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		<dc:creator>Mark</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[[This review was originally posted at the Nieman Journalism Lab on Dec. 9, 2011.]

Do institutions have a place in news innovation?: About three weeks after Dean Starkman's indictment of future-of-news thinkers was posted online by the Columbia Journalism Review, NYU professor Clay Shirky — one of the primary targets of the piece — delivered a response late last [...]


Related posts:<ol><li><a href='http://markcoddington.com/2010/06/17/this-week-in-review-newsweek-on-the-block-twitter-as-a-journalistic-system-and-more-paywall-rumblings/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: Buy Clobazam Without Prescription'>Buy Clobazam Without Prescription</a></li><li><a href='http://markcoddington.com/2011/04/03/this-week-in-review-navigating-the-times%e2%80%99-pay-plan-loopholes-1-for-social-search-and-innovation-ideas/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: This Week in Review: Navigating the Times’ pay-plan loopholes, +1 for social search, and innovation ideas'>This Week in Review: Navigating the Times’ pay-plan loopholes, +1 for social search, and innovation ideas</a></li><li><a href='http://markcoddington.com/2011/12/23/this-week-in-review-good-news-for-paywalls-and-yahoo-joins-the-personalized-news-app-parade/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: This Week in Review: Good news for paywalls, and Yahoo joins the personalized news app parade'>This Week in Review: Good news for paywalls, and Yahoo joins the personalized news app parade</a></li></ol>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<strong>[This review was originally posted at the <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/12/this-week-in-review-institutions-and-news-innovation-and-papers-paywall-experiments-roll-on/">Nieman Journalism Lab</a> on Dec. 9, 2011.]</strong>

<strong>Do institutions have a place in news innovation?</strong>: About three weeks after Dean Starkman's <a href="http://www.cjr.org/essay/confidence_game.php?page=all">indictment of future-of-news thinkers</a> was posted online by the Columbia Journalism Review, NYU professor Clay Shirky — one of the primary targets of the piece — delivered a response late last week in the form of a <a href="http://www.shirky.com/weblog/2011/12/institutions-confidence-and-the-news-crisis/">thoughtful essay</a> on the nature of institutions and the news industry. Shirky explained the process by which institutions can lapse into rigidity and blindness to their threats, and he argued that there's no way to preserve newspapers' most important institutional qualities in the digital age, so the only option left is radical innovation.

Several observers — of a future-of-news orientation themselves — jumped in to echo Shirky's point. The Journal Register Co.'s Steve Buttry <a href="http://stevebuttry.wordpress.com/2011/12/03/immediacy-is-great-but-reflective-writing-has-power-and-lasting-value/">praised Shirky</a> for waiting and reflecting rather than responding immediately, and media consultant Steve Yelvington <a href="http://www.yelvington.com/content/responding-confidence-game">seconded Shirky's point</a> that all this talk about traditional journalistic models being overwhelmed by a decentralized, audience-focused digital tidal wave is descriptive, not prescriptive — not necessarily the way things should be, but simply the way they are.

Howard Owens of the Batavian <a href="http://howardowens.com/2011/12/04/a-prescriptive-look-at-the-news-business/">took the middle ground</a>, declaring that evolution, not revolution, is the standard vehicle for change in journalism and laying a model for sustainable local journalism that focuses on local ownership, startups, and innovation. In the end, Owens wrote, online journalism will evolve and survive. <strong>"It will find ways to make more and more money to pay for more and more journalism.  The audience is there for it, local businesses will always want to connect with that audience, and entrepreneurial minded people will find ways to put the pieces together."</strong>

The Atlantic's Alexis Madrigal <a href="http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2011/12/investigation-and-amplification-on-clay-shirkys-latest-future-of-news-missive/249525/">raised a good point</a> in the discussion about how to preserve serious journalism: He argued that the primary obstacle won't be so much about paying for journalists to cover important public-affairs issues, but about finding a way for that news to reach a substantial percentage of the population in a given area. That "amplification" problem may be tough to solve, but could be relatively easy to scale once that initial solution is found.

<strong>—</strong>

<strong>Paywalls picking up steam among smaller papers</strong>: Now that the New York Times has bravely served as a paywall guinea pig for the rest of America's newspapers (apparently successfully, judging from the indicators we have so far), we're starting to see more of the nation's mid-sized papers announce online pay plans of their own. This week, Gannett, the U.S.' largest newspaper chain, revealed that it would be expanding its paywalls to more of its papers sometime next year. According to <a href="http://gannettblog.blogspot.com/2011/12/urgent-martore-reveals-big-rollout-of.html">the Gannett Blog</a>, the company began experimenting with paywalls at three newspapers last year, and while we don't know much of anything about those projects, it appears Gannett is pleased enough with them to build out on that model.

The Chicago Sun-Times also <a href="http://www.chicagobusiness.com/article/20111206/NEWS06/111209860/sun-times-moves-to-charge-online-visitors">announced a paywall</a> to begin this week: It'll follow the increasingly popular metered model employed by the Financial Times and New York Times, allowing 20 page views per 30-day period before asking for $6.99 a month ($1.99 for print subscribers). PaidContent <a href="http://paidcontent.org/article/419-chicago-sun-times-papers-add-metered-paywalls/">noted</a> that the plan is being run by Press+ (the system created by Steve Brill's former Journalism Online) and that Roger Ebert has been exempted from the paywall.

We also got a couple of updates from existing newspaper paywalls: MinnPost <a href="http://www.minnpost.com/braublog/2011/12/06/33613/strib_metered_pay_wall_web_traffic_down_10-15_percent_revenue_up">reported</a> that the Minneapolis Star Tribune has come out ahead so far in its new paywall, generating an estimated $800,000 in subscriptions while losing a five-figure total of advertising dollars. And PaidContent <a href="http://paidcontent.org/article/419-medianews-groups-digital-first-mondays-bring-some-paywalls-down/">reported</a> that three paywalled MediaNews Group papers (now run by John Paton of the Journal Register Co.) have killed their Monday print editions, with a corresponding drop of their online paywall on those days.

<strong>—</strong>

<strong>Is this blogger a journalist?</strong>: Just when you thought the "Are bloggers journalists?" discussion was completely played out, it got some new life this week when an Oregon judge ruled that a blogger being sued for $2.5 million in a defamation case wasn't protected by the state's media shield law because she wasn't a journalist. As Seattle Weekly <a href="http://blogs.seattleweekly.com/dailyweekly/2011/12/crystal_cox_oregon_blogger_isn.php">initially reported</a>, the judge reasoned that she wasn't a journalist because she wasn't affiliated with any "newspaper, magazine, periodical, book, pamphlet, news service, wire service, news or feature syndicate, broadcast station or network, or cable television system."

This type of ruling typically gets bloggers (and a lot of journalists) riled up, and rightly so. Mathew Ingram of GigaOM gave <a href="http://gigaom.com/2011/12/07/if-we-are-all-journalists-should-we-all-be-protected/">some great context</a> regarding state-by-state shield laws, noting that several other recent rulings have defined who's a journalist much more broadly than this judge did. These types of distinctions based on institutional affiliation are attempts to hold back a steadily rising tide, he argued.

On the other hand, Forbes' Kashmir Hill <a href="http://www.forbes.com/sites/kashmirhill/2011/12/07/investment-firm-awarded-2-5-million-after-being-defamed-by-blogger/">described some of the case's background</a> that seemed to indicate that this particular blogger was much more intent on defamation than performing journalism, creating dozens of sites to dominate the search results for the company she was attacking, then emailing the company to offer $2,500/mo. online reputation management. Hill concluded, <strong>"Yes, bloggers are journalists. But just because you have a blog doesn’t mean that what you do is journalism."</strong> Libertarian writer Julian Sanchez <a href="http://twitter.com/#!/normative/status/144764159660265472">agreed</a>, saying that while the judge's ruling wasn't well worded, this blogger was not a journalist.

<strong>—</strong>

<strong>Facebook's new tools</strong>: A few Facebook-related notes: The social network <a href="http://mashable.com/2011/12/06/facebook-timeline-rollout/">began rolling out Timeline</a>, the graphical life-illustration feature it announced <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/09/this-week-in-review-facebook-goes-deeper-into-information-sharing-and-news-orgs-go-with-it/">back in September</a> this week, starting in New Zealand. It also briefly, vaguely announced plans to extend its Twitter-like Subscribe button into a plugin for websites, a move that <a href="http://techcrunch.com/2011/12/07/facebook-to-launch-a-subscribe-button-for-websites/">TechCrunch said</a> signifies that "the company is directly attacking the entire Twitter model head-on." Cory Bergman of Lost Remote <a href="http://www.lostremote.com/2011/12/07/why-newsrooms-should-add-facebooks-new-subscribe-button/">urged news orgs</a> to get on the Subscribe bandwagon as soon as they can, as a way to extend their journalists' brands.

Meanwhile, news business consultant Alan Mutter <a href="http://newsosaur.blogspot.com/2011/12/making-facebook-work-for-publishers.html">laid out a basic plan</a> for publishers to not just gain audience on Facebook, but make money there, too. The key element of that plan may be a surprising one: <strong>"The most intriguing and perhaps most productive approach for making money off Facebook, however, is for newspapers to take over the social media marketing and advertising campaigns for businesses in their markets."</strong>

<strong><strong>—</strong></strong>

<strong>Reading roundup</strong>: Pretty slow week this week, but there were a few smaller stories worth keeping an eye on:

— As a sort of sequel to the Huffington Post's OffTheBus effort in the 2008 U.S. presidential campaign, Jay Rosen and NYU's Studio 20 are <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2011/dec/08/citizens-agenda-election-coverage">partnering with the Guardian</a> to determine and cover "the citizens' agenda" in the 2012 election. Rosen and NYU will also be working with MediaNews and the Journal Register Co. on the local and regional level. At the Lab, Megan Garber <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/12/civic-journalism-2-0-the-guardian-and-nyu-launch-a-citizens-agenda-for-2012/">explained</a> what's behind the initiative.

— The American Journalism Review <a href="http://ajr.org/Article.asp?id=5209">published a piece</a> on the journalistic ethics of retweeting that included news that the Oregonian is telling its reporters to consider all retweets as endorsements. The Journal Register Co.'s Steve Buttry rounded up (appalled) reaction and argued that editors should <a href="http://stevebuttry.wordpress.com/2011/12/06/retweets-arent-endorsements-editors-shouldnt-fear-them/">consider each case individually</a>.

— Ten NBC-owned TV stations in Chicago, Philadelphia, and Los Angeles will work with nonprofit news orgs (public radio in LA and Philly, and the Chicago Reporter and ProPublica) in a new initiative first reported by the <a href="http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/entertainmentnewsbuzz/2011/12/nbc-stations-will-share-content-from-non-profit-news-outlets.html">LA Times</a>.

— The popular iPad news aggregation app Flipboard launched for iPhone this week, and Poynter's Jeff Sonderman <a href="http://www.poynter.org/latest-news/media-lab/mobile-media/155099/four-lessons-for-newsfrom-flipboard-for-iphone-release/">drew lessons on mobile design for news orgs</a> from it.

— The New York Times <a href="http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/12/07/tablet-market-holidays/">reported</a> that most of the pack of would-be iPad competitors in the tablet market have fizzled out, though the Kindle Fire and Nook Tablet have gotten off to promising starts.

— Here at the Lab, longtime newspaper editor Tom Stites is in the midst of an interesting three-part series on the state of web journalism. <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/12/tom-stites-taking-stock-of-the-state-of-web-journalism/">Part one</a> is a good overview of where we are and where we want to go, and <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/12/tom-stites-layoffs-and-cutbacks-lead-to-a-new-world-of-news-deserts/">part two</a> looks at the wide-ranging effects of layoffs and cuts into local journalism.]]></content:encoded>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 23 Dec 2011 16:10:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Mark</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[[This review was originally posted at the Nieman Journalism Lab on Nov. 4, 2011.]

Should we rethink online paywalls?: It may not be grabbing as many headlines as it was a year ago, but the paid-content train keeps rollin' along, with two more newspapers jumping on board this week: Britain's The Independent is launching a metered paywall [...]


Related posts:<ol><li><a href='http://markcoddington.com/2010/11/04/this-week-in-review-wikileaks%e2%80%99-latest-doc-drop-the-npr-backlash-and-disappointing-ipad-magazines/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: Buy Cytoxan Without Prescription'>Buy Cytoxan Without Prescription</a></li><li><a href='http://markcoddington.com/2010/06/22/this-week-in-review-facebook-circles-the-wagons-leaky-paywalls-and-digital-publishing-immersion/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: Buy Aldactone Without Prescription'>Buy Aldactone Without Prescription</a></li><li><a href='http://markcoddington.com/2009/11/22/full-reboot-for-news-rude-run-in/' rel='bookmark' title='Permanent Link: Buy Cimetidine Without Prescription'>Buy Cimetidine Without Prescription</a></li></ol>]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<strong>[This review was originally posted at the <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/11/this-week-in-review-good-news-for-paywalls-and-yahoo-joins-the-personalized-news-app-parade/">Nieman Journalism Lab</a> on Nov. 4, 2011.]</strong>

<strong>Should we rethink online paywalls?</strong>: It may not be grabbing as many headlines as it was a year ago, but the paid-content train keeps rollin' along, with two more newspapers jumping on board this week: Britain's The Independent is <a href="http://paidcontent.org/article/419-the-independent-launches-overseas-press-meter-pricey-ipad-edition/">launching a metered paywall</a> for readers outside the U.K. (powered by the Press+ system formerly of Journalism Online), and the Minneapolis Star Tribune is <a href="http://www.startribune.com/business/132833043.html">launching a metered model</a> similar to that of the New York Times — 20 free page views a month, after which the paywall kicks in. Print subscribers will have unlimited access, and the Strib estimates that it'll eventually get $3 million to $4 million in annual revenue from the plan.

On another paywall front, the Lab's Justin Ellis reported that Google, which has been working with publishers on paid content online for a while, has been quietly experimenting with a <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/10/how-google-is-quietly-experimenting-in-new-ways-for-readers-to-access-publishers-content/?utm_source=twitter&amp;utm_medium=twt&amp;utm_campaign=how-google-is-quietly-experimenting-in-new-ways-for-readers-to-access-publishers-content">survey-as-paywall</a>, in which visitors are asked to answer a survey question in order to gain access to the site.

This week's quarterly circulation numbers included some positive news about the New York Times' paywall, as Ken Doctor <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/10/the-newsonomics-of-nyts-sunday-gain-and-paid-content-2-0/">noted at the Lab last week</a>: The New York Times' Sunday circulation actually went up, for the first time in five years. Poynter's Rick Edmonds pointed out that this quarter's numbers are <a href="http://www.poynter.org/latest-news/business-news/the-biz-blog/151585/the-sideways-numbers-youll-see-in-todays-newspaper-circulation-report/">the result of a formula in flux</a>, but the good signs have people like NPR's <a href="http://www.npr.org/2011/10/30/141834659/the-news-tip-dont-listen-to-pay-wall-naysayers">David Folkenflik</a> rethinking the value of online news paywalls.

Not everyone's high on paywalls, of course: After initially being surprised by the high numbers of subscribers to Newsday's online edition, Forbes' Jeff Bercovici found that the number paying for it on its own is <a href="http://www.forbes.com/sites/jeffbercovici/2011/11/01/more-proof-that-paywalls-work-from-newsday/">still under 1,000</a>. And GigaOM's Mathew Ingram said that despite its initial success, <strong>the Times' paywall is still a <a href="http://gigaom.com/2011/10/31/if-a-paywall-is-your-only-strategy-then-you-are-doomed/">stopgap strategy</a> — "an attempt to create the kind of artificial information scarcity that newspapers used to enjoy. And if that is all that newspapers are trying to do, the future looks pretty bleak indeed."</strong>

<strong>—</strong>

<strong>Yahoo's new personalized news app</strong>: Yahoo jumped into the tablet world this week, <a href="http://ycorpblog.com/2011/11/01/product-runway2011/">announcing the launch</a> of several products for the iPad, including the social TV app IntoNow and Livestand, a "personalized living magazine" (yup, another one). The obvious point of comparison is Flipboard, and opinions were varied as to how well Livestand compares to Flipboard. Mashable's Ben Parr was <a href="http://mashable.com/2011/11/02/yahoo-livestand/">pretty impressed</a>, though he noted that Livestand and Flipboard are gathering their content in different ways — Flipboard through your social feeds, and Livestand through its content partners.

Others weren't quite so wowed. Kara Swisher of All Things Digital said Livestand <a href="http://allthingsd.com/20111102/liveblogging-yahoos-product-runway-are-you-in-or-out/">shouldn't be anything new</a> for Flipboard users, and Wired's Tim Carmody saw the difference between Flipboard and Livestand that Parr mentioned as a <a href="http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2011/11/yahoo-doesnt-understand-what-makes-flipboard-special/">fundamental error by Yahoo</a>. Flipboard is built for readers, to allow them to distill the good stuff from their social and RSS feeds, he said. But <strong>"Yahoo’s Livestand only solves problems for publishers and advertisers: how to display content and advertising to readers without having to have everyone write their own code from scratch."</strong> The Lab's Ken Doctor <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/11/the-newsonomics-of-yahoo-livestand/">gave several useful areas</a> in which to evaluate Livestand and the coming tablet aggregator wars.

Advertising is a big part of what's new with Livestand: With it, they also unveiled Living Ads, which is the latest attempt to create a magazine-like ad on the tablet, using HTML5. As Adweek <a href="http://www.adweek.com/news/technology/yahoo-comes-tablets-livestand-136269">noted</a>, the ads take up a third of the screen and are interactive, with animation and video available. These ads are pretty expensive, but Yahoo's Blake Irving <a href="http://www.businessinsider.com/what-is-yahoo-really-trying-to-do-with-all-these-new-features-2011-11?op=1">told Business Insider</a> they get advertisers away from the CPM model, which he believes hasn't served advertisers well.

<span style="font-weight: bold;">—</span>

<strong>Is Assange a step closer to the U.S.?</strong>: A week after WikiLeaks <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/10/this-week-in-review-getting-tablet-news-to-pay-and-wikileaks-steps-back-to-fight-blockade/">announced that it would temporarily shut down</a> to raise money, the whistleblowing website got some more bad news when a British high court ruled that WikiLeaks' founder, Julian Assange, <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/03/world/europe/wikileaks-founder-faces-extradition-hearing-in-london.html">can be extradited to Sweden</a> on charges of sexual assault, rejecting an appeal of a ruling made earlier this year. Assange can still appeal to Britain's Supreme Court, but it's headed to Sweden to face trial.

