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16 Aug, 2010

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TBD takes off: One of the most anticipated new news organizations in journalism's recent history launched this week in the form of TBD, a site owned by Allbritton Communications (the folks behind Politico) covering local news in Washington, Kamagra from international pharmacy, Kamagra medication, D.C. As The Huffington Post's Jack Mirkinson wrote, buy Kamagra online no prescription, Buy Kamagra from canada, TBD is "something of a canary in the coal mine" of the future of journalism, being the protoype of a locally focused, order Kamagra online overnight delivery no prescription, Cod online Kamagra, community-driven, online-only news model whose effectiveness everyone's eager to gauge, Kamagra in us. Kamagra san diego, For the basics of the project, here are two local profiles from DCist and the more skeptical Washington Post, buy Kamagra online without a prescription, Buy Kamagra online with no prescription, a paidContent interview with Robert Allbritton, and a Poynter chat with TBD's Jim Brady and Steve Buttry, buy Kamagra without prescription. Kamagra pills, After TBD gave its media preview last Friday, quite a few people listed plenty of reasons to keep an eye on the site: Ken Doctor liked the "out of the box" nature of TBD's pro-am/social/mobile/multimedia efforts; Jeff Jarvis liked the collaborative, Kamagra paypal, Next day Kamagra, link-centric philosophy; the Lab's Laura McGann called attention to TBD's interactivity and collaboration through local blogs and social media; and Kevin Anderson was impressed by the project's commitment to profitability. Several TBD analyses focused particularly on TBD's interactive and collaborative news efforts, with Journalism LivesMashable and Poynter providing good area-by-area breakdowns, Buy Kamagra Without Prescription. Mark Potts, buying Kamagra online over the counter, Buy Kamagra without a prescription, who's starting up a similar blog-network effort, Growthspur, Kamagra to buy online, Kamagra buy,  wrote a thoughtful piece about the importance of TBD's own network of local blogs: "TBD is without doubt the biggest, most ambitious effort yet to create a new paradigm for local news coverage of a major metropolitan area, where to buy Kamagra, Kamagra tablets, " he wrote.

Poynter's Steve Myers also touched on an distinct aspect of TBD's operation — it also includes an Allbritton-owned all-news local cable channel that will be branded TBD TV, buy Kamagra online without prescription. Kamagra from canadian pharmacy, He examined how a web-TV converged newsroom operates, and Cory Bergman of Lost Remote (a local TV and hyperlocal news veteran himself) wondered if we might see more TV-local online news partnerships, buy generic Kamagra. Over the counter Kamagra, Here at the Lab, Ken Doctor took a detailed look at the economics of TBD's web-TV synergy, Kamagra price, coupon, Kamagra gel, ointment, cream, pill, spray, continuous-release, extended-release, centering on its pioneering broadcast and online advertising hybrid. Buy Kamagra Without Prescription, Meanwhile, David Rothman had some detailed advice for TBD's competitors.

The site officially launched Monday, Kamagra in canada, Purchase Kamagra online, and the initial reviews were mostly positive. Rothman and Suzanne Yada had the most detailed ones; both were impressed by the site's presentation and several of its features, though both were concerned about how much local news content the site would actually be able to produce, buy Kamagra online cod. Where can i buy Kamagra online, PaidContent's Staci Kramer liked the smooth design, too, ordering Kamagra online, Kamagra over the counter, but wanted to see more out of the site's locally personalized features. The New York Times' David Carr ("extremely functional .., Kamagra craiglist. Kamagra in uk, kind of ugly") and Mediaite's Michael Triplett ("off to a good start," despite "thin and D.C.-centric" content) also offered quicker reviews, buy cheap Kamagra. The most thoughtful review belongs to Lost Remote's Bergman, who noted that while many of the ideas are old, their implementation is new."This is the first time that a local media group — especially in the TV space — has wrapped these ideas together and aggressively launched them with an investment to back it up," he wrote, Buy Kamagra Without Prescription. Kamagra for sale,

