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27 Sep, 2010

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[This review was originally posted at the Nieman Journalism Lab Buy Mestinon Without Prescription, on Sept. 17, Mestinon prices, Mestinon medication, 2010.]

Entrepreneurship and old-school skills in j-school: We found out in February that New York University and the New York Times would be collaborating on a news site focused on Manhattan's East Village, and this week the site went live, free Mestinon samples. Order Mestinon from United States pharmacy, Journalism.co.uk has some of the details of the project: Most of its content will be produced by NYU students in a hyperlocal journalism class, though their goal is to have half of it eventually produced by community members, cod online Mestinon. Sale Mestinon, NYU professor Jay Rosen, an adviser on the project, buy Mestinon from canada, Where can i order Mestinon without prescription,  got into a few more of the site's particulars, describing its Virtual Assignment Desk, buy Mestinon online without prescription, Mestinon prescriptions, which allows local residents to pitch stories via a new WordPress editing plugin.

Rosen's caution that "it is going to take a while for The Local East Village to find any kind of stride" notwithstanding, Mestinon from international pharmacy, Where to buy Mestinon, the site got a few early reviews. The Village Voice's Foster Kamer started by calling the site the Times' "hyperlocal slave labor experiment" and concluded by officially "declaring war" on it, Buy Mestinon Without Prescription. GigaOM's Mathew Ingram, order Mestinon from mexican pharmacy, Mestinon paypal, on the other hand, was encouraged by NYU's effort to give students serious entrepreneurial skills, delivered overnight Mestinon, Mestinon overseas, as opposed to just churning out "typists and videographers."

NYU's project was part of the discussion about the role of journalism schools this week, though, purchase Mestinon online. Mestinon to buy, PBS' MediaShift wrapped up an 11-post series on j-school, which included an interview with Rosen about the journalism as R&D lab and a post comparing and contrasting the tacks being taken by NYU, buy no prescription Mestinon online, Where can i buy cheapest Mestinon online, Jeff Jarvis' program at the City University of New York and Columbia University. (Unlike the other two, Mestinon from canadian pharmacy, Buy Mestinon from mexico, Columbia is taking a decidedly research-oriented route.) Meanwhile, Tony Rogers, Mestinon buy, Mestinon in uk, a Philadelphia-area j-prof, wrote two articles (one of them a couple of weeks ago) at About.com quoting several professors wondering whether journalism schools have moved too far toward technological skills at the expense of meat-and-potatoes journalism skills, Mestinon discount. Buy Mestinon online with no prescription, They weren't the only ones: Both Teresa Schmedding of the American Copy Editors Society and Iowa State j-school director Michael Bugeja also criticized what they called a move away from the core of journalism in the country's j-schools. Buy Mestinon Without Prescription, "I expect to teach new hires InDesign, Quark or Twitter, MySpace, FB and how to use whatever the app of the week is, but I don’t expect to teach you what who, what, where, when, why and how means," Schmedding wrote. TBD's Steve Buttry countered those arguments with a post asserting that journalists need to know more about disruptive technology and what it's doing to their future industry. "Far too many journalists and journalism school graduates know next to nothing about the business of journalism and that status quo is indefensible, over the counter Mestinon, Mestinon price, coupon, " said Buttry.

A turning point in news consumption: Like most every Pew survey, ordering Mestinon online, Mestinon trusted pharmacy reviews, the biennial study released this week by the Pew Center for the People & the Press is a veritable cornucopia of information on how people are consuming news. Tom Rosenstiel of Pew's Project for Excellence in Journalism has some fascinating musings of the study's headline finding: People aren't necessarily ditching old platforms for news, Mestinon prices, Mestinon in us, but are augmenting them with new uses of emerging technology. Rosenstiel sees this as a turning point in news consumption, where to buy Mestinon, Delivered overnight Mestinon, brought about by more tech-savvy news orgs, faster Internet connections, buy Mestinon from mexico, Purchase Mestinon online, and increasing new media literacy. Several others — Mathew Ingram of GigaOM, Joe Pompeo of Business Insider, Mestinon in india, Mestinon from international pharmacy,  Chas Edwards of Digg — agreed that this development is a welcome one.

The Washington Post's Howard Kurtz and paidContent's Staci Kramer have quick summaries of the study's key statistics, and DailyFinance's Jeff Bercovici pointed out one particularly portentous milestone: For the first time, the web has eclipsed newspapers as a news source, Buy Mestinon Without Prescription. (But, Mestinon over the counter, Mestinon overseas, as Collective Talent noted, we still love our TV news.) Lost Remote's Cory Bergman took a closer look at news consumption via social media, where can i buy Mestinon online, Mestinon to buy online, and j-prof W. Joseph Campbell examined the other side of the coin — the people who are going without news, buy no prescription Mestinon online. Where to buy Mestinon, The Pew Internet & American Life Project also released an interesting study this week looking at "apps culture," which essentially didn't exist two years ago, order Mestinon no prescription. Buy cheap Mestinon no rx, Beyond the Book interviewed the project's director, Lee Rainie, fast shipping Mestinon, Free Mestinon samples, about the study, and the Lab gave us five applications for news orgs from the study: Turns out news apps are popular, buy cheap Mestinon, Buy Mestinon no prescription, people will pay for apps, and they consume apps in small doses, Mestinon pills.