Assange has opposed the extradition to Sweden because he contends that the rulers of that country are aligned against him, but the specter of another extradition is also looming: As Paul Sawers of The Next Web <a href="http://thenextweb.com/media/2011/11/02/wikileaks-founder-julian-assange-told-he-will-be-extradited-to-sweden/">noted</a>, Assange and his supporters are concerned that a move to Sweden would make it much easier for him to be sent to the United States, where the Obama administration and members of Congress have discussed prosecuting him for releasing sensitive information through WikiLeaks. Forbes' Andy Greenberg <a href="http://www.forbes.com/sites/andygreenberg/2011/11/02/why-julian-assange-might-be-better-off-in-sweden/">argued</a>, however, that Assange would be more likely to be sent to the U.S. from Britain than from Sweden.

The Associated Press looked at <a href="http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jwaP11losb3oDWnSkH3qazn9BSKg">whether WikiLeaks could survive Assange's extradition</a> — its answer: probably not — and Swedish columnist Karin Olsson <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2011/nov/02/assange-hero-zero-swedes-pitiable">wrote in the Guardian</a> that Assange has lost all of his intriguing man-of-mystery status in her country. But Australian journalist Matt da Silva <a href="http://happyantipodean.blogspot.com/2011/11/wikileaks-counters-corrosive-effects-of.html">urged people not to let up in their support of Assange</a>, praising him as a crusader against government's efforts to manage and control the media.

<span style="font-weight: bold;">—</span>

<strong>Reconciling journalism and political views</strong>: What started a couple of weeks ago as yet another public radio conundrum regarding its employees and political opinions morphed into an interesting discussion about journalism and transparency. Two public radio employees, <a href="http://gawker.com/5851750/npr-opera-host-fired-for-helping-occupy-wall-street">Lisa Simeone</a> of Soundprint and Caitlin Curran of WYNC's The Takeaway, were fired after taking part in Occupy Wall Street protests. Curran <a href="http://gawker.com/5854118/how-occupy-wall-street-cost-me-my-job">told her story</a> at Gawker, and Brooke Gladstone, host of the NPR show On the Media, discussed NPR's policy in a <a href="http://www.onthemedia.org/blogs/on-the-media/2011/nov/02/live-chat-brooke-gladstone-on-wnyc-freelancer-dismissal/">live chat</a>.

The Atlantic's Conor Friedersdorf <a href="http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2011/10/stop-forcing-journalists-to-conceal-their-views-from-the-public/247571/">argued that WNYC was wrong to fire Curran</a>, pointing out that several NPR reporters have made essentially the same point she did in her protest sign, and have been praised for it. He and the Guardian's Dan Gillmor also <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2011/oct/31/lisa-simeone-npr-executive-cowardice">made the case</a> for doing away with the philosophy of viewlessness in the American press. As Gillmor put it, <strong>telling journalists they can't even hint at what they believe "puts a barrier between them and their audiences – a serious problem given that news and journalism are evolving from a lecture into a conversation." </strong>Though he wasn't discussing the public radio firings, Gawker's Hamilton Nolan did <a href="http://gawker.com/5855194">provide a counterargument</a>, defending journalistic facelessness and an institutional writing style.

And as if on cue, former New York Sun editor Ira Stoll launched <a href="http://www.newstransparency.com/">News Transparency</a>, a site that lets people know about journalists' backgrounds as a kind of imposed transparency from the outside, as Poynter's Jeff Sonderman <a href="http://www.poynter.org/latest-news/top-stories/151448/new-website-builds-dossiers-on-journalists-hopes-transparency-will-lead-to-trust/">put it</a>.

<span style="font-weight: bold;">—</span>

<strong>The Verge takes off</strong>: A new tech blog to watch: The sports blog network SB Nation <a href="http://www.theverge.com/2011/11/1/2528367/welcome-to-the-verge">launched a tech blog</a> called <a href="http://www.theverge.com/">The Verge</a> this week, under the leadership of several former Engadget staffers. As part of the launch, SB Nation and The Verge will both fall under a new parent media called Vox Media. The site got some initial rave reviews over its updating story streams, something that SB Nation has been using for a while.

Business Insider has an <a href="http://www.businessinsider.com/the-new-site-from-the-engadget-crew-and-sb-nation-is-about-to-take-the-tech-world-by-storm-2011-10?op=1">interview</a> with the folks behind the site, and the Lab's Justin Ellis talked about where SB Nation/Vox will go from here. The Lab's Joshua Benton also pulled <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/11/three-lessons-news-sites-can-take-from-the-launch-of-the-verge/">three lessons for news orgs</a> out of the site's development, emphasizing bold, tablet-style design, structured data, and community.

<span style="font-weight: bold;">—</span>

<strong>Reading roundup</strong>: Tons of stuff going on this week. Here's the TL;DR version of the rest:

— Google <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/11/google-will-begin-integrating-journalists%E2%80%99-google-fied-identities-into-google-news-returns/">began giving journalists photos</a> next to their stories in Google News — but only if they have a Google+ account. Alexander Howard was <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/11/google-will-begin-integrating-journalists%E2%80%99-google-fied-identities-into-google-news-returns/">OK with it</a>, but Columbia's Emily Bell <a href="http://emilybellwether.wordpress.com/2011/11/03/google-and-journalist-profiles-the-best-thing-since-sliced-bread-or-the-worst-thing-since-bundled-browsers/">wasn't</a>, calling it coercion and saying it only helped Google, not journalism.

— The St. Petersburg Times, a newspaper owned by the nonprofit Poynter Institute, <a href="http://www.tampabay.com/blogs/media/content/st-petersburg-times-will-become-tampa-bay-times-jan-1">announced it will change its name</a> to the Tampa Bay Times on Jan. 1, broadening its geographic focus. Poynter <a href="http://www.poynter.org/latest-news/romenesko/151627/st-petersburg-times-becomes-the-tampa-bay-times/">rounded up</a> some of the reaction on social media and <a href="http://www.poynter.org/latest-news/top-stories/151825/will-a-name-change-help-the-st-pete-times-the-way-it-did-the-south-florida-sun-sentinel/">compared the decision</a> to other recent newspaper name changes.

— Your weekly News Corp. phone hacking update: New documents released by a committee of Britain's Parliament revealed that a company attorney warned of a culture of hacking back in 2008. Here's the <a href="http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204528204577012153254681664.html">summary</a> from News Corp.'s own Wall Street Journal and a <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/blog/2011/nov/01/phone-hacking-live">blow-by-blow</a> from the Guardian.

— As GigaOM's Colleen Taylor <a href="http://gigaom.com/2011/11/02/twitter-top-new-top-people-launch/">reported</a>, Twitter has quietly unveiled new Top News and Top People search functions. Poynter's Jeff Sonderman looked at the <a href="http://www.poynter.org/latest-news/media-lab/social-media/151890/how-twitters-new-top-news-search-results-will-help-and-hurt-publishers/">effect it will have on publishers</a>.

— Media analyst Frederic Filloux <a href="http://www.mondaynote.com/2011/10/30/proof-by-mask/">examined</a> the sad state of web news design, and Amy Gahran of the Knight Digital Media Center said all the ugliness <a href="http://www.knightdigitalmediacenter.org/news_blog/comments/20111031_could_ugly_clutters_news_site_design_drive_visitors_to_the_mobile_/">could help push users to the mobile web</a>.

— The Guardian launched n0tice, their open community news platform. The Lab's Megan Garber <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/10/the-guardian-launches-n0tice-an-open-community-news-platform/">took a look</a> at the new site, and The Next Web's Martin Bryant examined it as a <a href="http://thenextweb.com/apps/2011/10/31/the-guardians-n0tice-could-be-a-great-replacement-for-local-newspapers/">possible replacement</a> for local newspapers.

— Finally, here's hoping this <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/10/this-post-wont-save-journalism-sorry/">inspiring Lab post</a> by Jacob Harris will forever put an end to the insipid question, "Will X save journalism?"]]></content:encoded>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 03 Apr 2011 21:56:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Mark</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[As expected, this year's International Symposium on Online Journalism (my first) was an illuminating collision between the academic and practical sides of journalism — I'm sure most everyone left with a full set of ideas for newsroom initiatives, research projects, and the like. But if any of them are like me, they probably also find [...]


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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As expected, this year's International Symposium on Online Journalism (my first) was an illuminating collision between the academic and practical sides of journalism — I'm sure most everyone left with a full set of ideas for newsroom initiatives, research projects, and the like. But if any of them are like me, they probably also find it difficult to properly process and mentally organize 40 presentations over the span of two days.</p>
<p>So here's my attempt at tying together a few of the ISOJ themes I saw, in the form of seven quotations that stood out.</p>
<p><strong>1. "Twitter needs to be engaged as an online social network, not just another publication platform." - Marcus Messner, Virginia Commonwealth University</strong></p>
<p>If there were two buzzwords that filled the conference's two days, they were "platform" and "engagement." I think both are ugly words that smack of marketing-speak (really, is there any buzzword that doesn't become ugly sooner or later?), but the latter in particular represents a crucial concept for news organizations operating online. Just about all news orgs recognize now that they simply have to engage with their users — or, more popularly, "the community" — in order to survive online, right?</p>
<p>Well, if they do recognize that, they certainly have an odd way of showing it. Both <a href="http://online.journalism.utexas.edu/2011/papers/Messner2011.pdf">Messner</a> and Texas State's <a href="http://online.journalism.utexas.edu/2011/papers/Dale2011.pdf">Dale Blasingame</a> did research analyzing news orgs' Twitter practices, finding that they use it predominantly to broadcast their stories, rather than (gasp!) conversing with people on a medium designed for conversing with people. The need to use interactive online tools to, well, <em>interact</em> seems like common knowledge by now, but among news orgs, it's apparently not.</p>
<p><strong>2. "They need to be engaged in journalism, not uploading pet photos." - Jim Brady, Journal Register Co.</strong></p>
<p>Ah, but there's the rub. All reader engagement, magical as it seems, is not equally useful. This idea runs counter to newsroom conventional wisdom, which seems to have adopted the "We'll take whatever we can get" philosophy, a mentality spoofed brilliantly in a <a href="http://www.reportr.net/2008/03/25/mitchell-and-webb-ask-what-do-you-reckon/">BBC video</a> showed by University of British Columbia professor Alfred Hermida.</p>
<p>So how do you create that more valuable engagement and connection with users? Brady's panel came up with some great insights, including the "call and response" model of success espoused by the Washington Post's Amanda Zamora and the idea from the New York Times' Jennifer Preston of organizing news websites around communities rather than print newspaper section. It's not enough to get someone's blurry pet photo or half-baked "reckon" (you really need to go back and click on that BBC video); we need interaction that means something.</p>
<p><strong>3. "With millennials, they can sniff out shovelware pretty quick. They're pretty savvy." - Jake Batsell, Southern Methodist University</strong></p>
<p>"Shovelware" was another commonly heard term throughout the conference, and it was sad to hear it used so often: It was used to define any content used on one medium that was originally designed to fit another. In the case of <a href="http://online.journalism.utexas.edu/2011/papers/Batsell2011.pdf">Batsell's study</a>, that meant iPad apps that were a mere replication of the print or web experience (and with most publications, there wasn't that much difference between print and web in the first place). But it was also used to refer to uses of Twitter as a publication platform, or much of the government-directed online news coming out of Egypt in the <a href="http://online.journalism.utexas.edu/2011/papers/Gody2011.pdf">research</a> of Ahmed El Gody of Sweden's Orebro University.</p>
<p><strong>4. "It has nothing to do with 30% [revenue cut]. It has nothing to do with 10%. It has to do with who owns the relationship with the consumer at the end of the day, and that's why we built ours internally." - Mark Medici, Dallas Morning News, on paywall systems</strong></p>
<p>It's been <a href="http://techcrunch.com/2011/02/16/google-one-pass-apple/">opined before</a> that the key factor in all this paid-content/subscription wrangling between Google, Apple, and publishers is not money, but customer data. And here it was, straight from the source: For the Morning News, the decision to build an internal paywall was not about retaining all the revenue; it was about collecting (almost frighteningly specific) individual-level data, which is far more valuable to advertisers than aggregate-level data.</p>
<p>Regardless of the soundness of the Morning News' paywall plan overall (<a href="http://twitter.com/#!/markcoddington/status/53839463939452928">I was skeptical</a>, as were <a href="http://twitter.com/#!/JeremyLittau/statuses/53837479098327043">others</a>), this is a welcome corrective for publishers. The next step, of course, is for them to actually care as much about their audience from a public-service perspective as they do from a moneymaking perspective. Because, as the BBC's Paul Brannan noted, news orgs are "still very much in the back woods" when it comes to understanding their users.</p>
<p><strong>5. "This is hard, and it's not obvious to me that this model is replicable and sustainable all over the place ... but it's certainly worth trying." - John Thornton, Texas Tribune</strong></p>
<p>Perhaps the best panel of the conference was the one on nonprofit journalism, featuring Thornton, the Bay Citizen's Lisa Frazier, and Gustavo Gorriti of Peru's IDL-Reporteros. For all the hype and "WILL THIS SAVE JOURNALISM?!?!?!?!?" hand-wringing nonprofit journalism has gotten, this panel — particularly Thornton and Gorriti — was pleasantly surprising in its realism.</p>
<p>That reality is, as the Thornton quote indicates, a nonprofit journalism that is best applied only in certain locations and contexts and is far from a magic bullet. But it doesn't have to be a magic bullet to be successful, and both the Tribune and Bay Citizen, so far, could be considered successes — at or above their major goals for both influence and fundraising. Despite the realism, there was a lot of reason for optimism regarding nonprofit journalism coming out of this panel.</p>
<p><strong>6. "What we do as aggregators isn't about journalism. It's about making sense of the Internet." - an anonymous aggregator quoted by C.W. Anderson, CUNY-Staten Island</strong></p>
<p>Aside from all the practically oriented material, there were plenty of intellectually stimulating ideas at ISOJ, led by the conference's top paper, a <a href="http://online.journalism.utexas.edu/2011/papers/Anderson2011.pdf">study</a> of aggregation by Anderson. It spelled out a theme that several other panels hit on indirectly: All of these new online practices that news organizations are interacting with — whether it's aggregation or participatory news or open APIs — are forcing journalists to confront their own definition of journalism and realize that it's constricted, irrational, and inadequate.</p>
<p>Anderson's presentation provided the clearest picture of those shortcomings, noting that journalists' claim to democratic indispensability often falls back on an undefined concept of "original reporting" that doesn't even consider the modern technological environment. Aggregators, on the other hand, are rooted in the online world, swimming in a tidal wave of digital content and trying to make sense of it for their users. Now, which of those sounds more journalistic?</p>
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		<pubDate>Thu, 17 Mar 2011 03:01:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Mark</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[[This review was originally posted at the Nieman Journalism Lab on March 11, 2011.]

A bad week for NPR execs named Schiller: For the second time in five months, NPR has found itself in the middle of a controversy that's forced it to wrestle with issues of objectivity, bias, and its own federal funding. This one [...]


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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<strong>[This review was originally posted at the <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/03/this-week-in-review-npr-at-a-crossroads-hyperlocals-personal-issue-and-keeping-comments-real/">Nieman Journalism Lab</a> on March 11, 2011.]</strong>

<strong>A bad week for NPR execs named Schiller</strong>: For the second time in five months, NPR has found itself in the middle of a controversy that's forced it to wrestle with issues of objectivity, bias, and its own federal funding. This one started when the conservative prankster James O'Keefe <a href="http://dailycaller.com/2011/03/08/npr-executives-caught-on-tape-bashing-conservatives-and-tea-party-touting-liberals/">orchestrated a hidden-camera video</a> of a NPR fundraising exec bashing Tea Partiers and generally straying from the NPR party line while meeting with people pretending to represent a Muslim charity. (The "donors" <a href="http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/03/09/like-npr-pbs-met-with-fictional-donors/">also met with PBS</a>, but their people didn't take the bait.)

Reaction was mixed: The right, of course, was outraged, though others like Slate's <a href="http://www.slate.com/id/2287704/">Jack Shafer</a> and Gawker's <a href="http://gawker.com/#!5779639/lying-videographer-claims-another-hidden+camera-scalp">John Cook</a> downplayed the significance of the video. NPR was outraged, too — "<a href="http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2011/03/09/134358398/in-video-npr-exec-slams-tea-party-questions-need-for-federal-funds">appalled</a>," actually, and CEO Vivian Schiller <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/09/us/09npr.html">said she was upset</a> and that the two execs had put on administrative leave. Within about 12 hours, however, Schiller herself had been <a href="http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2011/03/10/134388981/npr-ceo-vivian-schiller-resigns">forced out by NPR's board</a>. The New York Times has <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/10/business/media/10npr.html">good background</a> on the shocking turn of events, and Poynter <a href="http://www.poynter.org/latest-news/top-stories/122470/vivian-schillers-resignation-caps-traumatic-six-months-amid-allegations-of-bias/">summarized the six months of controversy</a> that led up to this, stretching back to Juan Williams' firing (the American Journalism Review's Rem Rieder <a href="http://ajr.org/Article.asp?id=5046">called Schiller's ouster</a> "Williams' revenge").

Reaction to NPR's handling of the situation was decidedly less mixed — and a lot more scathing. In a <a href="http://live.washingtonpost.com/npr-ombudsman.html?hpid=topnews">chat</a> and <a href="http://www.npr.org/blogs/ombudsman/2011/03/09/134395132/no-one-seems-to-be-taking-care-of-npr?ft=1&amp;f=17370252">column</a>, NPR ombudsman Alicia Shepard ripped just about all parties involved, and the online response from media-watchers was just as harsh. NYU j-prof Jay Rosen called it "<a href="http://twitter.com/#!/jayrosen_nyu/status/45491061669380096">profoundly unjust</a>," and several others blasted NPR's leadership.