Demand Media's profit-less pastDemand Media, the new-media lightning rod du jour, purchase Kamagra online no prescription, Online buy Kamagra without a prescription,  filed for an IPO last Friday, giving us the first detailed financial look inside the private company. Several sites took cracks at sifting through the numbers for significant bits, purchase Kamagra, Kamagra in mexico, but two pieces stood out: One, Demand Media has yet to make a profit, real brand Kamagra online, Kamagra to buy, losing $22 million this year; and two, 26 percent of its revenue comes from cost-per-click advertising deals with Yahoo, buy cheap Kamagra no rx. Sale Kamagra, That's a pretty sizable chunk of Demand Media's income, and GigaOM's Mathew Ingram examined one of the company's reported risk factors — that Google could use its own search expertise to create a search-driven content company to compete with Demand, Kamagra in usa. Where can i order Kamagra without prescription, Ingram pointed out that Google already has a patent for a process that identifies "underserved" search content. All Things Digital noted that Demand's heavy reliance on Google "could torpedo the company" if Google changes its search formula or changes its contract with Demand, buy Kamagra from mexico, Order Kamagra online c.o.d, but it also countered that every web publisher is dependent on Google. Buy Kamagra Without Prescription, Then there's the whole matter of profitability. The Wall Street Journal's Scott Austin contrasted the numbers in Demand's filing with its executives' numerous past descriptions of the company as profitable, buy no prescription Kamagra online, Fast shipping Kamagra, as a reminder that "no one outside the company can verify a start-up’s financial claims." Slate's James Ledbetter also noticed an inexplicably large and sudden drop in Quantcast traffic to Demand's sites a few weeks ago and wondered what was behind it. Meanwhile, Kamagra in japan, Saturday delivery Kamagra, the Journal also profiled Demand Media's efforts to court big-time advertisers on the web.

A proposal to carve up the open web: A week after reports emerged that Google and Verizon were near a deal that would more or less mark the end of net neutrality, order Kamagra from mexican pharmacy, Free Kamagra samples, the two companies came forward this week not with a deal, but with a policy proposal, Kamagra tablets. Buy Kamagra online without prescription, As for whether that would mark the end of net neutrality, well, purchase Kamagra, Kamagra in us, it depends on who you ask. Google and Verizon called their plan a "proposal for an open Internet," and their CEOs co-authored a Washington Post op-ed arguing that their proposal "empowers an informed consumer, ensures the robust growth of the open Internet and provides incentives to strengthen the networks that carry Internet traffic." The proposal has quite a few moving parts, but it essentially prohibits Internet service providers from discriminating against or prioritizing "lawful Internet content," while excepting wireless networks and some unspecified future services from that regulation, Buy Kamagra Without Prescription.

The tech blog Engadget broke down the proposal, Kamagra in uk, Buy Kamagra without prescription, noting that would set something close to the status quo into formal policy, rendering the U.S, buy Kamagra online without a prescription. Purchase Kamagra online no prescription, Federal Communications Commission powerless to change policy as the Internet changes. Most of the web was quite a bit harsher in its  judgment, online buy Kamagra without a prescription, calling it an open attack on net neutrality by excluding its fastest part, wireless. CNET and The New York Times put together good summaries of the backlash, but here are some of the most to-the-point examples: Free Press' Craig Aaron ("one massive loophole that sets the stage for the corporate takeover of the Internet"), the Electronic Freedom Foundation (it limits net neutrality to "lawful" content, leaving "lawful" to be defined) Siva Vaidhyanathan (it gives Verizon control of the most exciting parts of the web) Public Knowledge's John Bergmayer (it divides the Internet into several public and non-public parts) Ars Technica (its rules "will become meaningless as 4G sweeps the country") Salon's Dan Gillmor ("a Trojan Horse for a modern age") Susan Crawford (future services is "a giant, enormous, science-fiction-quality loophole") and Harvard professor Jonathan Zittrain (makes way for "an impenetrable web of contracts and fees").

