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Posts Tagged ‘trust

[This review was originally posted on Sept. 30, 2011, at the Nieman Journalism Lab.]

A heavyweight enters the tablet ring: Amazon became the latest company to jump into the tablet market this week, unveiling the Kindle Fire, a $199 tablet that will run on Google’s Android system. It’s a 7″ touch-screen tablet that’s essentially a knockoff of the [...]

04 Oct, 2010

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AOL snaps up TechCrunch: The Internet giant of the '90s, buy Lithium online without a prescription, Lithium to buy online, AOL, has been aggressively trying to remake itself as a media company for the 2010s, Lithium prices, Online buy Lithium without a prescription, and it made one of its biggest moves this week when it bought the influential tech blog TechCrunch. The deal was first reported by GigaOM and announced on stage Tuesday at TechCrunch's Disrupt conference, buy no prescription Lithium online. Lithium discount, AOL also scooped up the web video company 5Min and Thing Labs, maker of the social media reader Brizzly on the same day, Lithium buy, Buy cheap Lithium no rx, though it couldn't snatch the popular All Things Digital blogging crew away from The Wall Street Journal.

Given how central TechCrunch's founder, where can i buy Lithium online, Where to buy Lithium, Michael Arrington, is to the blog's success, Lithium gel, ointment, cream, pill, spray, continuous-release, extended-release, Lithium in japan, the first questions were twofold: Will Arrington be able to continue exercising his iconoclastic editorial voice with AOL, and can the blog remain strong if he leaves, buy Lithium online with no prescription. Salon's Dan Gillmor was skeptical about the latter, and Fast Company and The Atlantic gave reason for similar doubts about the former, with a list of Arrington's past criticism of AOL and statements by the founder of Engadget, another blog purchased by AOL, that too many layers of management made the company difficult to work at, Buy Lithium Without Prescription. Next day Lithium, (He said things have changed at AOL since then.) For his part, Arrington gave assurances to tech blogger Robert Scoble and TechCrunch's readers that he'll have complete editorial independence and has agreed to stay on for at least three years, Lithium tablets. Cod online Lithium, The bigger media issue, of course, free Lithium samples, Lithium in canada, is that this purchase signals AOL's deepening transformation into a full-on web media company. As a marketing exec told the New York Post's Keith Kelly, Lithium prices, Over the counter Lithium, "Nobody gives AOL enough credit for the massive transformation that the brand has undertaken." AOL CEO Tim Armstrong explained the rationale behind the deal to Advertising Age and Bloomberg: TechCrunch's insider, consumer audience can garner premium ad rates, Lithium for sale, Lithium overseas, and the TechCrunch brand can give AOL some cred it couldn't necessarily get on its own. He also told GigaOM's Om Malik that he wants to begin developing platforms in communication, buy Lithium online no prescription, Buy Lithium without prescription, content and advertising for other companies to build on, though he wouldn't go into details, sale Lithium.

The Wall Street Journal threw a little bit of cold water on the AOL hype Buy Lithium Without Prescription, , noting that more than 40 percent of the company's revenue still comes from dial-up Internet service and related subscriptions. Lithium in australia, Advertisers haven't totally bought into the change yet either, the Journal said, buy Lithium online without a prescription. Where can i find Lithium online, AOL might have come a long way, but it still has a long way to go, Lithium from canadian pharmacy, Where can i buy cheapest Lithium online, too.

Can social media produce real social change?: In a piece in this week's New Yorker, buy Lithium no prescription, Lithium paypal, cultural critic Malcolm Gladwell challenged the idea that social media is an effective tool of social change and revolution, comparing it with the civil rights movement and other pre-social media large-scale social reform efforts, ordering Lithium online. Lithium buy, Gladwell argued that social media is built on weak social ties, which are good for encountering new information and amassing followers of a cause, Lithium from international pharmacy, Buy Lithium online without prescription, but bad at inspiring collective action. "The evangelists of social media don’t understand this distinction; they seem to believe that a Facebook friend is the same as a real friend and that signing up for a donor registry in Silicon Valley today is activism in the same sense as sitting at a segregated lunch counter in Greensboro in 1960," Gladwell wrote, Buy Lithium Without Prescription.