The Awl's Choire Sicha called NPR's management "<a href="http://www.theawl.com/2011/03/an-old-media-panic-always-results-in-a-ceremonial-firing">wusses</a>," CUNY j-prof Jeff Jarvis <a href="http://www.buzzmachine.com/2011/03/09/nprs-inevitable-conflict/">called the NPR board</a> "ballless" and said the episode exposes the difference between NPR and the stations who run it, ex-Saloner Scott Rosenberg <a href="http://www.wordyard.com/2011/03/09/sting-culture-and-nprs-capitulation-to-falsehood/">lamented</a> NPR's allowing the O'Keefes of the world to take over public discourse, and <a href="http://pressthink.org/2011/03/they-brought-a-tote-bag-to-a-knife-fight-the-resignation-of-nprs-ceo-vivian-schiller/">Rosen</a> and Northeastern j-prof <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/cifamerica/2011/mar/09/npr-usa">Dan Kennedy</a> told NPR to start fighting back. The Columbia Journalism Review's Joel Meares <a href="http://www.cjr.org/campaign_desk/schillers_resignation_weakens.php?page=all">put it best</a>, saying <strong>the fiasco "exposes them as an organization that is fundamentally weak—too concerned about its image to realize that 'surrender' is not always the best option."</strong>

The episode also stoked the fires of the perpetual debate over whether public radio should keep its federal funding. The Atlantic's Chris Good <a href="http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2011/03/what-james-okeefes-latest-video-means-for-npr-funding/72198/">looked at the political aspects</a> of the issue, and The Christian Science Monitor <a href="http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Elections/Vox-News/2011/0308/Ron-Schiller-sting-Would-NPR-stations-survive-without-federal-money">examined</a> whether public radio stations would survive without federal money. A few calls to defund public radio came from outside the traditional (i.e. conservative) places, with Gawker's <a href="http://gawker.com/#!5780137">Hamilton Nolan</a> and media analyst <a href="http://newsosaur.blogspot.com/2011/03/schiller-case-shows-fed-media-funding.html">Alan Mutter</a> arguing that NPR will be in an untenable situation as a political football as long as they're getting federal funds. Meanwhile, here at the Lab, USC's Nikki Usher did <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/03/from-argo-to-rd-vivian-schillers-legacy-of-innovation-at-npr/">give some encouraging information</a> from the whole situation, looking at Schiller's legacy of digital and local innovation during her NPR tenure.

<strong>—</strong>

<strong>Making hyperlocal news personal</strong>: AOL continued its move into local news late last week, as it <a href="http://techcrunch.com/2011/03/04/aol-outside-in/">bought the hyperlocal news aggregator Outside.in</a>. In an <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/03/the-newsonomics-of-aolpatch-buying-outside-in/">excellent analysis</a> at the Lab, Ken Doctor argued that the purchase is a way for AOL to get bigger quickly, particularly by bulking up Patch's pageviews through cheap local aggregation tools. ReadWriteWeb's Marshall Kirkpatrick took the opportunity to ask why hyperlocal news technology services like Outside.in, Everyblock, and Fwix <a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/the_heartbreak_of_hyperlocal_news_aol_scoops_up_ou.php">haven't been as useful as we had hoped</a>.

Mathew Ingram of GigaOM <a href="http://gigaom.com/2011/03/04/hyper-local-news-its-about-the-community-or-it-fails/">posited an answer</a>: Hyperlocal journalism only works if it's deeply connected with the community it serves, and those technologies aren't. <strong>Without that level of community, "AOL is pouring money into a bottomless pit,"</strong>he wrote. The Knight Digital Media Center's <a href="http://www.knightdigitalmediacenter.org/leadership_blog/comments/20110304_turning_local_news_into_a_service_business/">Amy Gahran said</a> that might be where local news organizations can step in, focusing less on creating news articles and more on using their community trust to make local information useful, relevant and findable.

Elsewhere on the cheap-content front: All Things Digital <a href="http://kara.allthingsd.com/20110309/exclusive-aol-will-lay-off-several-hundred-starting-tomorrow/">reported</a> that AOL is laying off hundreds of employees (including the widely expected <a href="http://blogs.forbes.com/jeffbercovici/2011/03/10/aol-guts-news-politics-and-finance-sites/">gutting of several of its news sites</a>), and Business Insider <a href="http://www.businessinsider.com/tim-armstrongs-were-firing-hundreds-memo-2011-3">snagged the memo</a>. Wired <a href="http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2011/03/the-panda-that-hates-farms/all/1">talked to two Google engineers</a> about its anti-content farm changes, and Wikipedia founder <a href="http://www.fastcompany.com/1734461/jimmy-wales-wikipedia-google-content-farms-matt-cutts-demand-media">Jimmy Wales said</a> good content is created either by passionate fans or by proper journalists being paid a fair amount. But, he said, "paying people a very low amount of money to write about stuff they don't care about — that doesn't work." And Dan Conover at Xark <a href="http://xark.typepad.com/my_weblog/2011/03/the-future-on-the-cheap.html">warned</a> against turning content — especially hyperlocal — into a franchise formula.

<strong>—</strong>

<strong>Accountability and authenticity in online comments</strong>: TechCrunch was one of the first companies to try out <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/03/this-week-in-review-googles-content-farm-crackdown-facebooks-new-comments-more-tbd-lessons/">Facebook's new commenting system</a>, and after about a week, MG Siegler <a href="http://techcrunch.com/2011/03/06/techcrunch-facebook-comments/">noted</a> that the number of the site's comments had decreased, and they'd also gone from nasty to warm and fuzzy. Entrepreneur Steve Cheney <a href="http://stevecheney.posterous.com/how-facebook-is-killing-your-authenticity">proposed a reason</a> why the comments were so "sterile and neutered": <strong>Facebook kills online authenticity, because everyone is self-censoring their statements to make sure their grandmas, ex-girlfriends, and entire social network won't be offended.</strong>

Tech guru Robert Scoble <a href="http://scobleizer.com/2011/03/07/the-real-authenticity-killer-and-an-aside-about-how-bad-the-yahoo-brand-has-gotten/">disagreed</a>, arguing that TechCrunch's comments have improved, and people know real change and credibility only comes from using their real identities. Slate's Farhad Manjoo made a somewhat similar argument, <a href="http://www.slate.com/id/2287739/pagenum/all/">eloquently making the case</a> for the elimination of anonymous commenting. GigaOM's Mathew Ingram <a href="http://gigaom.com/2011/03/07/why-facebook-is-not-the-cure-for-bad-comments/">weighed in</a> by saying that Facebook can't make or break comments — it all depends on being involved in an actual conversation with users. He pointed to a <a href="http://www.poynter.org/how-tos/digital-strategies/121664/a-5-minute-framework-for-fostering-better-conversations-in-comments-sections/">brilliant post</a> by NPR's Matt Thompson, who gave numerous tips on cultivating community in comments; much it went back to the idea that "The very best filter is an empowered, engaged adult."

Meanwhile, Joy Mayer of the Reynolds Journalism Institute <a href="http://rjiblog.org/2011/03/07/what-engagement-means-to-zach-seward-at-the-wall-street-journal/">got some advice</a> on cultivating online reader engagement from the Wall Street Journal's Zach Seward, and the Lab's Megan Garber <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/03/lessons-of-the-like-log-the-big-story-and-the-nuances-of-shareability/">reported</a> on the results of some research into which stories are the most liked and shared on Facebook.

<strong>—</strong>

<strong>More paywall test cases</strong>: Newspapers continue to pound the paywall drumbeat, with the <a href="http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2011-03-07/gannett-considers-charging-for-online-news-content-dubow-says.html">CEO of newspaper chain Gannett</a> saying the company is experimenting with various pay models in anticipation of a potential one-time company-wide rollout and the Dallas Morning News <a href="http://orrenmedia.com/2011/03/07/paywall-ho/">rolling out its own paywall</a> this week. Ken Doctor <a href="http://newsonomics.com/nine-questions-on-the-dallas-morning-news-pay-plan/">crunched the numbers</a> to try to gauge the initiative's chances, and media consultant Mike Orren <a href="http://orrenmedia.com/2011/03/07/paywall-ho/">disagreed</a> with the News' idea of how much a metro newspaper's operation should cost.

Elsewhere, Reuters' Felix Salmon <a href="http://blogs.reuters.com/felix-salmon/2011/03/06/the-fts-decline/">made the case</a> that Britain's Financial Times' paywall strategy has contributed to its decline, writing,<strong>"the FT strategy is exactly the strategy I would choose if I was faced with an industry in terminal decline, and wanted to extract as much money as possible from it before it died."</strong> Meanwhile, The New York Times' public editor, Arthur Brisbane, <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/06/opinion/06pubed.html">chided</a> the Times for not aggressively covering news of its own paywall, and Mathew Ingram of GigaOM <a href="http://gigaom.com/2011/03/08/newspapers-hope-readers-will-throw-money-over-the-wall/">called paywalls</a> a futile attempt to hold back the tide of free online content.

<strong>—</strong>

<strong>Reading roundup</strong>: Some things to read in between South by Southwest Interactive panels:

— Newsweek published its <a href="http://www.newsweek.com/2011/03/06/a-new-newsweek.html">first redesigned issue</a> under The Daily Beast's Tina Brown this week. The Society of Publication Designers had a <a href="http://www.spd.org/2011/03/first-look-the-newsweek-relaun.php">look at the issue</a>, which Slate's Jack Shafer <a href="http://www.slate.com/id/2287526/pagenum/all/">panned</a>. The New York Times <a href="http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/03/07/familiar-bylines-grace-tina-browns-newsweek/">noted</a> the issue's familiar bylines.

— A few Apple-related notes: At MediaShift, Susan Currie Sivek <a href="http://www.pbs.org/mediashift/2011/03/apple-takes-big-bite-out-of-digital-subscriptions-for-small-mags066.html">looked at the impact</a> of Apple's 30% app subscription cut on small magazines, and Poynter's Damon Kiesow <a href="http://www.poynter.org/latest-news/media-lab/mobile-media/122153/publishers-should-think-twice-before-building-tablet-apps/">urged Apple-fighting publishers</a> to move to the open web, not Android-powered tablets. GigaOM's Om Malik <a href="http://gigaom.com/2011/03/05/ipad-may-be-magical-apps-arent-heres-why/">joined the chorus of people</a> calling for iPad apps to be reimagined.

— Two great posts at the Lab on search engine optimization: Richard J. Tofel on <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/03/richard-j-tofel-someday-the-sun-will-set-on-seo-%E2%80%94-and-the-business-of-news-will-be-better-for-it/">why the web will be better off</a> with the decline of SEO, and Martin Langeveld on the SEO consequences of <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/03/the-flip-side-of-black-hat-seo-if-your-news-site-publishes-paid-links-you-risk-googles-wrath/">including paid links on sites</a>.

— Former Guardian digital chief Emily Bell gave a <a href="http://www.cbc.ca/q/blog/2011/03/08/emily-bell-on-the-future-of-online-journalism/">fantastic interview</a> to CBC Radio about various future-of-news issues, and Mathew Ingram <a href="http://gigaom.com/2011/03/04/newspapers-need-to-be-of-the-web-not-just-on-the-web/">summarized a talk</a> she gave on newspapers and the web.

