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∞ — Wearables versus there-ables. What if we’ve got…
“What if we’ve got it all wrong?What if we’re not actually supposed to wear all sorts of technology on our bodies and on our clothes? What if we didn’t have to / weren’t meant to carry our technology with us as we moved around town?What if the technology was actually already in the room when we got there? Maybe that’s the kind of Internet-of-things that will be more sustainable and will win long-term.”
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Free: British Pathé Puts Over 85,000 Historical Films on YouTube – Open Culture
Video, YouTube, Commons
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“We are still waiting, though, for a third model of news publishing to emerge. A news organisation that holds institutional strengths, beliefs and resources at its core but allows the rise of the independently oriented journalist some freedom to succeed or fail is still at the drawing board stage.
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How to Make Cinemagraphs | Photojojo
A little bit Daily Prophet… how to make a photo move. It’s a bit time-consuming and involves photoshop but it’s really got me thinking about how to use it in storytelling.
Category: Journalism
This week, I’ve been reading… (weekly)
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(Re)defining multimedia journalism — Changing Journalism — Medium
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This is the key for me. Immersive means I am lost in what I am reading/watching/hearing/experiencing.
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Immersive experiences rule. Take me somewhere I have never been. Show me something I have never seen.
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New digital tools every journalist should try – Knight Foundation
I haven’t used any of these but I’ll give them a go “in digital years a lifetime for a product seems like about 21 months. “Moore’s Law” predicted chip-processing power would double about every 18 months. It more or less has for decades, and each wave of chips remakes the digital world. In digital time, that means a tool born in 2012 was born a lifetime ago. There’s nothing wrong with the classic tools; they just aren’t the latest ones. “
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“Closing Thunderdome is just part of a major north-of-$100-million cost cutting initiative that is putting the best glow on some tough financials. The reason for the sale: Despite CEO John Paton’s aggressive remaking of the company, Alden’s investments in cheap newspaper company shares (“The Demise of Lean Dean Singleton’s Departure and the Rise of Private Equity”) haven’t worked out the way private equity bets are supposed to.”
Talking about Innovation and Digital Skills in Journalism at the Society of Editors regional conference
Skill #5 Measurable journalism
This week, I’ve been reading… (weekly)
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Aron Pilhofer on data journalism, culture and going digital | Tow Center for Digital Journalism
Interestingness ” Right now, many newsrooms are stupid about the way they publish. They’re tied to a legacy model, which means that some of the most impactful journalism will be published online on Saturday afternoon, to go into print on Sunday. You could not pick a time when your audience is less engaged. It will sit on the homepage, and then sit overnight, and then on Sunday a home page editor will decide it’s been there too long or decide to freshen the page, and move it lower. I feel strongly, and now there is a growing consensus, that we should make decisions like that based upon data. Who will the audience be for a particular piece of content? Who are they? What do they read? That will lead to a very different approach to being a publishing enterprise.”
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Stories for Your Screen: annie96 is typing…
Man, I *really* love this method of delivering a suspense story. I’m looking at how other media are using Snapchat and WhatsApp for audience engagement and it’s interesting but not Quite There (in my view), but as a medium for fiction, the design of this is very clever.
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The Big Roundtable’s Social Media Experiment – 10,000 Words
Interesting, and the conclusion is that the people within networks – however small – are more useful than the framework of that network. I can see the logic in the theory; however, I’m not sure I subscribe 100% to it. “Longform startup The Big Roundtable (BRT) recently commissioned three college students to put its assumptions about social sharing to the test. The challenge? Taking one story, one month and whatever techniques they could think of (legal, of course), the three undergraduates were tasked with the challenge of racking up the most unique page views.”
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Twitter Enhances Lists: 4 Ways To Take Advantage – Forbes
No new Twitter hacks here, but 4 solid tips to get the best out of lists – I find the the ‘subscribe & steal’ one very useful
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Chartbeat CEO on native ads, viewability, and a metric standard
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Why Writers Need Metrics, Too | LinkedIn
The pros of using analytics as a journalist – I really agree with the points raised here.
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The Most Important Topics Of 2014, According To You – Upworthy Insider
Surprisingly hard news is leading the way on Upworthy’s poll – not sure if this is the equivalent of people saying they read the Guardian when the actually get all their news from the Daily Mail sidebar of shame but still interesting
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Yes, Facebook reach is decreasing, no that’s not the end of news organisations’ effectiveness on the site. Interesting content gets shared; it’s the blah stuff that we shouldn’t bother posting that won’t get reach. Maybe it’s social media natural selection… “It’s worth noting the lack in organic reach shouldn’t mean marketers should cease creating non ad-funded Facebook content altogether. Some 25 million people in the UK visited Facebook every day in December 2013, the most recently available country-specific figures. Brands need to be where their audiences are and Facebook takes up a big chunk of their audiences’ lives. As a case in point: earlier this week, EE suffered a network outage that meant many of its customers had no access to its services for a number of hours. EE’s posts about the outage were shared and commented on thousands and hundreds of times respectively, despite the fact it didn’t pay to promote them, because customers expected up-to-date information to be readily available on its Facebook page. And it’s worth mentioning that actual marketing content from brands does show up in the News Feed, but just like word of mouth in any other form, it is only the exceptional marketing that creates a buzz.”
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The disrupted TV viewing model; interesting post and some excellent insights in the comments too.
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Skegnes Standard to become officeless paper – Journalism News from HoldtheFrontPage
“Editor Stephen Stray said: “We really want to be at the heart of the community and our reporting team will now be out and about much more – getting to events and reporting on your stories.” “We are delighted to be holding regular ‘reporter surgeries’ at the Embassy and would like to thank them for allowing us space in there to meet readers.” However East Lindsey District councillor Steve O’Dare said the office’s closure would be “bad news for Skegness.” He said: “It’s understandable but I think it’s going to be detrimental to Skegness. A lot of people like to pop into the office.””