Gladwell expounded helpfully on his points in a chat on the New Yorker website, online buy Lithium without a prescription, Buy Lithium online cod, in which he said, among other things, delivered overnight Lithium, Buy Lithium from mexico, that he holds up the 2008 Obama presidential campaign as the "gold standard" for social media-fueled civic engagement. His piece generated some thoughtful disagreement: The Atlantic's Alexis Madrigal said he liked the article overall but took issue with Gladwell's assertion that online networks don't have leadership or organization, Lithium medication. Purchase Lithium online, Others weren't quite so complimentary: In a video conversation, politics professor Henry Farrell and the Cato Institute's Julian Sanchez agreed that social media's weak ties could make it easier to form the strong social ties that lead to significant action, Lithium in usa. Lithium discount, A quasi-anonymous Economist correspondent made a similar arguments to both those points, saying that social media strengthens all social ties, buy cheap Lithium no rx, Lithium price, coupon, and that networks' bottom-up nature make them particularly subversive. Jeff Sonderman made similar points as well Buy Lithium Without Prescription, and pointed out that online and offline social networks tend to overlap, so they can't be treated as discrete entities.

There were plenty of other avenues (thoughtful and somewhat less so) down which critics took this debate — see this New York Times feature for six of them — but the most cogent points may have come from Expert Labs director Anil Dash, Lithium to buy online, Buy Lithium without a prescription, who argued that Gladwell is limited by his outmoded idea that the only type of revolutions that produce change are those that come in the form of chanting, sign-wielding masses. "There are revolutions, buy no prescription Lithium online, Fast shipping Lithium, actual political and legal revolutions, that are being led online, buy generic Lithium, Lithium in us, " Dash wrote. "They're just happening in new ways, purchase Lithium, Saturday delivery Lithium, and taking subtle forms unrecognizable to those who still want a revolution to look like they did in 1965."

Helping hyperlocal news thrive: Many of the U.S.' hyperlocal-news pioneers gathered in Chicago late last week for the Block By Block Community News Summit hosted by the Knight Digital Media Center's Michele McLellan and NYU j-prof Jay Rosen. A variety of ideas, order Lithium no prescription, Lithium in uk, tips, anecdotes flew back and forth at the event, order Lithium online c.o.d, Where can i buy Lithium online, which was ably summarized by the Lab's Megan Garber as well as Lauren Kirchner of The Columbia Journalism Review and Polly Kreisman of the local-news blog Lost Remote. You can also check out videos of several of the sessions at the Reynolds Journalism Institute, Lithium in india.

Garber listed several of the main themes of the gathering: Developing an intimate connection with a community (something of a throwback role for the news media, Garber said), building advertising and branding, and finding ways to share ideas with each other, Buy Lithium Without Prescription. Buy cheap Lithium, Kirchner noted the common strain among the participants' description of their own situations: "I’ve figured out how to do this, but I don’t know how to make it last." She also noted the general tension in the room caused by the presence of representatives from AOL and Yahoo, Lithium pills, Lithium san diego, two media companies with large-scale hyperlocal news aspirations. (Elsewhere this week, rx free Lithium, Lithium in mexico, AOL’s hyperlocal Patch initiative was called the WalMart of news and a potential steamroller of hyperlocal startups, though The Batavian’s Howard Owens gave some tips on beating Patch in your own neighborhood.) Afterward, McLellan took stock of what hyperlocal journalists need next. Afterward, McLellan took stock of what hyperlocal journalists need next.

That wasn't the only hyperlocal news resource to emerge this week. J-Lab released a report detailing what's worked and what hasn't in the the five years it's been funding community-news startups. One major conclusion in the report is that  Buy Lithium Without Prescription, hyperlocal news sites didn't replace the journalism of traditional news sources; they added something that hadn't been there before. (Some other key takeaways: Engagement, not just content; sweat equity is big; and the business model isn't there yet.) At Lost Remote, Cory Bergman of Seattle's Next Door Media offered an endorsement of the report, adding that for his startup, "the biggest critical success factor for a neighborhood news site is a passionate editor." And at PBS Idea Lab, Martin Moore made the case for a bottom-up structure in local news sites.