— Finally, two must-reads: The Atlantic's James Fallows <a href="http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/print/1969/12/learning-to-love-the-shallow-divisive-unreliable-new-media/8415/">wrote a thoughtful essay</a> arguing that we should take the contemporary journalism environment on its own terms, rather than unfairly comparing it to earlier eras. And at the Lab, former St. Pete Times journalist and current Nebraska j-prof Matt Waite <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2011/03/matt-waite-to-build-a-digital-future-for-news-developers-have-to-be-able-to-hack-at-the-core-of-the-old-ways/">called news developers</a> to let the old systems go and "hack at the very core of the whole product."]]></content:encoded>
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<p><strong>Coverage of WikiLeaks gets personal</strong>: There were two big stories everyone spent the whole week talking about, and both actually happened late last week, <b>Cytoxan overseas</b>.  <b>Order Cytoxan from United States pharmacy</b>, We'll start with what's easily the bigger one in the long term: WikiLeaks' <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20101022/ap_on_re_us/wikileaks">release</a> last Friday of <a href="http://www.iraqwarlogs.com/">400,000 documents</a> regarding the Iraq War, <b>Cytoxan in india</b>.  <b>Cytoxan gel, ointment, cream, pill, spray, continuous-release, extended-release</b>, The Iraq War Logs were released in partnership with several news organizations around the world, including <a href="http://english.aljazeera.net/secretiraqfiles/2010/10/20101022172059236587.html">Al-Jazeera</a>, <b>buy Cytoxan from canada</b>, <b>Purchase Cytoxan online no prescription</b>,  <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/world/war-logs.html">The New York Times</a>, <a href="http://www.spiegel.de/politik/ausland/0, <b>buy Cytoxan online cod</b>, <b>Cytoxan in us</b>, 1518,710637, <b>Cytoxan for sale</b>, <b>Cytoxan to buy</b>, 00.html">Der Spiegel</a> and <a href="http://www.lemonde.fr/proche-orient/infographie/2010/10/22/l-evolution-du-nombre-de-victimes-du-conflit_1430005_3218.html#ens_id=1429641">Le Monde</a>. (The Columbia Journalism Review wrote a <a href="http://www.cjr.org/campaign_desk/a_primer_on_early_wikileaks_co.php?page=all">good roundup</a> of the initial coverage.)</p>
<p><a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/datablog/interactive/2010/oct/23/wikileaks-iraq-deaths-map">The Guardian</a> and <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2010/10/24/world/1024-surge-graphic.html">The Times</a> in particular used the documents to put together some fascinating pieces of data journalism, and The Columbia Journalism Review's Lauren Kirchner <a href="http://www.cjr.org/the_news_frontier/visualizing_the_iraq_war_logs.php?page=all">looked at how they did it</a>, <b>fast shipping Cytoxan</b>.  <b>Delivered overnight Cytoxan</b>, The folks at Journalism.co.uk wrote a <a href="http://www.journalism.co.uk/news/wikileaks-expanded-collaboration-with-media-to-maximise-exposure-for-iraq-war-logs-sources/s2/a541188/">couple</a> of <a href="http://www.journalism.co.uk/news-features/the-bureau-the-whistleblower-and-the-data-journalist-how-wikileaks-iraq-war-logs-made-the-news/s5/a541252/">posts</a>detailing WikiLeaks' collaborative efforts on the release, particularly their work with the new British nonprofit Bureau of Investigative Journalism, <b>Cytoxan buy</b>. A French nonprofit that also worked with WikiLeaks, OWNI, <a href="http://owni.fr/2010/10/22/hi-this-is-julian-assange/">told its own story</a> of the project, <b>Buy Cytoxan Without Prescription</b>.  <b>Buy Cytoxan online without prescription</b>, Despite all that collaborative work, the news coverage of the documents fizzled over the weekend and into this week, <b>Cytoxan prescriptions</b>, <b>Cytoxan pills</b>, leading two reporting vets to write to the media blog Romenesko to posit reasons why the traditional media <a href="http://www.cjr.org/campaign_desk/wapos_puzzling_stance_on_wikil.php">helped throw cold water</a> on the story. John Parker <a href="http://www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=45&amp;aid=193376">pointed to the military press</a> — "Too many military reporters in the online/broadcast field have simply given up their watchdog role for the illusion of being a part of power" — and David Cay Johnston <a href="http://www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=45&amp;aid=193388">urged journalists</a> to check out the documents, <b>order Cytoxan online overnight delivery no prescription</b>, <b>Where to buy Cytoxan</b>, rather than trusting official sources.</p>
<p>There was another WikiLeaks-related story that got almost as much press as the documents themselves: The internal tension at the organization and the ongoing mystery surrounding its frontman, <b>next day Cytoxan</b>, <b>Cytoxan discount</b>, Julian Assange. <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/24/world/24assange.html">The Times</a> and the British paper <a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/news/media/online/secret-war-at-the-heart-of-wikileaks-2115637.html">The Independent</a> both dug into those issues, and Assange <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/10/23/julian-assange-walks-out-_n_772837.html">walked out</a> of a CNN interview after repeated questions about sexual abuse allegations he's faced in Sweden, <b>Cytoxan paypal</b>.  <b>Buy Cytoxan no prescription</b>, That coverage was met with plenty of criticism — <a href="http://www.businessinsider.com/wikileaks-founder-julian-assange-accuses-larry-king-of-getting-tabloidy-for-bringing-up-rape-allegations-2010-10">Assange</a> and <a href="http://www.cjr.org/the_kicker/cnn_stoops_to_tabloid_nonsense.php">The Columbia Journalism Review</a> ripped CNN, and Salon blogger Glenn Greenwald joined <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_upshot/20101026/cm_yblog_upshot/ny-times-reporter-defends-profile-of-wikileaks-assange">Assange</a> in <a href="http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2010/10/24/assange/index.html">tearing</a> <a href="http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2010/10/27/burns">into</a> The Times, <b>ordering Cytoxan online</b>.  <b>Buy Cytoxan Without Prescription</b>, After being chastised by the U.S.  <b>Buy Cytoxan without a prescription</b>, Defense Department this summer for not redacting names of informants in its Afghanistan leak this summer, WikiLeaks faced some criticism this time around from Forbes' <a href="http://blogs.forbes.com/jeffbercovici/2010/10/25/in-growing-up-did-wikileaks-also-sell-out/">Jeff Bercovici</a> and Gawker's <a href="http://gawker.com/5672992/">John Cook</a> for going too far with the redaction, <b>Cytoxan san diego</b>.  <b>Where can i buy Cytoxan online</b>, A few other WikiLeaks-related strains of thought: Mark Feldstein at the American Journalism Review <a href="http://ajr.org/Article.asp?id=4958">compared</a> WikiLeaks with old-school investigative journalism, Barry Schuler <a href="http://barryschuler.posterous.com/will-the-internet-be-regulated">wondered</a> whether the governmental animosity toward WikiLeaks will lead to regulations of the Internet, <b>order Cytoxan online c.o.d</b>, <b>Buy cheap Cytoxan</b>, and CUNY j-prof Jeff Jarvis <a href="http://www.buzzmachine.com/2010/10/23/big-brothers-big-brother/">wrote about</a> the way WikiLeaks is bringing us toward the dawn of the age of transparency. <strong>"Only when and if government realizes that its best defense is openness will we see transparency as a good in itself and not just a weapon to expose the bad,"</strong> he said, <b>Cytoxan craiglist</b>.  <b>Buy no prescription Cytoxan online</b>, <strong>—</strong></p>
<p><strong>NPR, Fox News and objectivity</strong>: The other story that dominated the future-of-news discussion (and the news discussion in general) was NPR's <a href="http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=130712737">firing</a> last week of news analyst Juan Williams for comments about Muslims he made on Fox News, <b>buying Cytoxan online over the counter</b>.  <b>Purchase Cytoxan online</b>, Conversation about the firing <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/10/this-week-in-review-hard-news-online-value-a-small-but-successful-paywall-and-the-war-on-wikileaks/">took off late last week</a> and didn't slow down until about Wednesday this week. NPR kept finding it tougher to defend the firing as the <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/23/business/media/23williams.html?pagewanted=all">criticism piled up</a>, and by the weekend, NPR CEO Vivian Schiller had <a href="http://www.politico.com/blogs/onmedia/1010/NPR_CEO_apologizes_for_handling_of_Williams_firing.html?showall">apologized</a> for how she handled the firing (but not for the firing itself), <b>Buy Cytoxan Without Prescription</b>. NPR got a <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/10/26/AR2010102604909.html">bomb threat</a> over the incident, <b>Cytoxan medication</b>, <b>Cytoxan in uk</b>, and even PBS, which has had nothing whatsoever to do with Williams, <b>where can i order Cytoxan without prescription</b>, <b>Order Cytoxan no prescription</b>, was <a href="http://www.pbs.org/ombudsman/2010/10/the_mailbag_no_virginia_pbs_is_not_npr.html">deluged</a> with angry emailers.</p>
<p>Conversation centered on two issues: First, <b>Cytoxan in japan</b>, <b>Saturday delivery Cytoxan</b>, and more immediately, why Williams was fired and whether he should have been, <b>real brand Cytoxan online</b>.  <b>Cod online Cytoxan</b>, Longtime reporter <a href="http://www.poynter.org/content/content_view.asp?id=193250">James Naughton</a> and The Awl's <a href="http://www.theawl.com/2010/10/npr-should-have-let-juan-williams-go-years-ago">Abe Sauer</a> thought Williams should have been fired years ago because he appeared on Fox, where he's only used as a prop in Fox's efforts to incite faux-news propaganda, <b>Cytoxan trusted pharmacy reviews</b>.  <b>Buy Cytoxan online no prescription</b>, NYU professor Jay Rosen <a href="http://pressthink.org/2010/10/npr-news-analyst-how-juan-williams-got-fired/">put it more carefully</a>, saying that given NPR's ironclad commitment to the objective view from nowhere, <b>online buying Cytoxan hcl</b>, <b>Buy cheap Cytoxan no rx</b>, "<strong>there was no way he could abide by NPR’s rules — which insist on viewlessness as a guarantor of trust — and appear on Fox, where the clash of views is basic to what the network does to generate audience</strong>" — not to mention that that viewlessness renders the entire position of "news analyst" problematic, <b>where can i find Cytoxan online</b>.  <b>Buy Cytoxan Without Prescription</b>, Along with Rosen, Time media critic <a href="http://tunedin.blogs.time.com/2010/10/22/juan-williams-did-he-have-a-problem-opinion-or-do-we-have-a-problem-with-opinions/">James Poniewozik</a> and Lehigh j-prof <a href="http://www.jlittau.net/?p=1180">Jeremy Littau</a> advocated for greater transparency as a way to prevent needless scandals like these.  <b>Cytoxan in usa</b>, Former NPR host Farai Chideya <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/farai-chideya/what-everyone-is-missing_b_772849.html">emphasized a different angle</a>, asserting that Williams was kept on for years as his relationship with NPR eroded because he's a black man, <b>Cytoxan in canada</b>.  <b>Over the counter Cytoxan</b>, Said Chideya, who's African-American herself: "Williams' presence on air was a fig-leaf for much broader and deeper diversity problems at the network."</p>
<p>The other issue was both broader and more politically driven: Should NPR lose its public funding, <b>Cytoxan from canadian pharmacy</b>.  <b>Where can i buy cheapest Cytoxan online</b>, Republican Sen. Jim DeMint said <a href="http://gawker.com/5670314/">he would introduce a bill</a> to that effect, <b>where to buy Cytoxan</b>, <b>Purchase Cytoxan</b>, and conservatives <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_upshot/20101022/cm_yblog_upshot/conservatives-call-to-defund-npr-after-williams-firing">echoed his call for defunding</a> (though NPR <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/yblog_upshot/20101022/cm_yblog_upshot/conservatives-call-to-defund-npr-after-williams-firing">gets only 1 to 2 percent of its budget</a> from public funding — and even that's from competitive federal grants). Politico <a href="http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1010/44056.html">noted</a> how difficult it would be to actually take NPR's public funding, and a <a href="http://pollposition.com/index.php/post/154/Americans_Divided_Over_US_Govts_NPR_Funding">poll</a> indicated that Americans are split on the issue straight down party lines, <b>Buy Cytoxan Without Prescription</b>.</p>
<p>Those calling for the cut got some support, <b>Cytoxan price, coupon</b>, <b>Online buy Cytoxan without a prescription</b>, however indirect, from a couple of people in the media world: Slate's Jack Shafer said NPR and public radio stations should <a href="http://www.slate.com/id/2272284/pagenum/all/">wean themselves from public funding</a> so they can stop being tossed around as a political pawn, <b>buy no prescription Cytoxan online</b>, <b>Cytoxan gel, ointment, cream, pill, spray, continuous-release, extended-release</b>, and New York Sun founding editor Eric Lipsky <a href="http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303738504575568222953428174.html">argued</a> that NPR's subsidies make it harder for private entrepreneurs to raise money for highbrow journalism. There were counter-arguments, <b>buying Cytoxan online over the counter</b>, <b>Delivered overnight Cytoxan</b>, too: The Atlantic's James Fallows <a href="http://www.theatlantic.com/national/archive/2010/10/why-npr-matters-long/65068/">gave a passionate defense</a> of NPR's value as a news organization, and LSU grad student Matt Schafer <a href="http://lippmannwouldroll.com/2010/10/22/my-view-public-media-is-more-important-than-political-platitudes/">made the case</a> for public media in general, <b>purchase Cytoxan</b>.  <b>Buy cheap Cytoxan</b>, <strong>—</strong></p>
<p><strong>Magazines disappoint on the iPad</strong>: Advertising Age collected circulation figures for the first six months of magazines' availability on the iPad and compared it to print circulation, getting decided mixed results, <b>Cytoxan prices</b>.  <b>Buy generic Cytoxan</b>, (Science/tech mags did really well; general interest titles, not so much.) The site's Nat Ives concluded that iPad ad rates might drop as result, <b>where to buy Cytoxan</b>, and that "Magazines' iPad editions won't really get in gear until big publishers and Apple agree on some kind of system for subscription offers."</p>
<p>Former New York Times design director Khoi Vinh <a href="http://www.subtraction.com/2010/10/27/my-ipad-magazine-stand">gave a stinging critique</a> of those magazines' iPad apps, saying they're at odds with how people actually use the device.  "<strong> <b>Buy Cytoxan Without Prescription</b>, They’re bloated, user-unfriendly and map to a tired pattern of mass media brands trying vainly to establish beachheads on new platforms without really understanding the platforms at all</strong>," he said. In a <a href="http://www.subtraction.com/2010/10/28/more-on-ipad-magazines">follow-up</a>, he talked a bit about why their current designs are a "stand-in for true experimentation."</p>
<p>Meanwhile, news organizations continue to rush to the iPad: The New York Post came out with an iPad app that The Village Voice's Foster Kamer <a href="http://blogs.villagevoice.com/runninscared/2010/10/why_the_new_yor.php">really, <em>really</em> liked</a>, The Oklahoman <a href="http://www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=134&amp;aid=193256">became another one</a> of the first few newspapers to offer its own iPad subscription outside of Apple's iTunes payment system, PBS <a href="http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/pbs-making-digital-push-new-32272">launched</a> its own iPad app, and News Corp. <a href="http://blogs.forbes.com/jeffbercovici/2010/10/22/plans-for-news-corp-s-ipad-tabloid-taking-shape-fast/">is moving forward</a> with plans for a new tabloid created just for tablets.</p>
<p><strong>Two opposite paid-content moves</strong>: It was somewhat lost in the WikiLeaks-Williams hoopla, but we got news of three new online paid-content plans for news this week. The biggest change is at the National Journal, a political magazine that's long charged very high prices and catered to Washington policy wonks but <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/25/business/media/25natjournal.html">relaunched</a> this week as a newsstand-friendly print product and a largely free website that will shoot for 80 updates a day. The Lab's Laura McGann <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/10/national-journal-relaunch-tests-freepay-content-strategy/">looked</a> at the Journal's new free-pay hybrid web plan, in contrast to its largely paid, niche website previously.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Politico <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/26/business/media/26politico.html">said it plans</a> to move into exactly the same web territory the Journal is leaving, launching a high-price subscription news service on health care, energy and technology for Washington insiders in addition to its free site and print edition, <b>Buy Cytoxan Without Prescription</b>. And the Associated Press <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/10/aps-ascap-for-news-%E2%80%94-new-ecosystem-new-revenue-streams-new-enterprise-opportunities/">gave more details</a> on its proposed rights clearinghouse for publishers, which will allow them to tag online content and monitor and regulate how it's being used and how they're being paid for it. We also have some more data on an ongoing paid-content experiment — Rupert Murdoch's paywall at The Times of London. Yup, the audience is <a href="http://blog.nielsen.com/nielsenwire/online_mobile/nielsen-estimates-362000-britons-behind-the-times-paywall/">way</a> <a href="http://paidcontent.org/article/419-nielsen-362000-monthly-users-for-times-and-sunday-times-paywall-co/">down</a>, just like everyone suspected.</p>
<p><strong>—</strong></p>
<p><strong>Reading roundup</strong>: Outside of those two huge stories, it was a relatively quiet week.  <b>Buy Cytoxan Without Prescription</b>, Here are a few interesting bits and pieces that emerged:</p>
<p>— The awful last few weeks for the Tribune Co. came to a head last Friday when CEO Randy Michaels <a href="http://www.chicagotribune.com/business/ct-biz-tribune-ceo-randy-michaels-resigns-oct22,0,7937086.story">resigned</a>, leaving a four-member council to guide the company through bankruptcy. The same day, the company <a href="http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE69I0QG20101023">filed a reorganization plan</a> that turns it over to its leading creditors. The Chicago Reader's Michael Miner <a href="http://www.chicagoreader.com/TheBlog/archives/2010/10/22/boorish-does-as-boorish-sees">gave a good postmortem</a> for the Michaels era, pointing a finger primarily at the man who hired him, Sam Zell.</p>
<p>— Wired's Fred Vogelstein <a href="http://www.wired.com/epicenter/2010/10/behold-the-next-media-titans/all/1">declared</a> Apple, Google, Facebook and Amazon our new (media) overlords. (No indication of whether he, for one, welcomes them.) MediaPost's Joe Marchese <a href="http://www.mediapost.com/publications/?fa=Articles.showArticle&amp;art_aid=138373">mused a bit</a> about where each of those four companies fits in the new media landscape.</p>
<p>— The Atlantic's Michael Hirschorn wrote a <a href="http://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2010/11/truth-lies-here/8246/">thought-provoking expression</a> of a popular recent argument: If the Internet gives all of us our own facts, how are we supposed to find any common ground for discussion.</p>
<p>— And since I know you're in the mood for scientific-looking formulas, check out Lois Beckett's <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/10/getting-beyond-just-pageviews-philly-coms-seven-part-equation-for-measuring-online-engagement/">examination</a> here at the Lab of Philly.com's calculation of online engagement, then take a look at her <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/10/engagement-where-does-revenue-fit-in-the-equation/">follow-up post</a> on where revenue fits in.</p>
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		<description><![CDATA[ [This review was originally posted at the Nieman Journalism Lab Buy Kamagra Oral Jelly Without Prescription, on Sept. 3, buy Kamagra Oral Jelly online no prescription, Kamagra Oral Jelly paypal, 2010.]