Noted Google watcher Jeff Jarvis had the most colorful response, illustrating the proposal's potential danger to the open web by presenting a future scenario with two Internets, the old "Internet" with everything pre-2010 and the new "Schminternet," with everything mobile and post-2010. "Mobile is the internet," he wrote. Buy Kamagra Without Prescription, "Mobile will very soon become a meaningless word when — well, if telcos allow it, that is — we are connected everywhere all the time." Meanwhile, Wired gets credit for the most fun phrase — "carrier-humping, net neutrality surrender monkey" — in its explanation of how Google got to that point.

Reading Roundup: A few final items to send you off for the weekend:

— Mashable's Vadim Lavrusik has a smart overview of the shift toward personalized, socially driven news distribution, with a suggestion for a credibility and trust index to help sort through it all.

— Facebook has launched a media page and is pushing for more collaboration with media companies. PBS MediaShift's Mark Glaser has an informative Q&A with Justin Osofsky, head of Facebook's media partnership team.

— Google engineering intern Lyn Headley has written the first of a series of posts explaining the rationale behind his new Rapid News Awards. It's a short, thoughtful take on aggregation, accountability and transparency.

— Finally, some (possibly) positive news: Spot.Us' David Cohn takes a look at the data and notes that the wave of job cuts at America's newspapers has largely subsided. Cohn wonders if it means newspapers are bouncing back, or if they've just cut down to the bone. I fear it's more of the latter.

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16 Aug, 2010

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A newbie owner for Newsweek: This week was a big one for Newsweek: After being on the block since May, it was sold to Sidney Harman, real brand Thorazine online, Thorazine craiglist, a 92-year-old audio equipment mogul who's married to a Democratic congresswoman and owns no other media properties. The price: $1, Thorazine medication, Cod online Thorazine, plus the responsibility for Newsweek's liabilities, estimated at about $70 million, Thorazine in japan. Online buying Thorazine hcl, The magazine's editor, Jon Meacham, where can i buy Thorazine online, Delivered overnight Thorazine, is leaving with the sale, though he told Yahoo's Michael Calderone that he had decided in June to leave when Newsweek was sold, Thorazine gel, ointment, cream, pill, spray, continuous-release, extended-release, Order Thorazine online c.o.d, no matter who the new owners were. Harman's age and background and the low sale price made for quite a few biting jokes about the sale on Twitter, dutifully chronicled for us by Slate's Jack Shafer, Thorazine in india. Thorazine san diego, Harman didn't help himself out much by telling The New York Times he doesn't have a plan for Newsweek. In a pair of sharp articles, The Daily Beast painted a grim picture of what exactly Harman's getting himself into: The magazine's revenue dropped 38 percent from 2007 to 2009, and it's losing money in all of its core areas, Buy Thorazine Without Prescription. The Beast noted that with no other media properties, Thorazine to buy, Order Thorazine online overnight delivery no prescription, Harman doesn't have the synergy potential that the magazine's previous owners, The Washington Post Co., Thorazine overseas, Where to buy Thorazine, said Newsweek would need. So why was he chosen, Thorazine pills. Thorazine from international pharmacy, Apparently, he genuinely cares about the publication, buying Thorazine online over the counter, Rx free Thorazine, and he's planning the least number of layoffs. (That, Thorazine price, coupon, Saturday delivery Thorazine, and the other bidders weren't too attractive, either.) PaidContent reported that his primary goal is to bring the magazine back to stability while he sets up a succession plan, Thorazine in canada.