Media trust hits a new low: Gallup released its annual poll on Americans' trust in the news media, and in what's become a fairly regular occurrence, that trust is at an all-time low. MinnPost's David Brauer tried to square that finding with Pew's finding two weeks ago that people are spending more time with the news. (My guess: Gallup's survey measures feelings about the traditional news media, while Pew's finding of increased news consumption is attributable largely to new media sources.)

The Atlantic's Derek Thompson asked why trust is so low, and came up with an interesting hypothesis: The news media is telling us not to trust the news media. Citing Bill O'Reilly, Glenn Beck and Jon Stewart as examples, he concludes, "to consume opinion journalism ... is to consume a product that exists to tell you that the product is inherently rotten." As if on cue, the Los Angeles Times' Andrew Malcolm rattled off a sarcastic litany of things the media has done to confirm people's belief that it's biased, Buy Lithium Without Prescription.

Reading roundup: Before we get the miscellany, there were a few smaller news developments that I want to highlight this week:

— The Boston Globe announced that it's planning on splitting its websites into free and paid versions late next year. (The Globe is owned by The New York Times Co., and The Times is also planning to charge for its website next year.) Media analyst Ken Doctor wrote a smart analysis on the Globe's strategy, calling it a plan to retain its print readers in the short run and convert them to (paid) tablet reading in the long run. The alt-weekly Boston Phoenix, meanwhile, didn't waste time in writing Boston.com's obituary.

— Mayhill Fowler, who gave The Huffington Post one of its biggest-ever scoops in 2008 as a reporter for the Off the Bus citizen-journalism project, wrote a kiss-off post on her personal blog announcing she was leaving the site, essentially, because she was tired of writing for nothing. The Post fired back Buy Lithium Without Prescription, , and Politico's Ben Smith used the incident to wonder if the opinion-oriented blogosphere is moving toward news judgment as the mainstream media makes the opposite transition.

— After Forbes bought his freelance blogging network True/Slant, Lewis D'Vorkin is planning on selling blog space to advertisers alongside the company's news blogs, Advertising Age reported. Reuters' Felix Salmon predicted the plan would spur a uprising along the lines of ScienceBlogs' PepsiGate this summer.

Now the three stray pieces you need to take a look at:

— The Awl's Nick Douglas wrote a great post explaining why online forums are so underrated as online culture-drivers, and why Reddit is becoming more important within that subculture.

— Stanford scholar Geoff McGhee produced a fantastic set of videos on data journalism. Regardless of whether you're familiar with data journalism, this is a must-see, Buy Lithium Without Prescription.

— And possibly the most essential piece of the week: Jonathan Stray's case for designing journalism from the user's perspective. "The news experience needs to become intensely personal," Stray wrote. "It must be easy for users to find and follow exactly their interests, no matter how arcane. Journalists need to get proficient at finding and engaging the audience for each story." A quote doesn't do it justice; go read the whole thing.

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14 Sep, 2010

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Cuts and big changes for two papers: In the past week, two American newspapers have announced major reorganizations that, Kamagra Oral Jelly discount, Free Kamagra Oral Jelly samples, depending on who you read, were either cold corporate downsizing or fresh attempts at journalism innovation, saturday delivery Kamagra Oral Jelly. Where can i find Kamagra Oral Jelly online, First, late last week, online buy Kamagra Oral Jelly without a prescription, Where can i buy Kamagra Oral Jelly online,  Gannett's USA Today announced that it would undergo the most sweeping change in its 28-year history, transforming "into a multi-media company" as opposed to a newspaper and laying off 130 of its 1, Kamagra Oral Jelly to buy, Fast shipping Kamagra Oral Jelly, 500 employees in the process. The Associated Press and paidContent have pretty good explanations of what the changes entail, where to buy Kamagra Oral Jelly, Real brand Kamagra Oral Jelly online, and thanks to the feisty Gannett Blog, we have the slide presentation Gannett execs made to USA Today's staff, Kamagra Oral Jelly buy. Order Kamagra Oral Jelly from mexican pharmacy, 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, Kamagra Oral Jelly medication, Kamagra Oral Jelly for sale, 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, Buy Kamagra Oral Jelly Without Prescription.