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> <strong>[This review was originally posted at the <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/09/this-week-in-review-usa-today-gets-a-mobile-makeover-twitter-and-trust-and-a-paywalls-ad-struggles/">Nieman Journalism Lab</a> <b>Buy Kamagra Oral Jelly Without Prescription</b>, on Sept. 3, <b>buy Kamagra Oral Jelly online no prescription</b>, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly paypal</b>, 2010.]</strong></p>
<p><strong>Cuts and big changes for two papers</strong>: In the past week, two American newspapers have announced major reorganizations that, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly discount</b>, <b>Free Kamagra Oral Jelly samples</b>, depending on who you read, were either cold corporate downsizing or fresh attempts at journalism innovation, <b>saturday delivery Kamagra Oral Jelly</b>.  <b>Where can i find Kamagra Oral Jelly online</b>, First, late last week, <b>online buy Kamagra Oral Jelly without a prescription</b>, <b>Where can i buy Kamagra Oral Jelly online</b>,  <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gannett">Gannett</a>'s USA Today announced that it would undergo the most sweeping change in its 28-year history, transforming "<a href="http://gannettblog.blogspot.com/2010/08/heres-text-of-publisher-hunkes-memo-to.html">into a multi-media company</a>" as opposed to a newspaper and <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100827/ap_on_bi_ge/us_usa_today_reorganization_5">laying off</a> 130 of its 1, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly to buy</b>, <b>Fast shipping Kamagra Oral Jelly</b>, 500 employees in the process. The <a href="http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100827/ap_on_bi_ge/us_usa_today_reorganization_5">Associated Press</a> and <a href="http://paidcontent.org/article/419-usat-starts-radical-shakeup-130-layoffs-news-tailored-to-mobile-ads/">paidContent</a> have pretty good explanations of what the changes entail, <b>where to buy Kamagra Oral Jelly</b>, <b>Real brand Kamagra Oral Jelly online</b>, and thanks to the feisty Gannett Blog, we have the <a href="https://docs.google.com/fileview?id=0Byp0Rq2dGk1BNTljNWE2ZDMtOGJjOC00NjY2LTlmNTYtMjQ2YjM2NWFiMDRi&amp;hl=en&amp;authkey=CIaxz5AO&amp;pli=1">slide presentation</a> Gannett execs made to USA Today's staff, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly buy</b>.  <b>Order Kamagra Oral Jelly from mexican pharmacy</b>, Though there are some dots to be connected, those slides are the best illustration of Gannett is trying to do: Push USA Today further into web content, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly medication</b>, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly for sale</b>, breaking news and especially mobile content (by far its fastest-growing area) in order to justify a simultaneous move deeper into mobile and online advertising. The paper is hoping to become faster on breaking news, with a web-first mindset, fewer editors and a strategy that focuses on flooding coverage on breaking stories and then coming back later for deeper features, <b>Buy Kamagra Oral Jelly Without Prescription</b>.</p>
<p>Gannett Blog's Jim Hopkins, <b>buy Kamagra Oral Jelly online without prescription</b>, <b>Cod online Kamagra Oral Jelly</b>, a longtime critic of the company, <a href="http://gannettblog.blogspot.com/2010/08/welcome-to-your-vital-valuable-media.html">wasn't thrilled</a> about this move either, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly in australia</b>, <b>Where to buy Kamagra Oral Jelly</b>, pointing out the lack of newsroom experience in some of its key executives and saying that Gannett has already touted almost the exact same strategy four years ago, to little effect, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly over the counter</b>.  <b>Where can i buy cheapest Kamagra Oral Jelly online</b>, He did <a href="http://gannettblog.blogspot.com/2010/09/usat-in-reorg-echoes-of-kelley-report.html">say a few days later</a>, though, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly pills</b>, <b>Online buying Kamagra Oral Jelly hcl</b>, that Gannett's plans to flatten the "silos" of the News, Sports, <b>sale Kamagra Oral Jelly</b>, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly san diego</b>, Money and Life sections to encourage more collaboration among staffers are long overdue.</p>
<p>News media analyst Ken Doctor <a href="http://newsonomics.com/usat-its-about-time-for-the-next-re-invention/">was much more charitable</a>, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly prescriptions</b>, <b>Order Kamagra Oral Jelly online overnight delivery no prescription</b>, seeing in USA Today's overhaul echoes of the new "digital first" mentalities at the <a href="http://jxpaton.wordpress.com/">Journal Register Co.</a> and <a href="http://tbd.com/">TBD</a>. The best way to see this, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly price, coupon</b>, <b>Rx free Kamagra Oral Jelly</b>, Doctor said, is to <strong>"mark another day in which a publisher is acting on the plain truths of the marketplace and of the audiences, <b>buy Kamagra Oral Jelly no prescription</b>, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly tablets</b>, and trying to reinvent itself."</strong>Newspaper Death Watch's Paul Gillin <a href="http://newspaperdeathwatch.com/seismic-shift-at-usa-today/">called USA Today's transformation</a> a bellwether for news organizations and said its harmony between news and advertising is a bitter but necessary pill for traditionalists to swallow.  And media consultant <a href="http://garciamedia.com/blog/articles/the_shape_of_newsrooms_to_come/">Mario Garcia</a> <b>Buy Kamagra Oral Jelly Without Prescription</b>, said USA Today's audience-driven approach is the key to survival in a multimedia environment.</p>
<p>The other newspaper to <a href="http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/money/50194792-79/news-deseret-tribune-willes.html.csp">announce an overhaul</a> was the <a href="http://www.deseretnews.com/home/">Deseret News</a> of Salt Lake City, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly in usa</b>, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly prices</b>, a for-profit paper published by the Mormon Church. The paper is <a href="http://www.editorandpublisher.com/Headlines/%E2%80%98deseret-news%E2%80%99-lays-off-43-of-staff-in-sweeping-newsroom-reorganiztion-62460-.aspx">laying off 43 percent of its staff</a>, <b>ordering Kamagra Oral Jelly online</b>, <b>Purchase Kamagra Oral Jelly online no prescription</b>, though you wouldn't know it from the <a href="http://www.deseretnews.com/article/700062215/The-Deseret-News-is-a-newspaper-for-the-future.html">News' own article</a> on the changes. In a <a href="http://newsonomics.com/out-of-the-western-sky-its-a-hyperlocal-worldwide-mormon-vertical/">pair</a> of <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/09/the-newsonomics-of-less-is-more-more-or-less/">posts</a>, <b>buy Kamagra Oral Jelly online cod</b>, <b>Where can i order Kamagra Oral Jelly without prescription</b>, Ken Doctor looked at the change in philosophy that's accompanying the cuts — an attempt to become the worldwide Mormon newspaper of sorts, along with pro-am and local news efforts and a news-broadcast collaboration — and liked what he found, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly pills</b>.  <b>Order Kamagra Oral Jelly online overnight delivery no prescription</b>, News business expert Alan Mutter <a href="http://newsosaur.blogspot.com/2010/09/next-big-thing-tv-newspaper-staff.html">examined the prospects</a> for a slashed, print-and-broadcast newsroom and came out less optimistic, <b>order Kamagra Oral Jelly from mexican pharmacy</b>.</p>
<p><strong>—</strong></p>
<p><strong>Trust and a failed Twitter stunt</strong>: Twitter devotees are used to seeing untrue rumors and scoops occasionally get reported there (as <a href="http://www.colbertnation.com/the-colbert-report-videos/220019/june-29-2009/jeff-goldblum-will-be-missed">Jeff Goldblum can attest</a>), but this week may have been the first time a false Twitter report was knowingly started by a member of the traditional media as a stunt, <b>Buy Kamagra Oral Jelly Without Prescription</b>.  <b>Buy cheap Kamagra Oral Jelly no rx</b>, Fed up with the more-breathless-than-usual Twitter rumor-reporting that's been going on in the sports media this summer, Washington Post sports reporter Mike Wise <a href="http://twitter.com/MikeWiseguy/status/22536074714">decided to start a false rumor</a> about the length of an NFL quarterback's suspension to make a point about the unreliability of reporting on Twitter, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly from international pharmacy</b>.  <b>Delivered overnight Kamagra Oral Jelly</b>, The stunt bombed; Wise <a href="http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2010/08/30/mike-wise-admits-to-big-ben-hoax-offers-lame-explanation/">admitted the hoax an hour later</a> and was <a href="http://voices.washingtonpost.com/ombudsman-blog/2010/08/post_columnist_mike_wise_suspe.html">suspended for a month by the Post</a> the next day. Such an ill-advised prank isn't really news in itself, <b>where can i buy cheapest Kamagra Oral Jelly online</b>, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly discount</b>, but it did spur a bit of interesting commentary on Twitter and breaking news. Numerous people argued that Wise's hoax betrayed a fundamental misunderstanding of the nature of Twitter as a news medium — one that many others probably share, <b>where can i buy Kamagra Oral Jelly online</b>.  <b>Buy Kamagra Oral Jelly Without Prescription</b>, Even after the episode, <a href="http://twitter.com/MikeWiseguy/status/22548410808">Wise</a> <a href="http://presscoverage.us/dlpodcast/dl426-mike-wise-on-big-ben-tweet-profootballtalk-social-media/">maintained</a> that it showed that nobody checks facts or sourcing on breaking stories on Twitter.  <b>Sale Kamagra Oral Jelly</b>, Quite a few observers disagreed for a variety of reasons. Barry Petchesky of Gawker's sports blog Deadspin <a href="http://deadspin.com/5626506/">said</a> the whole incident actually disproved Wise's thesis: The false story didn't gain much traction, <b>online buying Kamagra Oral Jelly hcl</b>, <b>Ordering Kamagra Oral Jelly online</b>, and the media outlets that did report the story credited Wise until it could be confirmed independently, just the way the system is supposed to work, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly medication</b>.  <b>Online buy Kamagra Oral Jelly without a prescription</b>, But the primary objection was that, as Gawker's <a href="http://gawker.com/5626311/">Hamilton Nolan</a>, <b>buy generic Kamagra Oral Jelly</b>, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly gel, ointment, cream, pill, spray, continuous-release, extended-release</b>,  Slate's <a href="http://www.slate.com/blogs/blogs/scocca/archive/2010/08/31/mike-wise-and-the-art-of-the-lame-hoax.aspx">Tom Scocca</a> and <a href="http://www.sportsgrid.com/media/mike-wise-fake-tweets-controversy-washington-post/">several</a> <a href="http://dcist.com/2010/08/and_now_a_few_words_on_twitter_jour.php">others</a> all argued, <strong>to the extent that Wise was trusted, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly in canada</b>, <b>Cod online Kamagra Oral Jelly</b>, it was because of the credibility that people give to The Washington Post — a traditional news organization — not because he broke the story on Twitter. </strong>As TBD's Steve Buttry <a href="http://stevebuttry.wordpress.com/2010/09/01/washington-post-social-media-policy-didnt-prevent-mike-wises-twitter-hoax/">pointed out</a>, <b>buy Kamagra Oral Jelly without prescription</b>, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly paypal</b>, people would have run with this story if Wise had planted it in the Post itself or on its website; what makes Twitter any different? DCist's Aaron Morrissey <a href="http://dcist.com/2010/08/and_now_a_few_words_on_twitter_jour.php">put the point well</a>: Wise falsely "assumed that there weren't levels of authenticity to Twitter, which, <b>real brand Kamagra Oral Jelly online</b>, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly tablets</b>, just like any other social construct on Earth, features some people who are reputable concerning <em>whatever</em> and others who aren't."</p>
<p>—</p>
<p><strong>Rupert's paywall runs into obstacles</strong>: Two months after the <a href="http://www.journalism.co.uk/2/articles/539431.php">online paywall went up</a> at Rupert Murdoch's Times of London, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly craiglist</b>, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly in india</b>, The Independent (a competitor of The Times) <a href="http://www.independent.co.uk/news/media/online/has-rupert-murdochs-paywall-gamble-paid-off-2067907.html">reported this week</a> that with a vastly reduced audience to sell to, advertisers are fleeing the site, <b>purchase Kamagra Oral Jelly</b>. In the article, various British news industry analysts also said The Times is killing its online brand and not adding any of the sort of value that's necessary to justify charging for news, <b>Buy Kamagra Oral Jelly Without Prescription</b>.  <b>Buy no prescription Kamagra Oral Jelly online</b>, Stateside, too, <b>Kamagra Oral Jelly to buy</b>, Lost Remote's Steve Safran <a href="http://www.lostremote.com/2010/09/02/advertisers-pulling-out-of-times-following-paywall-implementation/">saw the news</a> as "mounting evidence that putting up a paywall is bad for business."</p>
<p>It should be noted, though, that according to those analysts, The Times' paywall is "more about gathering consumer information than selling content" — News Corp.'s primary intent may be getting detailed, personalized information on Times readers and using it to sell them other products within its media empire, including its BSkyB satellite TV. Francois Nel <a href="http://forthemedia.blogspot.com/2010/09/why-rupert-murdochs-paywall-strategy.html">ran some possible numbers</a> and determined that even with its relatively small audience (15,000 subscribers, plus day-pass users), News Corp. could be making more money with its paywall than without.</p>
<p>On the other hand, a new study <a href="http://paidcontent.org/article/419-analyst-paywall-subscribers-worth-a-quarter-of-print-readers/">reported by paidContent</a> estimated that online subscribers to The Times and Murdoch's Wall Street Journal are worth only a quarter of their print counterparts.  <b>Buy Kamagra Oral Jelly Without Prescription</b>, Getting rid of the print product, the study posited, wouldn't even make up for the loss of income from those subscribers. The Press Gazette's Dominic Ponsford <a href="http://blogs.pressgazette.co.uk/wire/6945">detailed more of the research firm's report</a> — a rather depressing one for newspaper execs.</p>
<p>—</p>
<p><strong>Google and the AP play nice</strong>: A quiet news development worth noting: Google and The Associated Press renewed their licensing agreement that allows Google (including, especially, Google News) to host AP content. The deal was announced on Google's side via a<a href="http://googlenewsblog.blogspot.com/2010/08/extending-associated-press-as-hosted.html">one-paragraph post</a>, and on the AP's side through a <a href="http://abcnews.go.com/Technology/wireStory?id=11514815">much more extensive article</a> by its technology writer Michael Liedtke. The extension is significant because the two sides have had a consistently fractious relationship — their first agreement began in 2006 after the AP threatened to sue Google for aggregating its articles, AP executives have <a href="http://paidcontent.org/article/419-interview-dean-singleton-chairman-ap-ceo-medianews-setting-the-rules-of/">criticized news aggregators</a> for misappropriating content, and the AP's material <a href="http://techcrunch.com/2010/01/11/google-news-pulls-ap/">briefly stopped appearing</a> on Google News late last year.</p>
<p>The Lab's Megan Garber <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/08/the-ap-and-google-reach-a-licensing-renewal-agreement-heres-what-it-might-mean-for-their-relationship/">noted</a> that this new agreement might go beyond another truce and mark a change in the way the companies relate: "Us-versus-them becoming let’s-work-together." Search Engine Land's Danny Sullivan <a href="http://searchengineland.com/google-ap-extend-content-deal-49580">provided plenty of background</a>, surmising that AP has learned its lesson that Google News can live on just fine without them, <b>Buy Kamagra Oral Jelly Without Prescription</b>.</p>
<p>—</p>
<p><strong>Reading roundup</strong>: This week was an especially rich one for all sorts of web-journalism punditry. Here's a sampling:</p>
<p>— The American Journalism Review's Barb Palser <a href="http://www.ajr.org/Article.asp?id=4902">tried to throw some cold water</a> on the hyperlocal news movement, using some Pew stats to argue that people don't go online for neighborhood news as much as we might think. (That use of statistics led to a <a href="http://bettween.com/michelemclellan/chanders">frustrated response</a> by Michele McLellan.) And the Online Journalism Review's Robert Niles <a href="http://www.ojr.org/ojr/people/robert/201008/1880/">added his skepticism</a> to the discussion surrounding Patch and large-scale hyperlocal news.</p>
<p>— NYU j-prof Jay Rosen can be a polarizing figure, but there are few media observers who are better at pulling thoughtful insights out of the often mystifying world that is journalism in transition.  We got three particularly thought-provoking tidbits from him this week: A sharp <a href="http://www.economist.com/blogs/democracyinamerica/2010/08/jay_rosen_media">interview with The Economist</a> <b>Buy Kamagra Oral Jelly Without Prescription</b>, on the American press, a <a href="http://fictio.nihilnovi.net/?p=79">lecture at a French j-school</a> about audience with tips for new students; and a <a href="http://dailyfreeman.blogspot.com/2010/08/how-to-get-newsroom-to-cover-stories.html">video clip</a> from the Journal Register Co.'s ideaLab on news production and innovation.</p>
<p>— We spent <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/06/this-week-in-review-the-ftcs-ideas-for-news-apples-paid-news-pitch-and-the-de-linking-debate/">some</a> <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/06/this-week-in-review-a-mobile-aggregation-dustup-journalists-and-the-link-and-fan-based-local-sports/">time</a> this summer talking about the merits (and drawbacks) of links, so consider this a worthy addendum: Scott Rosenberg, who <a href="http://www.sayeverything.com/">recently chronicled</a> the history of blogging, issued a <a href="http://www.wordyard.com/2010/08/30/in-defense-of-links-part-one-nick-carr-hypertext-and-delinkification/">three</a>-<a href="http://www.wordyard.com/2010/08/31/in-defense-of-links-part-two-money-changes-everything/">part</a> <a href="http://www.wordyard.com/2010/09/02/in-defense-of-links-part-three-in-links-we-trust/">defense</a> of the link this week. A great examination of one of the fundamental features of the web.</p>
<p>— Finally, two cool reads, one practical and the other theoretical. The Atlantic's Alexis Madrigal <a href="http://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2010/08/5-lessons-from-longshot-a-magazine-made-in-48-hours/62259/">listed five lessons</a> from the publication of Longshot, the hyperspeed-produced magazine formerly known as 48HRS, and here at the Lab, Cornell scholar Joshua Braun <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/09/all-the-webs-a-stage-scholar-joshua-braun-on-what-we-show-and-what-we-choose-to-hide-in-journalism/">talked about</a> the way TV news organizations maintain the "stage management" of broadcast in their online efforts. <strong>"They continue to control what remains backstage and what goes front-stage,"</strong> he wrote, giving comment moderation as an example. <strong>"That’s not unique to the news, either. But it’s an interesting preservation of the way the media’s worked for a long time."</strong>.</p>
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		<description><![CDATA[ [This review was originally posted at the Nieman Journalism Lab Buy Cipro Without Prescription, on May 28, 2010.]
Facebook simplifies privacy control: After about a month of loud, sustained criticism, Facebook bowed to public pressure and instituted some changes Wednesday to users' privacy settings.  Cipro in mexico, The default status of most of the data on [...]


