray, continuous-release, extended-release, and specifically, parsing the impact of Times execs’ statement that anyone coming to a Times article through “another Web site” will get free access to that article, buy Meclizine online with no prescription, Where to buy Meclizine, without it counting toward their metered tally of page views. NYU professor Jay Rosen was the first to draw attention to the implications of that provision, Meclizine tablets, Buy Meclizine online without a prescription, concluding, “That looks a lot less like a pay wall to me, Meclizine in canada. Buy Meclizine no prescription, It isn’t a metered system if I can access the Times via the link economy without limit.”

In that case, Reuters’ Felix Salmon argued, cod online Meclizine, Meclizine trusted pharmacy reviews, online subscribers would be paying not for the Times’ content, but for how they got to it, where to buy Meclizine. Meclizine from canadian pharmacy, Or, as Josh Young put it, order Meclizine from United States pharmacy, Meclizine in uk, the Times is “charging for being ignorant of all doors but the front.” (Some more great back-and-forth on why the Times would want such a flimsy paywall can be found in the Notes and comments of Rosen’s piece.)


Silicon Valley Watcher Tom Foremski and Times contributor Robert Wright acknowledged the paywall’s leakiness, too: Foremski proposed getting linkers to run the Times’ ads, Meclizine buy, Online buying Meclizine hcl, and Wright wanted to add micropayments to the paywall. Steve Yelvington pointed out another big hole in the Times’ metered model: cookies.


Felix Salmon and Gawker’s Gabriel Snyder did the math and found it doesn’t look good for the Times; The Big Money’s Frederic Filloux was more optimistic about the numbers, provided the Times only charges the heaviest users, buy Meclizine online cod. (Salmon is also disappointed Buy Meclizine Without Prescription, that the Times has given up on the dream of being so essential that it can make big bucks from a free site.) If you want to do some number-crunching of your own, the Nieman Journalism Lab’s Jonathan Stray has a nifty little tool for you.

Newsday’s 35 online subscribers: Based on sources from an internal meeting, The New York Observer reported the number of subscribers of Newsday’s website since the Long Island newspaper — the nation’s 11th-largest newspaper by print circulation — put up a paywall three months ago, and the tally shocked a lot media observers: 35. MediaDailyNews detailed Newsday’s overall decline in numbers since the wall went up in late October. Meclizine overseas,

Several people — not least Newsday’s own execs — quickly noted the paper’s unique case: It’s owned by Cablevision, and subscribers of the print edition or Cablevision’s cable or broadband access get free access to the site, sale Meclizine. Meclizine in usa, (The paper estimates that amounts to 75 percent of Long Islanders.) As Steve Yelvington noted and Newsday hinted to paidContentthe paywall is much more about giving a free perk to cable and Internet subscribers than actually netting paid website customers. So it doesn’t make much sense to apply this scenario to other similar-sized papers, ordering Meclizine online. Meclizine over the counter, That being said, 35 is an astonishingly low number, Meclizine craiglist, to say the least.

Foursquare’s possibilities for news orgsFoursquare — a fast-growing, mobile-based social network based on sharing your location — announced its partnership with the free daily paper Canada Metro, the company’s first partnership with a news organization. Metro will add location-specific coverage to Foursquare users, who could receive alerts when they’re near those spots.

On the social media blog Mashable, Jennifer Van Grove described Metro’s Foursquare content as a travel guide book that “unlocks the best a neighborhood has to offer, Buy Meclizine Without Prescription. She calls the relationship symbiotic (mobile utility for Metro, print exposure for Foursquare and local businesses). With mobile news access exploding, this could be part of a future-of-journalism recipe: The tech blog ReadWriteWeb has an intriguing vision of the type of location-aware news and tips that might be possible through services like Foursquare.


Last week, Lehigh j-prof Jeremy Littau said that Foursquare can allow journalists to map out pertinent facts about their communities and help residents explore their neighborhoods. And Sean Blanda advised The New York Times (and other news organizations) to learn from Foursquare’s system of rewarding users.

Taking action in HaitiLast week’s discussion about whether reporters in Haiti should become involved in the story they’re covering (in this case, particularly reporters serving as doctors) continued into the weekend. The Society of Professional Journalists reiterated its stance that journalists should “avoid making themselves part of the stories they are reporting.” This prompted a barrage of angry Twitter posts by Jeff Jarvis. Tyler Dukes listed them and fired back at Jarvis, while Gazette Communications’ Steve Buttry joined Jarvis’ attack on SPJ. Buy Meclizine Without Prescription, NPR’s “On the Media” brought in a few more takes, and St. Petersburg Times media critic Eric Deggans proposed a middle wayIt’s OK to help, but turn the cameras off when you do it.

Reading roundup: If your head isn’t already spinning from the loads of iPad commentary I’ve thrown at you, there are a few pieces from the past week that are well worth a read: First, Alan Rusbridger, editor-in-chief of the British newspaper The Guardian, deftly outlined the state of journalism and argued against paywalls for news orgs in a lecture on Monday. Here’s the summary, the full text (it’s long) and a smart response by Jason Fry questioning Rusbridger’s anti-paywall argument.