Did social media kill RSS and press releases?: Ask.com announced last Friday Buy Mestinon Without Prescription, that it would shut down Bloglines, the RSS readerit bought in 2005, citing a slowdown in RSS usage as Twitter and Facebook increase their domination of real-time information flow. Mestinon in japan, "The writing is on the wall," wrote Ask's president, Mestinon buy, Buy Mestinon online cod, Doug Leeds. PaidContent's Joseph Tarkatoff used the news as a peg for the assertion that the RSS reader is dead, buy Mestinon online no prescription, Rx free Mestinon, noting that traffic is down for Bloglines and Google Reader, and that Google Reader, Mestinon gel, ointment, cream, pill, spray, continuous-release, extended-release, Mestinon prescriptions, the web's most popular RSS reader, is being positioned as more of a social sharing site, Mestinon discount. Purchase Mestinon, Tech writer Jeff Nolan agreed, arguing that RSS has value as a back-end application but not as a primary news-consumption tool:"RSS has diminishing importance because of what it doesn’t enable for the people who create content… any monetization of content, purchase Mestinon online no prescription, Saturday delivery Mestinon, brand control, traffic funneling, Mestinon in usa, Mestinon in uk, and audience acquisition," he wrote, Mestinon in mexico. Business Insider Henry Blodget joined in declaring RSS readers toast, blaming Twitter and Facebook for their demise. Numerous people jumped in to defend RSS, led by Dave Winer, who helped invent the tool about a decade ago, Buy Mestinon Without Prescription. Winer argued that RSS "forms the pipes through which news flows" and suggested reinventing the technology as a real-time feed with a centralized, non-commercial subscription service.

Tech writer Robert Scoble responded that while the RSS technology might be central to the web, RSS reading behavior is dying. The future is in Twitter and Facebook, he said. GigaOM's Mathew Ingram and media consultant Terry Heaton also defended RSS, with Ingram articulating its place alongside Twitter's real-time flow and Heaton arguing that media companies just need to realize its value as its utility spreads across the web.

RSS wasn't the only media element declared dead this week; Advertising Age's Simon Dumenco also announced the expiration of the press release Buy Mestinon Without Prescription, , replaced by the "real-time spin of Facebook and Twitter. PR blogger Jeremy Pepper and j-prof Kathy Gill pushed back with cases for the press release's continued use.

Twitter's media-company move: Lots of interesting social media stuff this week; I'll start with Twitter. The company began rolling out its new main-page design, which gives it a lot of the functions that its independently developed clients have. Twitter execs said the move indicated Twitter's status as a more consumptive platform, where the bulk of the value comes from reading, rather than writing — something All Things Digital's Peter Kafka tagged as a fundamental shift for the company: "Twitter is a media company: It gives you cool stuff to look at, you pay attention to what it shows you, and it rents out some of your attention to advertisers."

GigaOM's Mathew Ingram and venture capitalist David Pakman agreed, with Pakman noting that while Google, Facebook and Twitter all operate platform, users deal overwhelmingly with the company itself — something that's very valuable for advertisers. The Lab's Megan Garber also wrote a smart post on the effect of Twitter's makeover on journalism and information, Buy Mestinon Without Prescription. The new Twitter, Garber writes, moves tweets closer to news articles and inches its own status from news platform closer to a broadcast news platform. Ex-Twitter employee Alex Payne and Ingram (who must have had a busy week) took the opportunity to argue that Twitter as a platform needs to decentralize.

On to Facebook: The New Yorker released a lengthy profile of Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, and while not everyone was crazy about it (The Atlantic's Alexis Madrigal thought it was boring and unrevealing), but it gave the opportunity for one of the people quoted in it —Expert Labs director Anil Dash — to deliver his own thoughtful take on the whole Facebook/privacy debate. Dash isn't that interested in privacy; what he is worried about is "this company advocating for a pretty radical social change to be inflicted on half a billion people without those people's engagement, and often, effectively, without their consent."

Elsewhere around social media and news: Mashable's Vadim Lavrusik wrote a fantastic overview of what news organizations are beginning to do with social media, and we got closer looks at PBS NewsHourDCist and TBD in particular.

Reading roundup Buy Mestinon Without Prescription, : Plenty of stuff worth reading this week. Let's get to it.

— Last week's discussion on online traffic and metrics spilled over into this week, as the Lab's Nikki Usher and C.W. Anderson discussed the effects of journalists' use of web metrics and the American Journalism Review's Paul Farhi looked at the same issue (from a more skeptical perspective). The Columbia Journalism Review's Dean Starkman had the read of the week on the topic (or any topic, really), talking about what the constant churn of news in search of new eyeballs is doing to journalism. All of these pieces are really worth your time, Buy Mestinon Without Prescription.

— The San Jose Mercury News reported that Apple is developing a plan for newspaper subscriptions through its App Store that would allow the company to take a 30 percent cut of all the newspaper subscriptions it sells and 40 percent of their advertising revenue. The Columbia Journalism Review's Ryan Chittum was skeptical of the report, but Ken Doctor had nine good questions on the issue while we find out whether there's anything to it.

— The Atlantic published a very cool excerpt from a book on video games as journalism by three Georgia Tech academics. I'm guessing you'll be hearing a lot more about this in the next couple of years. Buy Mestinon Without Prescription, — Rafat Ali, who founded paidContent gave a kind of depressing interview to Poynter on his exit from the news-about-the-news industry. "I think there’s just too much talk about it, and to some extent it is just an echo chamber, people talking to each other. There's more talk about the talk than actual action." Well, shoot, I'd better find a different hobby. (Seriously, though, he's right — demos, not memos.)

— Finally, a wonderful web literacy tool from Scott Rosenberg: A step-by-step guide to gauge the credibility of anything on the web. Read it, save it, use it.

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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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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.