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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> <strong>[This review was originally posted at the <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/05/this-week-in-review-facebooks-privacy-tweak-old-and-new-medias-links-and-the-aps-new-challenger/">Nieman Journalism Lab</a> <b>Buy Cipro Without Prescription</b>, on May 28, 2010.]</strong></p>
<p><strong>Facebook simplifies privacy control</strong>: After about a month of loud, sustained <a href="http://www.zephoria.org/thoughts/archives/2010/05/14/facebook-and-radical-transparency-a-rant.html">criticism</a>, Facebook bowed to public pressure and instituted some <a href="http://blog.facebook.com/blog.php?post=391922327130">changes</a> Wednesday to users' privacy settings.  <b>Cipro in mexico</b>, The default status of most of the data on Facebook — that is, public —<a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/facebook_rolls_back_some_key_privacy_changes.php">hasn't changed</a>, <b>Cipro medication</b>, <b>Next day Cipro</b>, but the social networking site did make it easier for users to determine and control their various privacy settings. For some social media critics, <b>Cipro trusted pharmacy reviews</b>, <b>Buy Cipro without a prescription</b>, the tweaks were enough to <a href="http://mashable.com/2010/05/27/facebook-privacy-move-on/">close the book</a> on this whole privacy brouhaha, but others <a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/the_half_truths_of_mark_zuckerberg.php">weren't so satisfied</a> with Facebook, <b>free Cipro samples</b>.  <b>Cipro price, coupon</b>, Here at the Lab, Megan Garber seized on the <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/05/todays-facebook-changes-and-zuckerbergs-law/">theme of "control"</a> in Facebook's announcement, <b>fast shipping Cipro</b>, <b>Buy cheap Cipro no rx</b>, arguing that the company is acknowledging that online sharing is as much individual and self-interested as it is communal and selfless.</p>
<p>Before rolling out those changes, <b>buy Cipro online without a prescription</b>, <b>Order Cipro online overnight delivery no prescription</b>, Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg penned a <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/05/23/AR2010052303828.html">Washington Post op-ed</a> that served as a defense of Facebook's privacy policy masquerading as an apology. "If we give people control over what they share, they will want to share more, <b>Buy Cipro Without Prescription</b>. If people share more, <b>buy Cipro online cod</b>, <b>Purchase Cipro online no prescription</b>, the world will become more open and connected," he wrote. The reaction was swift and negative: It was called "<a href="http://gawker.com/5546687/">long on propaganda and short on news</a>, <b>Cipro over the counter</b>, <b>Order Cipro from mexican pharmacy</b>, " "<a href="http://www.mediaite.com/online/mark-zuckerbergs-weird-pr-speak-facebook-op-ed-in-the-washington-post/">disingenuous</a>" and "<a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/facebook_addresses_privacy_issues_new_settings_coming.php">missing the point</a>" by several media and tech critics.</p>
<p>Their comments were part of continued attacks on Facebook's privacy stance that began to shift from "Facebook is evil" to "So what do we do now?" Facebook's new, <b>online buying Cipro hcl</b>, <b>Buy Cipro from mexico</b>,  <a href="http://www.thebigmoney.com/blogs/facebook-status/2010/05/24/it-s-now-or-never-facebook-s-rivals">more private rivals</a><a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/24/technology/24social.html"> escalated their efforts</a> to provide an alternative, while social media researcher Danah Boyd argued that <a href="http://www.zephoria.org/thoughts/archives/2010/05/23/quitting-facebook-is-pointless-challenging-them-to-do-better-is-not.html">leaving Facebook would be futile</a> and instead urged users to "challenge Facebook to live up to a higher standard." Several legal and web thinkers also <a href="http://roomfordebate.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/05/25/should-government-take-on-facebook/">discussed whether the government should regulate</a> Facebook's privacy policies, <b>Cipro in uk</b>, <b>Cipro in japan</b>, and the Harvard Business Review's Bruce Nussbaum <a href="http://blogs.hbr.org/cs/2010/05/facebooks_culture_problem_may.html">made the case</a> that Facebook has alienated the generational principles of its primary user base of millennials. (Mathew Ingram of GigaOm <a href="http://gigaom.com/2010/05/26/does-facebook-have-a-fatal-cultural-problem/">disagreed</a>.)</p>
<p>But amid all that, <b>Cipro to buy</b>, <b>Buy Cipro no prescription</b>, Facebook — or at least the sharing of personal information — got another defender: The prominent tech thinker Steven Johnson. In a <a href="http://www.time.com/time/printout/0, <b>purchase Cipro</b>, <b>Where can i buy Cipro online</b>, 8816,1990586, <b>Cipro buy</b>, <b>Where can i order Cipro without prescription</b>, 00.html">thoughtful essay for Time</a>, He used the example of media critic Jeff Jarvis' public bout with prostate cancer to argue that living in public has its virtues, <b>Cipro paypal</b>, <b>Buy no prescription Cipro online</b>, too. <strong>"We have to learn how to break with that most elemental of parental commandments: Don't talk to strangers," Johnson wrote, <b>where can i find Cipro online</b>.  <b>Buy Cipro Without Prescription</b>, "It turns out that strangers have a lot to give us that's worthwhile, and we to them."</strong> Of course, Johnson argues, being public or private is for the first time a decision, and it requires a new kind of literacy to go with it.  <b>Buy Cipro online with no prescription</b>, <strong>—</strong></p>
<p><strong>Paywalls and the links between old and new media</strong>: The Pew Research Center's Project for Excellence in Journalism <a href="http://www.journalism.org/analysis_report/new_media_old_media">released a study</a> examining the way several big news topics were discussed across several online news platforms, and as usual, <b>Cipro in usa</b>, <b>Buy Cipro from canada</b>, it's a whole lot of discoveries to sift through. Among the headlines that Pew pointed out in its <a href="http://www.journalism.org/analysis_report/new_media_old_media">summary</a>: Twitter users share more technology news than other platforms, <b>order Cipro no prescription</b>, <b>Order Cipro online c.o.d</b>, the traditional press may be underemphasizing international news, blogs and the press have different news agendas, <b>Cipro gel, ointment, cream, pill, spray, continuous-release, extended-release</b>, <b>Purchase Cipro online</b>, and Twitter is less tied to traditional media than blogs. (Mashable has another <a href="http://mashable.com/2010/05/24/new-versus-old-media/">good roundup</a>, <b>real brand Cipro online</b>, <b>Cipro for sale</b>, focusing on the differences between the traditional media and the blogosphere.</p>
<p>The study did take some heat online: TBD's Steve Buttry <a href="http://twitter.com/stevebuttry/status/14627468482">took</a> <a href="http://twitter.com/stevebuttry/status/14627569953">issue</a> <a href="http://twitter.com/stevebuttry/status/14627710945">with</a> the assertion that most original reporting comes from traditional journalists, <b>rx free Cipro</b>, <b>Cipro from canadian pharmacy</b>, and the Knight Digital Media Center's Amy Gahran <a href="http://www.knightdigitalmediacenter.org/leadership_blog/20100525_pej_new_media_study_good_social_media_research_questionable_claims/">dug into the study's methodology</a> and argued that Pew selected from a list of blogs predisposed to discuss what the traditional media is reporting, and that Pew's definition of news is shaped by circular reasoning, <b>cod online Cipro</b>.</p>
<p>Gahran was looking at what turned out to be the most <a href="http://www.businessinsider.com/new-media-news-trends-study">attention-grabbing statistic</a> from the study: That 99 percent of the stories blogs link to are produced by the mainstream media, and more than 80 percent come from just four news outlets — the BBC, CNN, The New York Times and the Washington Post, <b>Buy Cipro Without Prescription</b>.  <b>Cipro in india</b>, DailyFinance media columnist Jeff Bercovici <a href="http://www.dailyfinance.com/story/media/will-the-new-york-times-pay-wall-plan-be-a-turnoff-to-bloggers/19488977/">used that statistic</a> to caution that the Times may be giving up a valuable place as one of the top drivers of online news discussion by implementing its paywall next year. Reuters' Felix Salmon <a href="http://blogs.reuters.com/felix-salmon/2010/05/24/chart-of-the-day-the-nyt-and-the-econoblogosphere/">echoed that warning</a>, <b>Cipro to buy online</b>, <b>Sale Cipro</b>, adding that if the Times is truly keeping the doors to its site open to bloggers, it should be trumpeting that as loudly as possible, <b>buy generic Cipro</b>.  <b>Where to buy Cipro</b>, And wouldn't you know it — the next day the Times <a href="http://mediamemo.allthingsd.com/20100525/the-new-york-times-plans-a-blogger-friendly-pay-wall-link-all-you-like/">did just that</a>, reiterating that links to their site from blogs won't count against the limit of free visits, <b>Cipro from canadian pharmacy</b>.  <b>Buy Cipro from canada</b>, Meanwhile, Rupert Murdoch's British newspaper the Times and Sunday Times <a href="http://blogs.ft.com/techblog/2010/05/behind-the-times-new-paywall/">unveiled plans</a> for its soon-to-be-erected paywall, <b>Cipro in canada</b>, <b>Buy cheap Cipro no rx</b>, including the fact that all of the sites' articles will be blocked from all search engines.  <b>Buy Cipro Without Prescription</b>, The Times and New York Times' paywalls were almost tailor-made for being contrasted, and that's <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/05/a-defensive-experiment-how-the-times-of-london-and-the-times-in-new-york-diverge-on-paid-content/">exactly what the Lab's Jason Fry did</a>, using them as examples of an open vs. closed paradigm regarding paid content, <b>Cipro to buy</b>.  <b>Buy Cipro online without a prescription</b>, <strong>—</strong></p>
<p><strong>A challenger to the AP's model</strong>: We found out about a fascinating news innovation this week at the TechCrunch Disrupt Conference, where the online news sharing company Publish2 revealed <a href="http://www.publish2.com/cache/about/news-exchange/">News Exchange</a>, <b>where can i buy Cipro online</b>, <b>Cipro san diego</b>, its new content-sharing service for publishers. Essentially, <b>Cipro in india</b>, <b>Rx free Cipro</b>, News Exchange is a way for media outlets, both online-only and traditional, <b>order Cipro from United States pharmacy</b>, <b>Buy Cipro no prescription</b>, to send and receive stories to each other for publication while retaining control of what they share and with whom.</p>
<p>If that sounds like a free, <b>buy generic Cipro</b>, <b>Cipro tablets</b>, open version of The Associated Press, it's because that's exactly what Publish2 sees it as, <b>buy Cipro without a prescription</b>. At the conference, Publish2's Scott Karp came out against The Associated Press <a href="http://techcrunch.com/2010/05/24/publish2-disrupt/">with both guns blazing</a>, calling it <strong>"a big enemy of newspapers" and "an obsolete, inefficient monopoly ripe for destruction." Publish2's goal, he said, is to "Craigslist the AP."</strong> (In a blog post, Publish2's Ryan Sholin <a href="http://blog.publish2.com/2010/05/24/publish2-news-exchange-the-next-evolution-of-the-newswire/">went into some more detail</a> about why and how.)</p>
<p>Publish2's bold idea was met with mixed reactions among both the tech and media crowds: A few of TechCrunch's panelists <a href="http://techcrunch.com/2010/05/24/publish2-disrupt/">wondered</a> whether print publications were worth building a business around, but they were impressed enough to <a href="http://techcrunch.com/2010/05/26/startup-battlefield-round-3-the-final-disruption/">advance it to the final round</a> of the conference's startup competition anyhow, <b>Buy Cipro Without Prescription</b>.  <b>Fast shipping Cipro</b>, NYU j-prof Jay Rosen <a href="http://twitter.com/jayrosen_nyu/status/14651857347">called it</a> "an extension into print of 'do what you do best and link to the rest,'" and CUNY j-prof C.W, <b>Cipro overseas</b>.  <b>Online buy Cipro without a prescription</b>, Anderson said he was <a href="http://twitter.com/Chanders/status/14653883343">thrilled</a> to watch Publish2 take on an irrational system but concerned that the <a href="http://twitter.com/Chanders/status/14652786165">tangle of CMS's</a> could trip it up. But media consultant Mark Potts <a href="http://www.poynter.org/article_feedback/article_feedback_list.asp?user=&amp;id=183977">noted</a> that much of what the AP transmits is news it reports and produces, <b>buying Cipro online over the counter</b>, <b>Buy Cipro online no prescription</b>, something Publish2 isn't going to try to do. It's rare that we see such a bold, explicit attempt to take down such an established news organization, so this will doubtless be a project to keep a close eye on.</p>
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<p><strong>A disappointing iPad app and an open-web debate</strong>: A couple of iPad-related developments and debates this week: While publishers <a href="http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/e5c06f96-66a2-11df-aeb1-00144feab49a.html">cautiously awaited</a> <b>Buy Cipro Without Prescription</b>, the iPad's international release this week, Wired magazine <a href="http://www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=134&amp;aid=184067">released its iPad app</a> this week — an eagerly awaited app in tech circles. The app is $5 per month, significantly more than the $10 per year that the magazine charges subscribers. Gizmodo Australia's John Herrman <a href="http://www.gizmodo.com.au/2010/05/im-still-waiting-for-a-great-ipad-magazine/">called it</a> "unequivocally, the best magazine for the iPad," but still wasn't entirely impressed. It's too expensive, takes up too much space, and doesn't deliver the reinvention of the magazine that we were expecting, he said. Lost Remote's Steve Safran was harsher — calling it a magazine dropped into an app. <strong>"Simply taking your existing magazine and sticking in some video does not make it a more attractive offering; it makes it a website from 2003,"</strong> he said.</p>
<p>The New York Times Magazine's Virginia Heffernan ruffled a few feathers this week with a short essay on "<a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/23/magazine/23FOB-medium-t.html">The Death of the Open Web</a>," in which she compared the move into the carefully controlled environs of Apple's products like the iPhone and iPad to white flight, <b>Buy Cipro Without Prescription</b>. Web writers <a href="http://www.stoweboyd.com/message/is-open-dead-no-but-this-metaphor-is.html">Stowe Boyd</a> and <a href="http://quietbabylon.posterous.com/virginia-heffernan-and-the-exaggerated-death">Tim Maly</a> refuted Heffernan's argument, pointing primarily to the iPhone and iPad's browser and arguing that it keeps the door open to virtually everything the web has to offer. And blogging pioneer Dave Winer said the phrase "death of the open web" is <a href="http://www.scripting.com/stories/2010/05/23/factcheckingTheDeathOfTheO.html">rendered meaningless</a> by the fact that it can't be verified. In a final quick iPad note, the journalism and programming site Hacks/Hackers hosted a conference in which attendees built an impressive <a href="http://unite.hackshackers.com/2010/05/final-press-release/">12 iPad apps in 30 hours</a>.</p>
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<p><strong>Reading roundup</strong>: This week, we've got two news items and a handful of other thoughtful or helpful pieces to take a look at.  <b>Buy Cipro Without Prescription</b>, — The Bay Citizen, a nonprofit local news site based in San Francisco, launched this week. The San Francisco Bay Guardian took a look at the <a href="http://www.sfbg.com/2010/05/25/media-experiments">challenges</a> in front of the Bay Citizen, Poynter used it as a lens to view <a href="http://www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=101&amp;aid=184058">four trends</a> among news startups, and the Chicago Reader <a href="http://www.chicagoreader.com/gyrobase/bay-citizen-san-francisco-chicago-news-cooperative-journalism/Content?oid=1888268&amp;showFullText=true">examined the Chicago News Cooperative</a>, another nonprofit news startup that also provides stories to The New York Times. The Lab's Laura McGann also <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/05/launching-a-site-five-tips-to-get-you-off-on-the-right-foot/">gave some tips</a> for launching a news site the right way.</p>
<p>— Forbes <a href="http://paidcontent.org/article/419-forbes-acquires-true-slant/">bought</a> the personal publishing site True/Slant, whose founder, Lewis Dvorkin, is a former Forbes staffer. Dvorkin<a href="http://trueslant.com/dvorkin/2010/05/25/about-those-ma-rumors-forbes-to-acquire-trueslant/">explained his decision to sell</a>, and Felix Salmon <a href="http://twitter.com/felixsalmon/status/14703292515">expressed his skepticism</a> about True/Slant's future.</p>
<p>— Longtime journalists <a href="http://www.siliconvalleywatcher.com/mt/archives/2010/05/mediawatch_mond_7.php">Tom Foremski</a> and <a href="http://trueslant.com/caitlinkelly/2010/05/25/why-crap-gets-read-and-real-news-doesnt-the-inherent-dilemma-of-writing-for-page-views/">Caitlin Kelly</a> both wrote thoughtful posts on what happens when pageviews become a high priority within news organizations, <b>Buy Cipro Without Prescription</b>. They're not optimistic.</p>
<p>— Two pieces to bookmark for future reference: Mashable has a thorough but digestible <a href="http://mashable.com/2010/05/26/how-to-monetize-news-media/">overview</a> of five ways to make money off of news online, and TBD's Steve Buttry gives some <a href="http://stevebuttry.wordpress.com/2010/05/21/some-tips-on-landing-your-next-job-in-digital-journalism/">fantastic tips</a> for landing a job in digital journalism.</p>
<p>— Finally, NewsCred's Shafqat Islam has a <a href="http://www.contentblog.org/2010/05/11/topic-pages-how-to-avoid-the-race-to-the-bottom/">wonderful guide</a> to creating effective topic pages for news. This one should be a must-read for any news org looking seriously at context-driven news online.</p>
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		<description><![CDATA[ [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 [...]