Gannett Blog's Jim Hopkins, buy Kamagra Oral Jelly online without prescription, Cod online Kamagra Oral Jelly, a longtime critic of the company, wasn't thrilled about this move either, Kamagra Oral Jelly in australia, Where to buy Kamagra Oral Jelly, 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, Kamagra Oral Jelly over the counter. Where can i buy cheapest Kamagra Oral Jelly online, He did say a few days later, though, Kamagra Oral Jelly pills, Online buying Kamagra Oral Jelly hcl, that Gannett's plans to flatten the "silos" of the News, Sports, sale Kamagra Oral Jelly, Kamagra Oral Jelly san diego, Money and Life sections to encourage more collaboration among staffers are long overdue.

News media analyst Ken Doctor was much more charitable, Kamagra Oral Jelly prescriptions, Order Kamagra Oral Jelly online overnight delivery no prescription, seeing in USA Today's overhaul echoes of the new "digital first" mentalities at the Journal Register Co. and TBD. The best way to see this, Kamagra Oral Jelly price, coupon, Rx free Kamagra Oral Jelly, Doctor said, is to "mark another day in which a publisher is acting on the plain truths of the marketplace and of the audiences, buy Kamagra Oral Jelly no prescription, Kamagra Oral Jelly tablets, and trying to reinvent itself."Newspaper Death Watch's Paul Gillin called USA Today's transformation 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 Mario Garcia Buy Kamagra Oral Jelly Without Prescription, said USA Today's audience-driven approach is the key to survival in a multimedia environment.

The other newspaper to announce an overhaul was the Deseret News of Salt Lake City, Kamagra Oral Jelly in usa, Kamagra Oral Jelly prices, a for-profit paper published by the Mormon Church. The paper is laying off 43 percent of its staff, ordering Kamagra Oral Jelly online, Purchase Kamagra Oral Jelly online no prescription, though you wouldn't know it from the News' own article on the changes. In a pair of posts, buy Kamagra Oral Jelly online cod, Where can i order Kamagra Oral Jelly without prescription, 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, Kamagra Oral Jelly pills. Order Kamagra Oral Jelly online overnight delivery no prescription, News business expert Alan Mutter examined the prospects for a slashed, print-and-broadcast newsroom and came out less optimistic, order Kamagra Oral Jelly from mexican pharmacy.

Trust and a failed Twitter stunt: Twitter devotees are used to seeing untrue rumors and scoops occasionally get reported there (as Jeff Goldblum can attest), 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, Buy Kamagra Oral Jelly Without Prescription. Buy cheap Kamagra Oral Jelly no rx, 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 decided to start a false rumor about the length of an NFL quarterback's suspension to make a point about the unreliability of reporting on Twitter, Kamagra Oral Jelly from international pharmacy. Delivered overnight Kamagra Oral Jelly, The stunt bombed; Wise admitted the hoax an hour later and was suspended for a month by the Post the next day. Such an ill-advised prank isn't really news in itself, where can i buy cheapest Kamagra Oral Jelly online, Kamagra Oral Jelly discount, 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, where can i buy Kamagra Oral Jelly online. Buy Kamagra Oral Jelly Without Prescription, Even after the episode, Wise maintained that it showed that nobody checks facts or sourcing on breaking stories on Twitter. Sale Kamagra Oral Jelly, Quite a few observers disagreed for a variety of reasons. Barry Petchesky of Gawker's sports blog Deadspin said the whole incident actually disproved Wise's thesis: The false story didn't gain much traction, online buying Kamagra Oral Jelly hcl, Ordering Kamagra Oral Jelly online, 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, Kamagra Oral Jelly medication. Online buy Kamagra Oral Jelly without a prescription, But the primary objection was that, as Gawker's Hamilton Nolan, buy generic Kamagra Oral Jelly, Kamagra Oral Jelly gel, ointment, cream, pill, spray, continuous-release, extended-release,  Slate's Tom Scocca and several others all argued, to the extent that Wise was trusted, Kamagra Oral Jelly in canada, Cod online Kamagra Oral Jelly, 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. As TBD's Steve Buttry pointed out, buy Kamagra Oral Jelly without prescription, Kamagra Oral Jelly paypal, 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 put the point well: Wise falsely "assumed that there weren't levels of authenticity to Twitter, which, real brand Kamagra Oral Jelly online, Kamagra Oral Jelly tablets, just like any other social construct on Earth, features some people who are reputable concerning whatever and others who aren't."