Everybody has ideas of what Harman should do with his newest plaything: MarketWatch's Jon Friedman wants to see Buy Thorazine Without Prescription, Newsweek drop the opinion-and-analysis approach that it's been aping from The Economist, as do several of the observers Politico talked to. Buy Thorazine from mexico, (DailyFinance's Jeff Bercovici just wants Harman to make it a little less excruciatingly dull to read.) Two other Politico sources — new media guru Jeff Jarvis and former Newsweek Tumblr wizard Mark Coatney — want to see Newsweek shift away from a print focus and figure out how to be vital on the web. Media consultant Ken Doctor proposes pushing forward on tablet editions, over the counter Thorazine, Where can i find Thorazine online, multimedia and interacting with readers online as the future of the magazine. Jarvis also has some pieces of advice for magazines in general, Thorazine prescriptions, Buy Thorazine online cod, urging to them to resist the iPad's siren song and get local, among other things, next day Thorazine. Buy no prescription Thorazine online, Poynter's Rick Edmonds has the most intriguing idea for a new Newsweek — going nonprofit. That would likely require refining its editorial mission to a narrower focus on national and international affairs, with the pop culture analysis getting cut out, Edmonds says, but he believes Harman might actually be considering a nonprofit approach, Buy Thorazine Without Prescription. Ken Doctor suggests that with Harman's statements about the relative unimportance of turning a profit from the magazine, order Thorazine from United States pharmacy, Buy Thorazine without a prescription, he's already blurring the lines between a for-profit and nonprofit organization.

Meanwhile, Thorazine discount, Thorazine for sale,  others were busy speculating about who might be the editor to lead Newsweek into its next incarnation, buy cheap Thorazine no rx. Sale Thorazine, Names thrown out included Newsweek International editor Fareed Zakaria, Newsweek.com editor Mark Miller, Thorazine to buy online, Thorazine over the counter, Slate Group editor Jacob Weisberg, and former Time editor and CNN CEO Walter Isaacson, Thorazine from canadian pharmacy, Thorazine in usa, though Isaacson has taken himself out of consideration.

WikiLeaks and the need for context: WikiLeaks continued to see fallout from its unprecedented leak of 92, where to buy Thorazine, Buy Thorazine from canada, 000 documents about the war in Afghanistan two weekends ago, with more cries for it to be shut down and its founder, Thorazine in mexico, Order Thorazine from mexican pharmacy, Julian Assange, arrested, where can i order Thorazine without prescription, Buy Thorazine online no prescription, largely because its leak revealed the names of numerous Afghan informants to the U.S. Assange expressed regret Buy Thorazine Without Prescription, for those disclosures, and WikiLeaks said it's even asking for the Pentagon's help in identifying and redacting names of informants in its next document dump, though the Pentagon said they haven't heard from WikiLeaks yet. Not that the U.S, buy generic Thorazine. Buy Thorazine no prescription, government hasn't been trying to make contact — it demanded the documents be returned(!), and agents detained a WikiLeaks researcher at customs and then tried to talk with him again at a hacking conference this week, order Thorazine no prescription. Thorazine paypal, An Australian TV station gave a fascinating inside look at Assange's life on the run, and Slate's Jack Shafer contrasted Assange's approach to leaking sensitive documents with the more government-friendly tack of traditional media outlets, buy cheap Thorazine. Thorazine prices, WikiLeaks also had some news to report on the business-model side: It will begin collecting online micropayment donations through Flattr.

The ongoing discussion around WikiLeaks this week centered on what to do with the data it released, Buy Thorazine Without Prescription. The Tyndall Report provided a thorough roundup of how TV news organizations responded to the leak, Thorazine in australia, Thorazine trusted pharmacy reviews, and several others pinned the rather ho-hum public reaction to the documents' contents on a lack of context provided by news organizations. Former Salon editor Scott Rosenberg said the leak provides a new opportunity to shed an antiquated scoop-based definition of news and bring the reality of the war home to people, ordering Thorazine online. Fast shipping Thorazine, In a smart post musing on the structure of the modern news story, the Lab's Megan Garber proposed an outlet dedicated solely to follow-up journalism, Thorazine buy, Buy Thorazine online with no prescription, arguing that one of the biggest challenges in modern journalism is giving a sense of continuity to long-running stories. "What results is a flattening: the stories of our day, buy Thorazine without prescription, Thorazine from canadian pharmacy, big and small, silly and significant, Thorazine in australia, Thorazine for sale, are leveled to the same plane, occupying the same space, Thorazine in uk, essentially, in the wobbly little IKEA bookshelf that is the modular news bundle," she wrote in a follow-up post.