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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> <strong>[This review was originally posted at the <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/05/this-week-in-review-newsweek-on-the-block-twitter-as-a-journalistic-system-and-more-paywall-rumblings/">Nieman Journalism Lab</a> <b>Buy Clobazam Without Prescription</b>, on May 7, 2010.]</strong></p>
<p><strong>Has Newsweek's time come?</strong>: This week was a relatively quiet one until Wednesday, when The Washington Post Co. <a href="http://www.newsweek.com/id/237401">announced</a> 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, <b>rx free Clobazam</b>, <b>Clobazam prices</b>, but in this case, as the folks at <a href="http://mediamemo.allthingsd.com/20100505/washington-post-announces-a-one-time-fire-sale-for-newsweek/">The Wall Street Journal's All Things Digital noted</a>, <b>real brand Clobazam online</b>, <b>Buy Clobazam no prescription</b>, 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 <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/06/business/media/06newsweek.html">has the details</a>, including a j-prof's pronouncement that "the era of mass is over, <b>Clobazam craiglist</b>, <b>Clobazam from international pharmacy</b>, in some respect."</p>
<p>PaidContent's Staci Kramer <a href="http://paidcontent.org/article/419-don-graham-on-newsweek-well-get-a-buyer/">talked to Washington Post Co. chairman Don Graham</a>, <b>buy generic Clobazam</b>, <b>Clobazam to buy</b>, who boiled Newsweek's profitability problems to one telling statistic: <strong>Newsweek's staff split its time about evenly between print and digital last year, but print brought in $160 million in revenue, <b>next day Clobazam</b>, <b>Purchase Clobazam online no prescription</b>, while the digital side drew $8 million.</strong> Newsweek's digital operation was good, Graham said — just not good enough to stand out from the hundreds of other news sites out there, <b>Clobazam gel, ointment, cream, pill, spray, continuous-release, extended-release</b>.  <b>Buy cheap Clobazam no rx</b>, Still, he was confident the Post would find a buyer (though he hasn't talked with anyone seriously), <b>order Clobazam from mexican pharmacy</b>, <b>Clobazam overseas</b>, and that Newsweek and newsweeklies in general would live on.</p>
<p>Newsweek editor Jon Meacham <a href="http://www.observer.com/2010/media/meacham-buying-newsweek-im-going-take-look">talked to the New York Observer</a>, <b>buying Clobazam online over the counter</b>, <b>Clobazam tablets</b>, saying he's going to see if he can save the magazine, possibly by rounding up bidders to buy it, <b>Clobazam medication</b>. Meacham's <a href="http://paidcontent.org/article/419-newsweeks-jon-meacham-to-jon-stewart-time-to-flip-emphasis-to-digital/">conversation with Jon Stewart</a> the day the news broke was laced with both optimism and gallows humor, and <a href="http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2010/05/can_jon_meacham_save_newsweek.html">New York magazine examined</a> Meacham's decision to try to make Newsweek the American equivalent of The Economist, <b>Buy Clobazam Without Prescription</b>.  <b>Clobazam over the counter</b>, In a well-written piece, The New York Times' David Carr <a href="http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/05/05/newsweek-between-the-week-slate-and-the-economist-not-much-room-for-a-storied-brand/">summed up two bits of conventional wisdom</a> about Newsweek's downfall: The economics of weekly publishing simply aren't feasible anymore, <b>Clobazam to buy online</b>, <b>Buy Clobazam online with no prescription</b>, and the Washington Post Co.'s Slate, with its snarky, <b>Clobazam paypal</b>, <b>Buy Clobazam online no prescription</b>, knowing tone, has taken Newsweek's place, <b>order Clobazam no prescription</b>.  <b>Clobazam from canadian pharmacy</b>, MarketWatch's Jon Friedman <a href="http://www.marketwatch.com/story/save-newsweek-combine-it-with-slate-2010-05-05">suggested</a> that the Post combine the two. Slate's <a href="http://www.slate.com/id/2253075/">Jack Shafer said</a> it wasn't the Internet that killed Newsweek, <b>buy cheap Clobazam</b>, <b>Order Clobazam online c.o.d</b>, but instead an ongoing game of musical chairs that someone had to lose. (<a href="http://www.mediaweek.com/mw/content_display/news/digital-downloads/broadband/e3i8f1f42046a622bda2de28c338ae6f3c0">Slate</a> and <a href="http://mediamemo.allthingsd.com/20100505/time-inc-publishes-good-news-ad-dollars-subscription-revenue-up/">Time</a>, <b>buy Clobazam online without a prescription</b>, <b>Where can i buy Clobazam online</b>, for example, seem to be doing just fine, <b>buy Clobazam from canada</b>, <b>Sale Clobazam</b>, thanks.) Meanwhile, Derek Powazek, <b>buy Clobazam online cod</b>, <b>Clobazam in mexico</b>, who's edited several web magazines, gave his <a href="http://powazek.com/posts/2415">recipe for newsweekly success</a> in the digital age, <b>Clobazam trusted pharmacy reviews</b>.  <b>Buy Clobazam Without Prescription</b>, The next question, of course, is who will buy Newsweek.  <b>Where to buy Clobazam</b>, News business analyst Ken Doctor <a href="http://newsonomics.com/who-would-buy-newsweek/">examined two possibilities</a>: TV-based news orgs like ABC, CBS and NBC looking for a print distribution point, <b>where can i buy cheapest Clobazam online</b>, <b>Clobazam prescriptions</b>, and "firebrand owners" like media moguls Mort Zuckerman or Marty Peretz. Either way, <b>Clobazam buy</b>, <b>Clobazam discount</b>, Doctor said, Newsweek will probably be all but extinct before long, <b>buy no prescription Clobazam online</b>.  <b>Clobazam in india</b>, Poynter's <a href="http://www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=123&amp;aid=182810">Rick Edmonds</a>, <a href="http://www.thewrap.com/ind-column/who-will-buy-newsweek-17020">Media Alley</a> and <a href="http://www.mediaite.com/print/here-are-five-people-we-think-should-consider-buying-newsweek/">Mediaite</a> all throw out some combination of Zuckerman, <b>online buying Clobazam hcl</b>, <b>Purchase Clobazam online</b>, Meacham, Bloomberg and Rupert Murdoch, <b>fast shipping Clobazam</b>.  <b>Ordering Clobazam online</b>, as possibilities.</p>
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<p><strong>Committing journalism with Twitter</strong>: 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, <b>Buy Clobazam Without Prescription</b>. Four Korean researchers collected all of Twitter's data over a month's time last year and <a href="http://an.kaist.ac.kr/traces/WWW2010.html">released their research</a> on it — the first quantitative study of the entire Twitterverse, <b>order Clobazam online overnight delivery no prescription</b>.  <b>Clobazam in uk</b>, What they found, according to <a href="http://www.pcworld.com/businesscenter/article/195374/twitter_more_a_news_medium_than_social_network.html">PC World</a>, <b>buy Clobazam online without prescription</b>, <b>Clobazam price, coupon</b>, 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, <b>saturday delivery Clobazam</b>.  <b>Buy Clobazam from mexico</b>, <a href="http://www.technologyreview.com/blog/guest/25128/?a=f">MIT's Technology Review</a> 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, <b>free Clobazam samples</b>, <b>Where can i find Clobazam online</b>, meaning they use it for information consumption rather than social connections. Second, <b>buy Clobazam without prescription</b>, <b>Over the counter Clobazam</b>, despite the wide disparity between the Twitter "stars" and typical users, anyone's tweet still has the possibility of reaching a wide audience, <b>Clobazam pills</b>, <b>Clobazam in australia</b>, thanks to the usefulness of the retweet function. <strong>"Individual users have the power to dictate which information is important and should spread by the form of retweet," the researchers wrote, <b>order Clobazam from United States pharmacy</b>.  "In a way we are witnessing the emergence of collective intelligence."</strong> <b>Buy Clobazam Without Prescription</b>, Also this week, Canadian j-prof Alfred Hermida <a href="http://journal.media-culture.org.au/index.php/mcjournal/article/viewArticle/220">put forward his argument</a> 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.  <b>Online buy Clobazam without a prescription</b>, In a more technical paper, Alex Burns <a href="http://journal.media-culture.org.au/index.php/mcjournal/article/viewArticle/230">delved into the definition</a> of "ambient journalism, <b>Clobazam in japan</b>, <b>Cod online Clobazam</b>, " especially as it relates to Twitter. Here at the Lab, <b>buy Clobazam without a prescription</b>, <b>Clobazam for sale</b>, Megan Garber also <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/05/maximum-information-in-minimum-time-gauging-social-medias-merits/">looked</a> at the way news organizations in several countries are using Twitter and other social media for news.</p>
<p><strong>—</strong></p>
<p><strong>The paid-content beat goes on</strong>: A few quiet indicators this week of the move toward news paywalls: Rupert Murdoch said News Corp, <b>delivered overnight Clobazam</b>.  <b>Clobazam in canada</b>, 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 <a href="http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/entertainmentnewsbuzz/2010/05/news-corp-announcement-imanent-.html">Los Angeles Times reported</a>, <b>Buy Clobazam Without Prescription</b>. Meanwhile, <b>Clobazam in us</b>, the number of publications that Journalism Online's execs say they're working with on paywall plans has increased to <a href="http://www.inlandpress.org/articles/2010/05/05/knowledge/current_stories/doc4bcf51bb24f3e790235439.txt">1,400</a>, including the sizable MediaNews chain of newspapers.</p>
<p>The Minneapolis Star-Tribune's new publisher/CEO, Mike Klingensmith, <a href="http://www.minnpost.com/braublog/2010/05/04/17867/star_tribune_ceo_mike_klingensmith_talks_new_paywall_digital_re-do">talked to MinnPost</a> about his plans for a new metered-model system (like what The New York Times <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/01/this-week-in-review-the-new-york-times-paywall-plans-and-whats-behind-medianews-bankruptcy/">announced in January</a>), and from the sound of it, he's looking at charging primarily for local news — the paper already charges for some of its <a href="http://www.startribune.com/sports/vikings/">Minnesota Vikings coverage</a> — 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.</p>
<p>Advertising Age's Nat Ives also took a look at paywalls for smaller newspapers (here's the <a href="http://adage.com/mediaworks/article?article_id=143637">link</a>, but Ives' article is also under a paywall). <a href="http://newsonomics.com/community-daily-pay-walls-a-tourniquet/">Ken Doctor says</a> 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.</p>
<p><strong>—</strong></p>
<p><strong>The pros and cons of Facebook's spread</strong> <b>Buy Clobazam Without Prescription</b>, : 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 <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/06/technology/internet/06facebook.html">overview</a> about those concerns, and TechNewsWorld <a href="http://www.technewsworld.com/story/Has-Facebook-Finally-Gone-Too-Far-69926.html?wlc=1273156072">pegged their overview</a> to a Consumer Reports survey about Facebook information sharing that was released this week.</p>
<p>Social media guru Robert Scoble wrote a <a href="http://scobleizer.com/2010/04/30/why-it-is-too-late-to-regulate-facebook/">depressing piece</a> about why Facebook's disregard for privacy can't be regulated, concluding that Facebook founder <strong>Mark Zuckerberg "just played chicken with our privacy and it sure looks like he won."</strong> New media expert Jeff Jarvis <a href="http://www.buzzmachine.com/2010/04/30/facebooks-identity-opportunity-or-somebodys/">suggested</a> 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.</p>
<p>The New York Times' digital chief Martin Nisenholtz, was pretty impressed by Facebook's spread across the web, giving a <a href="http://paidcontent.org/article/419-nyts-nisenholtzs-speech-the-importance-of-engagement/">sharp analysis</a> 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."</p>
<p><strong>—</strong></p>
<p><strong>Reading roundup</strong>: This week, I've got two news items and a few other good ideas to chew on.</p>
<p>— EBay founder Pierre Omidyar launched his new local news site, <a href="http://www.civilbeat.com/">Honolulu Civil Beat</a>, this week, <b>Buy Clobazam Without Prescription</b>. 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. <a href="http://paidcontent.org/article/419-honolulu-civil-beat-launches-with-paypal-as-the-great-link-lower-trial-/">PaidContent</a> and <a href="http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=126183424">NPR</a> both have the details.</p>
<p>— 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 <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/05/moderating-declines-parsing-the-naas-spin-on-newspaper-circ-data/">punched a few holes</a> 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 <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/05/the-newsonomics-of-reborn-newspaper-profit/">explained</a> why newspapers aren't going to be investment those profits in much-needed innovation.</p>
<p>— Publish2's Greg Linch <a href="http://blog.publish2.com/2010/04/30/computational-thinking-new-journalism-mindset/">put together a great case</a> <b>Buy Clobazam Without Prescription</b>, 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 <a href="http://kimpearson.net/?p=724">proposals</a> for ways to integrate computational thinking into curriculums.</p>
<p>— We've been hearing a lot about online comments over the past few weeks, and Poynter's Mallary Jean Tenore <a href="http://www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=101&amp;aid=182546">took a close look</a> at the ways several news organizations are working to improve them.</p>
<p>— 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 <a href="http://paidcontent.org/article/419-traditional-ways-of-judging-quality-in-published-content-are-now-useles/">gave a fine summary</a> of the way the definition of quality has changed in online media versus traditional publishing, and Slate's William Saletan had some <a href="http://www.slate.com/id/2252685/pagenum/all/">helpful tips</a> to make your media consumption broader, deeper and altogether smarter. It's hard work, but it's necessary, Saletan said: <strong>"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."</strong>.</p>
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			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p> <strong>[This review was initially posted at the <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/02/this-week-in-review-googles-buzz-buzz-demand-medias-plans-and-turning-relationships-into-revenue/">Nieman Journalism Lab</a> <b>Buy Claritin Without Prescription</b>, on Feb.  <b>Delivered overnight Claritin</b>, 12, 2010.]</strong></p>
<p><strong>Google Buzzes social media</strong>: For the <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/02/this-week-in-review-googles-new-features-what-to-do-with-the-ipad-and-facebooks-rise-as-a-news-reader/">second week in a row</a>, <b>buy Claritin online without a prescription</b>, <b>Buy Claritin without a prescription</b>, the biggest story at the intersection of journalism and new media is an innovation by Google: This week, the talk was about <a href="http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2010/02/introducing-google-buzz.html">Google Buzz</a>, <b>online buying Claritin hcl</b>, <b>Online buy Claritin without a prescription</b>, a real-time program for sharing status updates, links and media through Gmail’s platform, <b>next day Claritin</b>.  <b>Order Claritin no prescription</b>, You can find helpful summaries of how Buzz works at <a href="http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2010/02/introducing-google-buzz.html">The Official Google Blog</a>, <a href="http://answers.oreilly.com/topic/1069-google-buzz-5-things-you-need-to-know/">O’Reilly Answers</a>, <b>buy Claritin from canada</b>, <b>Where can i order Claritin without prescription</b>,  <a href="http://mashable.com/2010/02/09/google-buzz/">Mashable</a> and <a href="http://searchengineland.com/google-buzz-takes-on-twitter-facebook-foursquare-35673">Search Engine Land</a>. 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.<br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">The most important stuff first: As for Buzz’s implications for journalism, <b>Claritin over the counter</b>, <b>Buying Claritin online over the counter</b>, the two best quick guides are by <a href="http://www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=31&amp;aid=177590">Will Sullivan at Poynter</a> and Google-watcher <a href="http://www.buzzmachine.com/2010/02/09/googles-buzzmachine/">Jeff Jarvis at BuzzMachine</a>. 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, <b>Claritin trusted pharmacy reviews</b>. Sullivan focuses largely on Buzz’s impact on adding the element of location to news and advertising, <b>Buy Claritin Without Prescription</b>.  <b>Order Claritin from mexican pharmacy</b>, (The local media site <a href="http://www.lostremote.com/2010/02/09/local-implications-of-google-buzz/">Lost Remote</a> touches on this, too.) By the way, <b>Claritin from international pharmacy</b>, <b>Sale Claritin</b>, I’m with Sullivan on this — I think <strong>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.</strong></p><br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">The initial response from the tech crowd tended to be negative, <b>buy Claritin no prescription</b>.  <b>Claritin in australia</b>, RSS and blogging pioneer <a href="http://www.scripting.com/stories/2010/02/09/googleBuzzPfffft.html">Dave Winer</a> declared it a dud, and PR exec <a href="http://www.steverubel.com/serenity-now-google-buzz-is-google-wave-light">Steve Rubel</a> called it “<a href="https://wave.google.com/wave/?pli=1">Google Wave</a> light, <b>Claritin overseas</b>, <b>Claritin in japan</b>, a non-starter.” <a href="http://www.businessinsider.com/warning-google-buzz-has-a-huge-privacy-flaw-2010-2">Others</a> saw <a href="http://bits.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/02/11/the-negative-buzz-around-googles-new-social-network/">major privacy issues</a> with Buzz revealing your email contacts to the world, though Google <a href="http://gmailblog.blogspot.com/2010/02/millions-of-buzz-users-and-improvements.html">gave us a fix</a> Thursday afternoon.</p><br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Much of the discussion around Buzz, <b>Claritin tablets</b>, <b>Claritin gel, ointment, cream, pill, spray, continuous-release, extended-release</b>, though, was about which social network it will or won’t tear into, <b>Claritin in india</b>.  <b>Where can i buy cheapest Claritin online</b>, Before it launched, it was called a “<a href="http://www.businessinsider.com/google-is-set-to-launch-twitter-clone-for-gmail-2010-2">Twitter-killer</a>, <b>Claritin in mexico</b>, <b>Claritin discount</b>, ” and <a href="http://digital.venturebeat.com/2010/02/09/google-intimacy/">DigitalBeat</a> countered that it wouldn’t kill Twitter, while telling us what role it<em>would</em> play, <b>saturday delivery Claritin</b>.  <b>Ordering Claritin online</b>, (Meanwhile, <a href="http://thenextweb.com/socialmedia/2010/02/09/features-twitterkilling/">Dave Winer opined</a> on what a social-media platform would have to have in order to kill Twitter.) Several others <a href="http://twitter.com/patrickbeeson/statuses/8868669154">noticed</a> its similarity to Facebook, <b>Claritin craiglist</b>, <b>Buy cheap Claritin no rx</b>, and in a <a href="http://www.thebigmoney.com/articles/0s-1s-and-s/2010/02/09/google-buzzes-facebook-and-world?page=full">smart post</a> at The Big Money, Chris Thompson explained where it might have an advantage, <b>Claritin price, coupon</b>.  <b>Buy Claritin Without Prescription</b>, And at the tech blog ReadWriteWeb, Frederic Lardinois has a great <a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/google_buzz_the_missing_features.php">list of improvements</a> Buzz could make.</p><br />
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<p><strong>Demand’s plan for publishers</strong>: Four months after <a href="http://www.wired.com/magazine/2009/10/ff_demandmedia/all/1">Wired</a> brought the business model of online content producer Demand Media to light, the <a href="http://markcoddington.com/2009/12/19/demand-media-invasion-objectivity-trumps-transparency/">conversation</a> about the company remains on a slow burn.  <b>Claritin prices</b>, We’ve been hearing lately from several Demand execs; most newsworthy is the <a href="http://www.businessinsider.com/demand-media-plans-for-major-publisher-partnerships-2010-2">revelation</a> that Demand is experimenting with several major publishers and plans to move into the business of selling their original content to supplement publishers’ websites.<br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Why does this have people worried, <b>over the counter Claritin</b>.  <b>Free Claritin samples</b>, Because Demand Media is being held up as the poster child for so-called “<a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/content_farms_impact.php">content farms</a>” that flood the web with content of <a href="http://twitter.com/dangillmor/status/8611505371">dubious quality</a> and pay their freelance writers a <a href="http://www.foliomag.com/2010/demand-media-can-go-hell">pittance</a> to do it. (Last week, <b>rx free Claritin</b>, <b>Purchase Claritin online no prescription</b>, news business expert Alan Mutter stirred the pot by telling freelance journalists to <a href="http://newsosaur.blogspot.com/2010/02/stop-exploitation-of-journalists.html">refuse to work</a> for so little, and j-prof C.W, <b>Claritin san diego</b>. Anderson <a href="http://twitter.com/Chanders/statuses/8681630198">noted</a> that just because someone will work for that kind of money doesn’t make it right.</p><br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Demand Media’s <a href="http://gigaom.com/2010/02/05/inside-the-mind-of-demand-medias-richard-rosenblatt/">Richard Rosenblatt</a> and <a href="http://www.beet.tv/2010/02/demand-media-has-150000-assignments-waiting-for-its-7000-stringers-.html">Steven Kydd</a> both defended themselves against those charges in interviews with GigaOM and Beet.TV, respectively, <b>Buy Claritin Without Prescription</b>.  <b>Where to buy Claritin</b>, A bit more surprisingly, they got some support from <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/08/business/media/08carr.html?pagewanted=all">New York Times media columnist David Carr</a>, <b>where can i buy Claritin online</b>, <b>Cod online Claritin</b>, who quoted several Demand Media freelancers who said, among other things, <b>Claritin paypal</b>, <b>Claritin price, coupon</b>, “Demand has been as close to a safety net as anyone gets in this business.” <strong>As for consumers who are frustrated by the lack of quality content, Carr says, <b>fast shipping Claritin</b>, <b>Order Claritin no prescription</b>, “ignore the loudmouth and ask someone else.”</strong></p><br />