Rupert's paywall runs into obstacles: Two months after the online paywall went up at Rupert Murdoch's Times of London, Kamagra Oral Jelly craiglist, Kamagra Oral Jelly in india, The Independent (a competitor of The Times) reported this week that with a vastly reduced audience to sell to, advertisers are fleeing the site, purchase Kamagra Oral Jelly. 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, Buy Kamagra Oral Jelly Without Prescription. Buy no prescription Kamagra Oral Jelly online, Stateside, too, Kamagra Oral Jelly to buy, Lost Remote's Steve Safran saw the news as "mounting evidence that putting up a paywall is bad for business."

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 ran some possible numbers 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.

On the other hand, a new study reported by paidContent estimated that online subscribers to The Times and Murdoch's Wall Street Journal are worth only a quarter of their print counterparts. Buy Kamagra Oral Jelly Without Prescription, 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 detailed more of the research firm's report — a rather depressing one for newspaper execs.

Google and the AP play nice: 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 aone-paragraph post, and on the AP's side through a much more extensive article 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 criticized news aggregators for misappropriating content, and the AP's material briefly stopped appearing on Google News late last year.

The Lab's Megan Garber noted 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 provided plenty of background, surmising that AP has learned its lesson that Google News can live on just fine without them, Buy Kamagra Oral Jelly Without Prescription.

Reading roundup: This week was an especially rich one for all sorts of web-journalism punditry. Here's a sampling:

— The American Journalism Review's Barb Palser tried to throw some cold water 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 frustrated response by Michele McLellan.) And the Online Journalism Review's Robert Niles added his skepticism to the discussion surrounding Patch and large-scale hyperlocal news.

— 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 interview with The Economist Buy Kamagra Oral Jelly Without Prescription, on the American press, a lecture at a French j-school about audience with tips for new students; and a video clip from the Journal Register Co.'s ideaLab on news production and innovation.

— We spent some time this summer talking about the merits (and drawbacks) of links, so consider this a worthy addendum: Scott Rosenberg, who recently chronicled the history of blogging, issued a three-part defense of the link this week. A great examination of one of the fundamental features of the web.

— Finally, two cool reads, one practical and the other theoretical. The Atlantic's Alexis Madrigal listed five lessons from the publication of Longshot, the hyperspeed-produced magazine formerly known as 48HRS, and here at the Lab, Cornell scholar Joshua Braun talked about the way TV news organizations maintain the "stage management" of broadcast in their online efforts. "They continue to control what remains backstage and what goes front-stage," he wrote, giving comment moderation as an example. "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.".

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12 Mar, 2010

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The Times, plagiarism and the link: A few weeks ago, the resignations of two journalists from The Daily Beast and The New York Times accused of plagiarism had us talking about how the culture of the web affects that age-old journalistic sin. That discussion was revived this week by the Times' public editor, Mazindol in canada, Fast shipping Mazindol, Clark Hoyt, whose postmortem on the Zachery Kouwe scandal appeared Sunday, where can i find Mazindol online. Rx free Mazindol, Hoyt concluded that the Times "owes readers a full accounting" of how Kouwe's plagiarism occurred, and he also called out DealBook, order Mazindol online overnight delivery no prescription, Buying Mazindol online over the counter,  the Times' business blog for which Kouwe wrote, questioning its hyper-competitive nature and saying it needs more oversight, where can i buy cheapest Mazindol online. Mazindol buy, (In an accompanying blog post, Hoyt also said the Times needs to look closer at implementing plagiarism prevention software.)