Second, The New York Times’ Nick Bilton points out how ingrained sharing, filtering and aggregating have become in the way we live on the web. It’s one of those short, simple pieces that neatly captures a concept that many of us had noticed but hadn’t sharply articulated yet.


Finally, the Knight Digital Media Center’s Michele McLellan — also a fellow at the University of Missouri’s Reynolds Journalism Institute — has a mind-blowingly thorough taxonomy of local news organizations across the country. This is definitely a post you’ll want to save for future reference.

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22 Feb, 2010

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[This review was originally posted at the Nieman Journalism Lab Buy Rhinocort Without Prescription, on Jan. Online buy Rhinocort without a prescription, 22, 2010.]

The Times’ paywall proposal: No question about media and journalism’s biggest story this week: The New York Times announced it plans to begin charging readers for access to its website in 2011, over the counter Rhinocort. Where can i buy Rhinocort online, Here’s how it’ll work: you can view an as-yet-unidentified number of articles for free each month before the Times requires you to pay a flat, unlimited-access fee to see more; this is known as a metered system, order Rhinocort no prescription. Buy Rhinocort without a prescription, (If you subscribe to the print edition, it’ll be free.) Two Times execs answered questions about the plan, where to buy Rhinocort, Rhinocort prescriptions, including whether you can still email and link to articles (you can) and why it’s different from TimesSelect, the abandoned paid-content experiment it tried from 2005-07, fast shipping Rhinocort. Rhinocort in mexico, Gabriel Sherman of New York’s Daily Intel, who broke the rumor on Sunday, where can i buy cheapest Rhinocort online, Buy Rhinocort online with no prescription, has some details of the paywall debate within the Times.

There’s been a ton of reaction to the Times’ plan online, so I’ll tackle it in three parts: First, the essential reading, then some other worthwhile opinions, and finally the interesting ephemera.


Four must-reads: It makes sense to start with New York Times media critic David Carr’s take on the plan, because it’s the most the thorough, cogent defense of the Times’ paywall you’ll find, Buy Rhinocort Without Prescription. He argues that Times execs “have installed a dial on the huge, buy Rhinocort online without prescription, Buy Rhinocort from canada, heaving content machine of The New York Times,” giving the site another flexible revenue stream outside of advertising, buy Rhinocort from mexico. Buy generic Rhinocort, If you’re up for a little algebra, Reuters’ Felix Salmon has a sharp economic analysis of the paywall, Rhinocort in india, Order Rhinocort online c.o.d, arguing that the value of each article will become much greater for subscribers than nonsubscribers. For the more theoretical-minded, where can i find Rhinocort online, Buy Rhinocort online no prescription, CUNY prof C.W. Anderson has some fascinating thoughts here at the Lab on how the paywall turns the Times into a niche product and what it means for our concept of the “public.” And as usual, next day Rhinocort, Rhinocort gel, ointment, cream, pill, spray, continuous-release, extended-release, Ken Doctor thoughtfully answers many of the practical questions you’re asking right now.


Other thoughtful opinions: Poynter’s Bill Mitchell poses a lot of great business questions and wonders how the Times will handle putting the burden on its most loyal online-only users. Steve Yelvington reminds us that we’re not going to learn much here that we can apply to other papers, because “the Times is fundamentally in a different business than regional dailies” and “a single experiment with a single price point by a single newspaper is just a stab in the dark.” Before the announcement, Rhinocort tablets, Rhinocort prices, former Editor & Publisher columnist Steve Outing, Forrester Research’s James McQuivey, Rhinocort san diego, Rx free Rhinocort, and Reuters’ Felix Salmon gave the Times advice on constructing its paywall, almost none of which showed up in the Times’ plans, purchase Rhinocort online. Buy Rhinocort Without Prescription, Two massive tech blogs, TechCrunch and Mashable, think the paywall won’t amount to much. Purchase Rhinocort, Slate’s Jack Shafer says people will find ways to get around it, NYU’s Jay Rosen echoes C.W, Rhinocort in us. Rhinocort discount, Anderson’s thoughts on niche vs. public, Rhinocort paypal, Rhinocort price, coupon, and CUNY’s Jeff Jarvis doesn’t like the Times’ sense of entitlement.


The ephemera: The best stuff on Twitter about the announcement was collected at E&P In Exile and the new site MediaCriticSteve Outing and Jason Fry don’t like the wait ’til 2011, and Cory Doctorow is skeptical that that’s even true, Rhinocort in australia. Rhinocort in japan, Former E&Pers Fitz & Jen interview a few newspaper execs and find that (surprise, surprise) the like the Times’ idea, buy cheap Rhinocort no rx. So does Steven Brill of Journalism Online, who plans to roll out a few paywalls of his own soon. Dan Gillmor wants the Times to find out from readers what new features they’d pay for, and Jeff Sonderman makes two good points: “The major casualty of NYT paywall is sharing,” and “Knowing the ‘meter is running’ creates cautious viewing of the free articles.”