Mashable also examined Buy Thorazine Without Prescription, (in nifty infographic form!) how WikiLeaks changes the whistleblower-journalist relationship, while NPR wondered whether WikiLeaks is on the source or journalist side of equation. And PBS' Idea Lab had something handy for news orgs: A guide to helping them think about how to handle large-scale document releases.

Tumblr trends upward: The social blogging service Tumblr got the New York Times profile treatment this week, as the paper focused on its growing popularity among news organizations who are trying to jump on it as the next big social media trend — a form of communication somewhere between Twitter and blogging. The article noted that several prominent media brands have Tumblr accounts, though many of them aren't doing much with theirs. Over at Mediaite, Anthony De Rosa, who runs the Tumblr account for the sports blog network SB Nation, said we can expect to see still more media outlets jump on the Tumblr bandwagon, especially because it rewards smart media companies who have a distinctive voice.

New York's Nitasha Tiku tried to douse the hype, arguing that Mark Coatney's often-mentioned Tumblr success for Newsweek "wasn't thanks to the distribution channel on Tumblr, it was his irreverent, conversational style — and that will be difficult for the fresh-faced interns that old-media publications don't pay to run their Tumblrs." And Gawker gave us a graded rundown of traditional news orgs' Tumblr accounts, Buy Thorazine Without Prescription.

Two Internet freedom scares: From The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times this week came two stories that have had many people concerned about issues of freedom and the web. First, the Journal ran a series on the alarming amount of your online data and behavior that companies track on behalf of advertisers. Cluetrain Manifesto co-author Doc Searls argued that while the long-held ideal of intensely personal advertising is getting closer to reality, "the advertising business is going to crash up against a harsh fact: 'consumers' are real people, and most real people are creeped out by this stuff." Jeff Jarvis was much less moved by the Journal's reporting, mocking it as scaremongering that tells us nothing new. Salon's Dan Gillmor fell closer to Searls' outrage than to Jarvis' nonchalance, and media consultant Judy Sims said this series is a window into a complex future for display advertising, one that media executives need to become familiar with in a hurry. Buy Thorazine Without Prescription, Second, the Times unleashed an avalanche of commentary in the tech world with a report that Google and Verizon are moving toward an agreement that would allow companies to pay to get their content to web users more quickly, which would effectively end the passionately held open-Internet principle known as net neutrality. The FCC quickly suspended its closed-door net neutrality meetings, and despite denials from Google and Verizon (which Wired picked apart), a whole lot of whither-the-Internet concernensued. I'm not going to dig too deeply into this story here (I'd rather wait until we have something concrete to opine about), but here are the best quick guides to what this might mean: J-prof Dan Kennedy, Salon's Dan Gillmor and ProPublica's Marian Wang.

Reading roundup: Just a couple of quick items this week:

— Thanks to Poynter, we got glimpses of a couple of softer paid-content options being tried out by GlobalPost and The Spokesman-Review of Spokane, Washington, that might be sprouting up soon elsewhere, too. The Lab's Megan Garber profiled one of the new companies offering that type of porous paywall, MediaPass, and All Things Digital's Peter Kafka sifted through survey results to try to divine what The New York Times' paywall might look like.

— Google's social media platform Google Wave officially died this week, a little more than a year after it was born. Tech pioneer Dave Winer looked at why it never took off and drew a few lessons, too.

— Finally, the Lab's Jonathan Stray took a look at some very cool things that The Guardian is doing with data journalism using free web-based tools. It's a great case study in a blossoming area of journalism.

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About this blog

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