Reuters' Felix Salmon challenged Hoyt's assertion, buy Mazindol without prescription, Buy cheap Mazindol, saying that the Times' problem was not that its ethics were too steeped in the ethos of the blogosphere, but that they aren't bloggy enough, buy Mazindol no prescription. Buy Mazindol online no prescription, Channeling CUNY prof Jeff Jarvis' catchphrase "Do what you do best and link to the rest," Salmon chastised Kouwe and other Times bloggers for rewriting stories that other online news organizations beat them to, Mazindol gel, ointment, cream, pill, spray, continuous-release, extended-release, Buy Mazindol online with no prescription, rather than simply linking to them. "The problem, here, is that the bloggers at places like the NYT and the WSJ are print reporters, and aren’t really bloggers at heart," Salmon wrote, Buy Mazindol Without Prescription.

Michael Roston made a similar argument at True/Slant the first time this came up, Mazindol medication, Sale Mazindol, and ex-newspaperman Mathew Ingram strode to Salmon's defense this time with an eloquent defense of the link. It's not just a practice for geeky insiders, Mazindol craiglist, Mazindol in usa, he argues; it's "a fundamental aspect of writing for the web." (Also at True/Slant, Paul Smalera made a similar Jarvis-esque argument.) In a lengthy Twitter exchange with Salmon, next day Mazindol, Mazindol in uk, Times editor Patrick LaForge countered that the Times does link more than most newspapers, and Kouwe was an exception, where can i find Mazindol online. Mazindol to buy, Jason Fry, a former blogger for the Wall Street Journal, Mazindol craiglist, Free Mazindol samples,  agreed with Ingram and Smalera, but theorizes that the Times' linking problem is not so much a refusal to play by the web's rules as "an unthinking perpetuation of print values that are past their sell-by date." Those values, buy Mazindol no prescription, Purchase Mazindol online, he says, are scoops, Mazindol to buy online, Buy no prescription Mazindol online, which, as he argued further in a more sports-centric column, buy Mazindol without a prescription, Order Mazindol no prescription, readers on the web just don't care about as much as they used to.

Location prepares for liftoff: The massive music/tech gathering South By Southwest (or, Mazindol prescriptions, Mazindol prices, in webspeak, SXSW) starts today in Austin, real brand Mazindol online, Mazindol in canada, Texas, so I'm sure you'll see a lot of ideas making their way from Austin to next week's review, Mazindol over the counter. If early predictions Buy Mazindol Without Prescription, are any indication, one of the ideas we'll be talking about is geolocation — services like Foursquare and Gowalla that use your mobile device to give and broadcast location-specific information to and about you. Buy generic Mazindol, In anticipation of this geolocation hype, CNET has given us a pre-SXSW primer on location-based services, rx free Mazindol. Order Mazindol online c.o.d, Facebook jump-started the location buzz by apparently leaking word to The New York Times that it's going to unveil a new location-based feature next month. Silicon Alley Insider does a quick pro-and-con rundown of the major location platforms, Mazindol from canadian pharmacy, Ordering Mazindol online, and ReadWriteWeb wonders whether Facebook's typically privacy-guarding users will go for this.

The major implication of this development for news organizations, Mazindol overseas, Mazindol price, coupon, I think, is the fact that Facebook's jump onto the location train is going to send it hurtling forward far, buy Mazindol from mexico, Where can i buy cheapest Mazindol online, far faster than it's been going. Within as little as a year, location could go from the domain of early-adopting smartphone addicts to being a mainstream staple of social media, where to buy Mazindol, Buy cheap Mazindol, similar to the boom that Facebook itself saw once it was opened beyond college campuses. That means news organizations have to be there, too, developing location-based methods of delivering news and information. We've known for a while that this was coming; now we know it's close, Buy Mazindol Without Prescription.

The future of context: South By Southwest also includes bunches of fascinating tech/media/journalism panels, Mazindol san diego, Mazindol in japan, and one of them that's given us a sneak preview is Monday's panel called "The Future of Context." Two of the panelists, former web reporter and editor Matt Thompson and NYU professor Jay Rosen, Mazindol in uk, Mazindol gel, ointment, cream, pill, spray, continuous-release, extended-release, have published versions of their opening statements online, and both pieces are great food for thought, Mazindol buy. Online buy Mazindol without a prescription, Thompson's is a must-read: He describes the difference between day-to-day headline- and development-oriented information about news stories that he calls "episodic" and the "systemic knowledge" that forms our fundamental framework for understanding an issue. Thompson notes how broken the traditional news system's way of intertwining those two forms of knowledge are, Mazindol medication, Order Mazindol from United States pharmacy, and he asks us how we can do it better online.