Apple’s tablet to go public: Apple announced that it will unveil its “latest creation” (read: its new tablet) next Wednesday, Buy Rhinocort Without Prescription. Delivered overnight Rhinocort, Since the announcement came a day after word of the Times’ paywall plans broke, it was only natural that the rumors would merge, free Rhinocort samples. Buy Rhinocort online without a prescription, The Daily Intel’s Gabriel Sherman, who broke the story of those Times plans, order Rhinocort online overnight delivery no prescription, Real brand Rhinocort online, quoted Times officials putting the Times-tablet-deal rumors to restThe Wall Street Journal detailed Apple’s plans for the tablet to do to newspapers, magazines and TV what the iPod did to music, order Rhinocort from mexican pharmacy. Buying Rhinocort online over the counter, Meanwhile, Columbia j-student Vadim Lavrusik and TechCrunch’s Paul Carr got tired of the tablet hype — Lavrusik for the print industry and Carr for tech geeks, buy no prescription Rhinocort online. Rhinocort in canada, (The Week also has a great timeline of the rumors.)

MediaNews goes bankrupt: Last Friday, MediaNews Group — a newspaper chain that publishes the Denver Post and San Jose Mercury-News, Rhinocort from international pharmacy, Rhinocort for sale, among others — announced it would file for bankruptcy protection. Buy Rhinocort Without Prescription, (A smaller chain, Morris Publishing Group, made the same announcement the day before.) For the facts and background of the filing, we’ve got a few sources: At the Lab, MediaNews veteran Martin Langeveld has a whole lot of history and insight on MediaNews chief Dean Singleton. News business analyst Alan Mutter tells us about the amazing fact that Singleton will come out of the filing unscathed but Hearst, purchase Rhinocort online no prescription, Where can i order Rhinocort without prescription, which invested in MediaNews to save the San Francisco Chronicle, stands to lose $317 million in the deal. And MinnPost reports that the St, buy Rhinocort no prescription. Rhinocort to buy, Paul Pioneer Press was the only MediaNews paper losing money.

Looking at the big picture, saturday delivery Rhinocort, Buy Rhinocort without prescription,  Ken Doctor says that bankruptcies like these are just a chance for newspapers to buy time while adjusting their strategy in “the fog of media war.” Steve Outing takes a glass-half-full approach, arguing that the downfall of old-media chains like MediaNews are a great opportunity for journalism startups to build a new news ecosystem.


How much do Google News users read?: An annual study by research firm Outsell and Ken Doctor on online and offline news preferences made waves by reporting that 44 percent of Google News users scan headlines without clicking through to the original articles. PaidContent noted that Outsell has a dog in this fight; it openly advocates that news organizations should get more money from Google, Rhinocort medication. Rhinocort to buy online, Search engine guru Danny Sullivan was not impressed, giving a thorough critique of the study and its perceived implications, Rhinocort pills. Syracuse j-prof Vin Crosbie also wondered whether the same pattern might be true with print headlines, Buy Rhinocort Without Prescription. Buy cheap Rhinocort,

In a similar vein, BNET’s David Weir used comScore numbers to argue that Google, ordering Rhinocort online, Rhinocort in mexico, Yahoo and Microsoft support big newspapers, and Jeff Jarvis made one of his favorite arguments — in defense of the link.


Heartbreak in Haiti: I’d be remiss if I didn’t mention the journalism and media connections to the largest news story in the world for the past two weeks — the devastating earthquake in Haiti. Several sites noted that Twitter led the way in breaking news of the quake and in raising money for relief, free Rhinocort samples. Rhinocort prices, The money aspect is new, but as Columbia j-prof Sree Sreenivasan noted last June, buy Rhinocort online no prescription, Rhinocort in australia,  Twitter came of age a long time ago as a medium for breaking global news. That’s what it does. The coverage also provided an opportunity for discussion about the ethics of giving aid while reporting, purchase Rhinocort. Rhinocort trusted pharmacy reviews, —

Reading roundup: In addition to being out in front of the whole New York Times paywall story, Gabriel Sherman authored a nice, purchase Rhinocort online, Buy no prescription Rhinocort online, long think piece for The New Republic on the difficulties of one of America’s other great newspapers, The Washington Post. For what it’s worth, Post patriarch Donald Graham thought it was “not even a molehill.”

Over at Snarkmarket, Robin Sloan uses the economic concept of stock and flow to describe the delicate balance between timeliness and permanence the world of online media. It’s a brilliant idea — a must-read.


Finally, a promising new site named MediaCritic, run by Salon veteran Scott Rosenberg, citizen journalism advocate Dan Gillmor, and Lucasfilm’s Bill Gannon, had its soft launch this week. It looks like it’s going to include some nifty features, like Rosenberg’s regular curation of Twitter commentary on big media subjects.

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About this blog

This is the personal blog of Mark Coddington, former reporter and University of Texas graduate student in journalism, and home of his thoughts on all things media-related.