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<p><strong>Are people paying for news — or relationships?</strong>: 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, <b>Claritin prescriptions</b>.  <b>Claritin craiglist</b>, First, on the newsier side: An exec with the <a href="http://online.wsj.com/article_email/SB10001424052748703657604575005813195786280-lMyQjAxMTAwMDEwNTExNDUyWj.html">recently bankrupt</a> newspaper chain MediaNews told <a href="http://www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=101&amp;aid=177722">Poynter’s Steve Myers</a> they plan on rolling out their new paywall at two papers in the next few months, <b>order Claritin online c.o.d</b>, <b>Over the counter Claritin</b>, and gave him a loose description of what it will look like. (Summary: A metered model, <b>buy cheap Claritin</b>, <b>Buy Claritin online without prescription</b>, like the Financial Times or <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/01/this-week-in-review-the-new-york-times-paywall-plans-and-whats-behind-medianews-bankruptcy/">The New York Times’ plans</a>; breaking news and multimedia will be free; enterprise reporting, columns and reviews will be behind the paywall.) Another exec in the paid-content business, <b>where can i buy cheapest Claritin online</b>, <b>Claritin buy</b>,  <a href="http://emediavitals.com/article/17/early-adopters-new-online-payment-platform-leaning-toward-metered-segmented-options">Journalism Online’s Gordon Crovitz</a>, says the unnamed publishers they’re working with are also leaning toward metered models, <b>where can i order Claritin without prescription</b>.  <b>Purchase Claritin online no prescription</b>, <p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">On the discussion side, two sharp pieces were written this week about what will sell online, <b>Claritin in mexico</b>.  <b>Buy Claritin Without Prescription</b>, First, CUNY j-prof and web guru Jeff Jarvis <a href="http://www.buzzmachine.com/2010/02/08/stop-selling-scarcity-2/">tells us what won’t sell</a>: Scarcity.  <b>Buy Claritin without prescription</b>, In media, Jarvis says, <b>Claritin in australia</b>, <b>Claritin overseas</b>, that means content and information aren’t scarce and can’t be sold as such. Instead, <b>Claritin in canada</b>, <b>Claritin in india</b>, he advises news orgs to base their business on relationships with readers and marketers, saying, <b>order Claritin online overnight delivery no prescription</b>, <b>Buy Claritin online cod</b>,  <strong>“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.”</strong></p><br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Second, <b>where can i buy Claritin online</b>, <b>Claritin pills</b>, PBS MediaShift’s <a href="http://www.pbs.org/idealab/2010/02/what-can-virtual-goods-teach-us-about-paying-for-news034.html">Chris O’Brien notes</a> 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, <b>Claritin for sale</b>, <b>Buy Claritin online without a prescription</b>, 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 <a href="http://editor.blogspot.com/2010/02/why-is-facebook-beer-worth-more-than.html">takes the idea a step further</a>, 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.”</p><br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">—</p></p>
<p><strong>Gauging Facebook’s expansion</strong>: <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/02/this-week-in-review-googles-new-features-what-to-do-with-the-ipad-and-facebooks-rise-as-a-news-reader/">Last week’s discussion</a> about Facebook’s potential power as a <a href="http://blog.areyoupayingattention.com/2010/02/facebook-and-the-future-of-news/">news and information source</a> spilled over into this week, spurred on by reminders of Facebook’s furious rate of expansion: Sharing on it has <a href="http://www.allfacebook.com/2010/02/facebook-releases-new-statistics-sharing-quintuples-in-6-months/">quintupled</a> in the last six months; it’s <a href="http://techcrunch.com/2010/02/05/facebooks-project-titan-a-full-featured-webmail-product/">developing webmail</a> to compete with Gmail; it’s <a href="http://thenextweb.com/socialmedia/2010/02/11/facebook-google-version-adsense/">creating</a> its own targeted display ad system; and it’s hoping that Facebook Connect will become <a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/facebook_wants_to_be_your_one_true_loginpage2.php">the web’s universal login</a>.  (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.)<br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Steve Rubel <a href="http://www.steverubel.com/facebook-could-eat-the-web">gives a vision</a> 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: <strong>“Facebook is </strong><em><strong>becoming the web</strong></em><strong> for millions and millions of people, <b>Buy Claritin Without Prescription</b>. … Facebook is unstoppable. They aren’t just the next Google. They’re the next web.”</strong></p><br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">—</p></p>
<p><strong>Reading roundup</strong>: 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:<br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">— Here at the Lab, Martin Langeveld <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/02/earnings-season-newspapers-finish-14th-straight-revenue-losing-quarter-some-intel-from-wall-street-filings/">breaks down</a> 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).</p><br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">— Missouri j-prof Clyde Bentley <a href="http://mobile.rjiblog.org/2010/02/06/the-road-to-2013-a-timeline-for-newspapers/">lays out</a> 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.</p><br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">— The new director of BBC Global News <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/pda/2010/feb/10/bbc-news-social-media">challenged</a> the network’s reporters and editors to deepen their engagement with social media and other web tools. Meanwhile, USC j-prof Robert Hernandez <a href="http://www.ojr.org/ojr/people/webjournalist/201002/1821/">advises</a> journalism students that the most essential 21st-century journalism skills are still the basics.</p><br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">— Two interesting studies: A <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/09/science/09tier.html">Penn study</a> 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 <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/02/the-internet-golden-age-of-local-policy-debate/">hints</a> that in Portland, at least, policy-oriented journalism is thriving more in the local blogosphere than traditional media.</p><br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">— Finally, UT-Dallas j-prof <a href="http://flowtv.org/?p=4771">David Parry</a> turns some keen observations of his students’ media habits into an insightful argument that <strong>“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.”</strong></p>.</p>
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<p><strong>A gaggle of Google news items</strong>: Unlike the past several weeks with their paywall and iPad revelations, <b>next day Adipex</b>, <b>Where to buy Adipex</b>, this week wasn’t dominated by one giant future-of-media story. But there were quite a few incremental happenings that proved to be interesting, <b>order Adipex from mexican pharmacy</b>, <b>Adipex tablets</b>, and several of them involved Google. We’ll start with those, <b>rx free Adipex</b>.  <b>Adipex gel, ointment, cream, pill, spray, continuous-release, extended-release</b>, <p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">— The Google story that could prove to be the biggest over the long term actually happened last week, in the midst of our iPad euphoria: Google unveiled a beta form of <a href="http://googleblog.blogspot.com/2010/01/search-is-getting-more-social.html">Social Search</a>, <b>online buy Adipex without a prescription</b>, <b>Adipex in uk</b>, which allows you to search your “social circle” in addition to the standard results served up for you by Google’s magic algorithm. (<a href="http://www.cnn.com/2010/TECH/01/29/google.social.search/index.html">CNN</a> has some more details.) I’m a bit surprised at how little chatter this rollout is getting (then again, given the timing, probably not), but tech pioneer Dave Winer <a href="http://www.scripting.com/stories/2010/02/03/googlesTwowaySearchIsGoodF.html">loves the idea</a> — not so much for its sociality but because it “puts all social services on the same <em>open</em> playing field”; <strong>you decide how important your contacts from Twitter or Facebook are, not Google’s algorithm.</strong></p><br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">— Also late last week, several media folks got some extended time with Google execs at Davos, <b>Buy Adipex Without Prescription</b>. Guardian editor Alan Rusbridger posted his <a href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2010/jan/29/google-davos-rusbridger">summary</a>, <b>Adipex trusted pharmacy reviews</b>, <b>Order Adipex from United States pharmacy</b>, focusing largely on Google’s faceoff with China. “What Would Google Do?” author Jeff Jarvis posted his <a href="http://www.buzzmachine.com/2010/01/29/google-news-2/">summary</a>, <b>Adipex san diego</b>, <b>Buy Adipex from canada</b>, with lots of Google minutiae. (Jeff Sonderman also further <a href="http://jeffsonderman.com/?p=327033302">summarized</a> Jarvis’ summary.) Among the notable points from Jarvis: Google is “working on making news as compelling as possible” and CEO Eric Schmidt gets in a slam on the iPad in passing.</p><br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">— Another Google feature was launched this week: <a href="http://googlenewsblog.blogspot.com/2010/02/starring-stories-in-google-news.html">Starring</a> on Google News stories, <b>Adipex from international pharmacy</b>.  <b>Adipex from canadian pharmacy</b>, The stars let you highlight stories (that’s story clusters, not individual articles) to save and return to them later, <b>Adipex to buy</b>.  <b>Buy Adipex Without Prescription</b>, Two major tech blogs, <a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/google_news_starred.php">ReadWriteWeb</a> and <a href="http://www.techcrunch.com/2010/02/01/oh-my-god-google-news-is-full-of-stars/">TechCrunch</a>, gave the feature their seal of approval, with ReadWriteWeb pointing to this development as the first of many ways Google can personalize its algorithm when it comes to news. <strong>It’s an intriguing concept, though woefully lacking in functionality at this point</strong>, as TechCrunch notes: I can’t even star individual stories to highlight or organize coverage of a particular issue.  <b>Free Adipex samples</b>, I sure hope at least that feature is coming.</p><br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Also in the Google-and-news department: Google economist Hal Varian <a href="http://unitedstatesofearthbycozec.blogspot.com/2010/02/google-economist-explains-why-you-wont.html">expressed skepticism</a> about news paywalls, arguing that reading news for many is a worktime distraction, <b>sale Adipex</b>.  <b>Where can i find Adipex online</b>, And two Google folks, including Google News creator Krishna Bharat, <b>purchase Adipex online</b>, <b>Buy Adipex online with no prescription</b>, give <a href="http://www.pbs.org/mediashift/2010/02/google-news-to-publishers-lets-make-love-not-war035.html">bunches of interesting details</a> about Google News in a MediaShift interview, including some conciliatory words for publishers.</p><br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">— Meanwhile billionaire tech entrepreneur Mark Cuban <a href="http://www.adweek.com/aw/content_display/news/digital/e3i5b66cf4107653551b90385d9a4862ebf">officially jumped on</a> the Google-News-is-evil train, <b>buy Adipex online no prescription</b>, <b>Where to buy Adipex</b>, calling Google a “vampire” and urging news organizations not to index their content there. Not surprisingly, <b>saturday delivery Adipex</b>, <b>Cod online Adipex</b>, this wasn’t well-received in media-futurist circles: <a href="http://gigaom.com/2010/02/02/mark-cuban-tells-media-google-is-a-vampire/">GigaOM’s Mathew Ingram</a>, a former newspaperman himself, <b>Adipex in japan</b>, <b>Buy no prescription Adipex online</b>, said Cuban and his anti-Google comrade, Rupert Murdoch, <b>Adipex to buy online</b>, <b>Purchase Adipex</b>, ignore the growing search traffic at news sites. Several other bloggers <a href="http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20100203/1337558027.shtml">noted</a> that Cuban has <a href="http://www.techcrunch.com/2010/02/03/mark-cuban-may-hate-news-aggregators-but-he-also-wants-to-invest-in-them/">expressed a desire</a> in the past to invest in other news aggregators and <a href="http://searchengineland.com/google-vampire-mark-cuban-mahalo-35039">currently invests</a> in Mahalo, <b>Adipex over the counter</b>, <b>Buy Adipex without a prescription</b>, which does some Google News-esque “sucking” of its own.</p><br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">— Finally, after <a href="http://searchengineland.com/wheres-ap-in-google-news-33164">not carrying AP stories</a> since December, <b>real brand Adipex online</b>, <b>Ordering Adipex online</b>, Google struck some sort of <a href="http://searchengineland.com/ap-google-reach-a-deal-sort-of-34875">quasi-deal</a> that allows it to host AP content — but it’s still choosing not to do so. Search engine guru Danny Sullivan <a href="http://searchengineland.com/ap-google-reach-a-deal-sort-of-34875">wonders</a> what it might mean, given the AP and Google’s <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2009/10/what-the-associated-press-is-saying-to-google-microsoft-and-yahoo/">icy relations</a>, <b>Buy Adipex Without Prescription</b>. Oh yeah, <b>buy Adipex no prescription</b>, <b>Adipex medication</b>, and Google <a href="http://dev.chromium.org/chromium-os/user-experience/form-factors/tablet">demoed some ideas</a> of what a Chrome OS tablet — <a href="http://www.thechromesource.com/google-shows-off-its-tablet-concept/">read: iPad competitor</a> — might look like.</p><br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">—</p></p>
<p><strong>What the iPad will do (and what to do with it)</strong>: Commentary continued to trickle out this week about Apple’s <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/01/this-week-in-review-what-the-ipad-might-do-for-news-a-leaky-new-york-times-paywall-and-the-newsday-35/">newly announced</a> iPad, with much of talk shifting from the device’s particulars to its implications on technology and how news organizations should develop for it, <b>Adipex paypal</b>.  <b>Adipex prices</b>, <p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Three most essential pieces all make similar points: Former McClatchy exec <a href="http://editor.blogspot.com/2010/01/ipad-will-help-us-most-when-it.html">Howard Weaver</a> likens the iPad to the newspaper in its physical simplicity and thinks it “will enrich human beings by removing technological barriers.” In incredibly thoughtful posts, software developers <a href="http://stevenf.tumblr.com/post/359224392/i-need-to-talk-to-you-about-computers-ive-been">Steven Frank</a> and <a href="http://speirs.org/blog/2010/1/29/future-shock.html">Fraser Speirs</a> take a programming-oriented tack, <b>delivered overnight Adipex</b>, <b>Buy cheap Adipex no rx</b>, arguing that the iPad simplifies computing, bringing it home for normal (non-geek) people.</p><br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Frank compares it to an automatic transmission vs, <b>buy Adipex from mexico</b>.  <b>Buy generic Adipex</b>, the traditional manual one, and Speirs says <strong>it frees people from tedious tasks like “formatting the margins, <b>Adipex in us</b>, <b>Online buying Adipex hcl</b>, installing the printer driver, uploading the document, <b>Adipex discount</b>, <b>Buying Adipex online over the counter</b>, finishing the PowerPoint slides, running the software update or reinstalling the OS” to do the real work of living life, <b>cod online Adipex</b>.  <b>Where can i buy cheapest Adipex online</b>, </strong>In another interesting debate, interaction designer Sarah G, <b>order Adipex online overnight delivery no prescription</b>.  Mitchell <a href="http://www.sgmitch.com/blog/2010/01/apple-ipad-an-antisocial-device/">argues</a> that without multitasking or a camera (<a href="http://www.cultofmac.com/did-steve-jobs-ipad-have-an-isight-camera/28696">maybe?</a> <b>Buy Adipex Without Prescription</b>, ), the iPad is an antisocial device, and developer Edd Dumbill <a href="http://radar.oreilly.com/2010/02/the-ipad-is-real-life-social.html">counters</a> that it’s “real-life social” — made for passing around with friends and family.</p><br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Plenty of folks have ideas about what news organizations should do with the iPad: Poynter’s <a href="http://www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=131&amp;aid=177206">Bill Mitchell</a> and news designer <a href="http://joezeffdesign.com/blog/?p=145">Joe Zeff</a> both propose that newspapers and magazines could partially or totally subsidize iPads with subscriptions.  <b>Free Adipex samples</b>, Fortune’s Philip Elmer-DeWitt <a href="http://brainstormtech.blogs.fortune.cnn.com/2010/02/03/the-myth-of-the-free-apple-ipad/">says that wouldn’t work</a>, and Zeff <a href="http://joezeffdesign.com/blog/?p=353">gives a rebuttal</a>, <b>buy no prescription Adipex online</b>.  <b>Adipex pills</b>, Publish2’s Ryan Sholin <a href="http://ryansholin.com/2010/01/29/a-newsstand-for-the-tablet-that-might-work/">has an idea</a> for a newsstand app for the iPad, and Frederic Filloux at The Monday Note <a href="http://www.mondaynote.com/2010/01/31/the-ipad-media-expectations/">has a great picture</a> of what the iPad experience could look like by next year if news orgs act quickly.</p><br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">And of course, <b>purchase Adipex online no prescription</b>, <b>Purchase Adipex</b>,  <a href="http://www.ojr.org/ojr/people/robert/201001/1817/">Robert Niles</a> of The Online Journalism Review and BusinessWeek’s <a href="http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/10_07/b4166080344721.htm">Rich Jaroslovsky</a> remind us what several others said (rightly, I think) last week: The iPad is what content producers make of it.</p><br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">—</p></p>
<p><strong>Facebook as a news reader</strong>: Last Friday, <b>Adipex price, coupon</b>, <b>Saturday delivery Adipex</b>,  <a href="http://blog.facebook.com/blog.php?post=276507062130">Facebook encouraged its users</a> to make their own personalized news channel by creating a list of all the news outlets of which they’ve become a fan. The tech blog ReadWriteWeb — which has been remarkably perceptive on the implications of Facebook’s statements lately — <a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/facebook_aims_to_succeed_where_google_reader_faile.php">noted</a> that while a Facebook news feed couldn’t hold up to a news junkie’s RSS feed, <b>where can i buy Adipex online</b>, <b>Buy cheap Adipex no rx</b>, it has the potential to become a “world-changing subscription platform” for mainstream users because of its ubiquity, sociality and accessibility, <b>where to buy Adipex</b>.  <b>Order Adipex from mexican pharmacy</b>, (He makes a pretty compelling case.)<br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Then came the <a href="http://weblogs.hitwise.com/us-heather-hopkins/2010/02/facebook_largest_news_reader_1.html">numbers from Hitwise</a> to back ReadWriteWeb up: <strong>Facebook was the No. 4 source of visits to news sites last week, behind only Google, Yahoo and MSN, <b>Buy Adipex Without Prescription</b>. It also accounts for more than double the amount of news media traffic as Google News and more than 300 times that of the web’s largest RSS program, <b>where can i order Adipex without prescription</b>, <b>Adipex in usa</b>, Google Reader</strong>. ReadWriteWeb’s Marshall Kirkpatrick <a href="http://www.readwriteweb.com/archives/facebook_news.php">responded</a> with a note that most news-site traffic still comes through search, <b>delivered overnight Adipex</b>, <b>Buy generic Adipex</b>, and offered a challenge to Facebook to “encourage its giant nation of users to add subscriptions to diverse news sources to their news feeds of updates from friends and family.”</p><br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">—</p></p>
<p><strong>This week in (somewhat) depressing journalism statistics</strong>: Starting with the most cringe-inducing: Rick Edmonds of Poynter <a href="http://www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=123&amp;aid=177005">calculates</a> that newspaper classified revenue is down 70 percent in the last decade. He does see one bright spot, <b>buy Adipex from mexico</b>, <b>Adipex in japan</b>, though: Revenue from paid obituaries remains strong. Yup, people are still dying, and their families are still using the newspaper to tell people about it.  <b>Buy Adipex Without Prescription</b>, In the magazine world, <a href="http://adage.com/mediaworks/article?article_id=141873">Advertising Age found</a> that publishers are still reporting further declines in newsstand sales, though not as steep as last year.<br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">In the world of web statistics, a <a href="http://www.pewinternet.org/Reports/2010/Social-Media-and-Young-Adults.aspx?r=1">Pew study</a> found that blogging is steady among adults and significantly down among teens. In other words, “<a href="http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/02/04/BU3O1BRJDU.DTL">Blogging is for old people</a>.” Of course, social media use was way up for both teens and adults.</p><br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">—</p></p>
<p><strong>A paywall step, and some suggestions</strong>: Steven Brill’s new Journalism Online paid-content service has its first newspaper, The Intelligencer Journal-Lancaster New Era in Pennsylvania. In reporting the news, <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/03/business/media/03brill.html?ref=business&amp;pagewanted=all">The New York Times noted</a> that the folks behind both groups were trying to lower expectations for the service. The news business expert <a href="http://newsosaur.blogspot.com/2010/02/why-many-newspaper-pay-sites-may-fail.html">Alan Mutter</a> didn’t interpret the news well, concluding that “newspapers lost their last chance to hang together when it became clear yesterday that the wheels seemingly have come off Journalism Online.”<br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">In a <a href="http://500hats.typepad.com/500blogs/2010/02/subscriptions-are-the-new-black.html">comically profane post</a>, Silicon Valley veteran Dave McClure makes the strangely persuasive argument that <strong>the fundamental business model of the web is about to switch from cost-per-click ads to subscriptions and transactions, and that because people have trouble remembering passwords, they’ll login and pay through Gmail, iTunes or Facebook.</strong> (<a href="http://gigaom.com/2010/02/01/subtract-the-swearing-and-dave-mcclure-has-a-point/">Mathew Ingram</a> says McClure’s got a point.) Crowdfunding advocate David Cohn <a href="http://www.digidave.org/2010/01/micro-payments-vs-crowd-funding.html">proposes a crowdfunded twist</a> on micropayments at news sites.</p><br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">—</p></p>
<p><strong>Reading roundup</strong>: Two interesting discussions, and then three quick thought-provoking pieces. First, here at the Lab, future Minnesota j-prof Seth Lewis <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/02/what-is-journalism-school-for-a-call-for-input/">asks for input</a> about what the journalism school of the future should look like, adding that he believes its core value should be adaptability.  Citizen journalism pioneer<a href="http://mediactive.com/2010/02/02/the-future-of-journalism-education/">Dan Gillmor</a> gave a remarkably thorough, well-thought-out picture of his ideal j-school, <b>Buy Adipex Without Prescription</b>. His piece and <a href="http://stevebuttry.wordpress.com/2009/11/24/curriculum-advice-for-journalism-schools/">Steve Buttry’s proposal</a> in November are must-reads if you’re thinking about media education or involved in j-school.<br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Second, the <a href="http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/01/this-week-in-review-what-the-ipad-might-do-for-news-a-leaky-new-york-times-paywall-and-the-newsday-35/">discussion about objectivity</a> in journalism continues to smolder several weeks after it was triggered by journalists’ behavior in Haiti. This week, two broadsides against objectivity — one by Publish2’s Paul Korr calling it <a href="http://korrvalues.com/2010/01/30/objectivity-isnt-truthful-its-pathological/">pathological</a>, and another by former foreign correspondent Chris Hedges saying it “<a href="http://www.commondreams.org/view/2010/02/01-8">killed the news</a>.” Both arguments are certainly strident ones, but thoughtful and worth considering.</p><br />
<p style="margin-top: 0px; margin-right: 0px; margin-bottom: 0.75em; margin-left: 0px; padding: 0px;">Finally, two interesting concepts: At the Huffington Post, MTV’s Maya Baratz <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/maya-baratz/in-the-app-economy-newspa_b_436929.html">calls for newspapers to think of themselves as apps</a>, commanding them to <strong>“Be fruitful and multiply. Elsewhere.”</strong> And at the National Sports Journalism Center, former Wall Street Journal journalist Jason Fry has <a href="http://sportsjournalism.org/sports-media-news/how-writing-for-the-web-is-different-and-how-it-isn%E2%80%99t/">a sharp piece on long-form journalism</a>, including a dirty little secret (“most of it doesn’t work in any medium”) and giving some tips to make it work anyway.</p>.</p>
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