Rosen's post is in less of a finished format, buy Mazindol online no prescription, Mazindol paypal, but it has a number of interesting thoughts, including a quick rundown of reasons that newsrooms don't do explanatory journalism better, delivered overnight Mazindol. Cluetrain Manifesto co-author Doc Searls Buy Mazindol Without Prescription, ties together both Rosen's and Thompson's thoughts and talks a bit more about the centrality of stories in pulling all that information together. Mazindol in india, —

Tech execs' advice for newspapers: Traditional news organizations got a couple of pieces of advice this week from two relatively big-time folks in the tech world. First, Mazindol in us, Fast shipping Mazindol, Netscape co-founder Marc Andreessen gave an interview with TechCrunch's Erick Schonfeld in which he told newspaper execs to "burn the boats" and commit wholeheartedly to the web, rather than finding way to prop up modified print models, Mazindol from international pharmacy. Buy Mazindol online with no prescription, He used the iPad as a litmus test for this philosophy, noting that "All the new [web] companies are not spending a nanosecond on the iPad or thinking of ways to charge for content, Mazindol tablets. Mazindol pills, The older companies, that is all they are thinking about."

Not everyone agreed: Newspaper Death Watch's Paul Gillin said publishers' current strategy, next day Mazindol, which includes keeping the print model around, is an intelligent one: They're milking the print-based profits they have while trying to manage their business down to a level where they can transfer it over to a web-based model. News business expert Alan Mutter offered a more pointed counterargument:"It doesn’t take a certifiable Silicon Valley genius to see that no business can walk away from some 90% of its revenue base without imploding."

Second, Google chief economist Hal Varian spoke at a Federal Trade Commission hearing about the economics of newspapers, advising newspapers that rather than charging for online content, they should be experimenting like crazy, Buy Mazindol Without Prescription. (Varian's summary and audio are at Google's Public Policy Blog, and the full text, slides and Martin Langeveld's summary are here at the Lab. Sync 'em up and you can pretty much recreate the presentation yourself.) After briefly outlining the status of newspaper circulation and its print and online advertising, Varian also suggests that newspapers make better use of the demographic information they have of their online readers. Over at GigaOM, Mathew Ingram seconds Varian's comments on engagement, imploring newspapers to actually use the interactive tools that they already have at their sites.

Reading roundup: We'll start with our now-weekly summary of iPad stuff: Apple announced last week that you can preorder iPads as of today, and they'll be released April 3. That could be only the beginning — an exec with the semiconductor IP company ARM told ComputerWorld we could see 50 similar tablet devices out this year. Multimedia journalist Mark Luckie Buy Mazindol Without Prescription, urged media outlets to develop iPad apps, and Mac and iPhone developer Matt Gemmell delved into the finer points of iPad app design. (It's not "like an iPhone, only bigger," he says.)

I have two long, thought-provoking pieces on journalism, both courtesy of the Columbia Journalism Review. First, Megan Garber has a sharp essay on the public's growing fixation on authorship that's led to so much mistrust in journalism — and how journalists helped bring that fixation on. It's a long, deep-thinking piece, but it's well worth reading all the way through Garber's cogent argument. Her concluding suggestions for news orgs regarding authority and identity are particularly interesting, with nuggets like "Transparency may be the new objectivity; but we need to shift our definition of 'transparency': from 'the revelation of potential biases,' and toward 'the revelation of the journalistic process.'"

Second, CJR has the text of Illinois professor Robert McChesney's speech this week to the FTC, in which he makes the case for a government subsidy of news organizations. McChesney and The Nation's John Nichols have made this case in several places with a new book, "The Death and Life of American Journalism," on the shelves, but it's helpful to have a comprehensive version of it in one spot online.

Finally, The Online Journalism Review's Robert Niles has a simple tip for newspaper publishers looking to stave off their organizations' decline: Learn to understand technology from the consumer's perspective. That means, well, consuming technology. Niles provides a to-do list you can hand to your bosses to help get them started.

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