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Another JP title to become officeless paper
The Skegness Standard has become the latest Johnston Press title to embrace
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This week, I’ve been reading… (weekly)
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There are a lot of resources in this directory, from basic to complex tools, many of which are rated and assessed by users. Very handyHecta is an app for OS X which magnifies photographs without pixelation or blur.Photographers, designers, journalists — and you — can zoom in on the smallest detail with clarity and precision.The long explanation is this: “LSI or Latent Semantic Indexing is a complicated term with a simple explanation. The main concept behind Latent Semantic Indexing is to discover words and phrases that are related in the context of any document or group of documents. Search engines, Internet Marketing Professionals, and Website Designers often use LSI in their day-to-day activities.Latent Semantic Indexing is the discovery process for finding related terms and phrases. LSI is a mathematical equation that will fold words into a matrix for analysis that will draw out semantically related terms.”The short one is this: It’s pretty good for finding out what words people are searching for in a specified geographic area, i.e. a useful journalism tool.Latest in the handy podcast series from J.co.uk
This week, I’ve been reading… (weekly)
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“Most publishers give their staff massive desktop monitors to work on, using desktop software tools, and a CMS that works on a desktop. And then the majority of users view the output on a mobile. “
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“These days, BuzzFeed is rapidly expanding with $46 million in funding. Vox Media has raked in some $80 million in venture capital. Business Insider’s $12 million boost last week makes its haul about $30 million. And feel-good social curation site Upworthy has raised about $12 million since launching two years ago. 1 “Suddenly, the market for content just opened up,” said Sarah Lacy, founder of PandoDaily, which has secured about $4 million in venture capital since 2012. “It’s dramatically changed. I think a lot of it for me was Vice getting valued at $1 billion. No one had seen anything like that in the content space. And they’re trying to speak to a very specific audience that’s hard to reach in a deeply authentic way. It’s certainly not something you’re phoning in. It’s not a pre-written press release. It’s not a listicle.””
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Text streaming sounds very cool, doesn’t it? Spritz looks more than the latest shiny, it looks like it really is going to be the next very big thing.
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Live blogging is a skill. It involves getting the tone as well as content bang on – and sometimes, as with this reader’s gripe – the line between fact and comment gets blurred. The trick is to know what kind of live blog you’re doing – and be consistent.From the Guardian Readers’ Editor blog: “The latest example was on the website today. Matthew Weaver’s “news blog” … included the statement: ‘David Cameron continues to try to give the impression of being on top of the crisis…’ Now, is that fact or opinion? If you are claiming it is fact, then I am not aware of any objective standard against which one can judge whether the PM is ‘on top of the crisis’ (whatever that means) or not … As a more general point, what is the status of these news blogs? My preference would be for them to stick to the facts.” In an exchange of email correspondence the complainant also said: “I would much prefer a news blog to do what it says on the tin – to give me the news unadulterated by the ‘views’ of the reporter. I don’t mind in the least if that results in a list of updates – isn’t that what news is? Opinion isn’t fact.””
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There are some annoying ‘sign up for more followers HERE’ ads to ignore before you get to the content, but good insights when you do.
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“If you’re an average reader, I’ve got your attention for 15 seconds, so here goes: We are getting a lot wrong about the web these days. We confuse what people have clicked on for what they’ve read. We mistake sharing for reading. We race towards new trends like native advertising without fixing what was wrong with the old ones and make the same mistakes all over again. MORE Here’s An Updated Tally Of All The People Who Have Ever Died From A Marijuana Overdose Huffington Post These Disturbing Fast Food Truths Will Make You Reconsider Your Lunch Huffington Post Justin Bieber & Selena Gomez Kiss Over Breakfast, Another Baby on the Way for Christian Bale & More People Fed by Joakim Noah’s intensity, resilient Bulls take down Heat Sports Illustrated ‘True Detective’ finale: Talk about it Entertainment Weekly “
This week, I’ve been reading… (weekly)
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Neil Gaiman’s Journal: Storms and how they start
“Twitterstorms are no fun when people are making up things about you or insulting you for things you didn’t do or think or say. When scores of people from a group that you consider yourself a part of are shouting at you, it’s incredibly upsetting, no matter who you are. “
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How BitTorrent Rewrote The Rules Of The Internet | Fast Company | Business + Innovation
Fascinating, short read about how BitTorrent’s use of Micro Transport Protocol has dramatically grown its user base, and made the net a less congested place. “Under uTP, any BitTorrent transfers you have going on in the background will politely wait for your streaming to be finished before they jump in. Then, in the uncrowded hours of the late night, uTP lets your torrenting get going, soaking up all that suddenly spare bandwidth. Now that uTP is used for 80% of BitTorrent transfers, traffic no longer peaks in that 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. time slot. This is also why the monthly userbase has grown from 60 million in 2008 to 170 million today–all while the share of peak traffic continues to go down. “
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The world’s largest photo service just made its pictures free to use | The Verge
“Getty Images is dropping the watermark for the bulk of its collection, in exchange for an open-embed program that will let users drop in any image they want, as long as the service gets to append a footer at the bottom of the picture with a credit and link to the licensing page. For a small-scale WordPress blog with no photo budget, this looks an awful lot like free stock imagery. “
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Wrexham.com overturns ban to film council meetings – Journalism News from HoldtheFrontPage
“A hyperlocal news website has been successful in overturning a ban on the filming of council meetings. Wrexham.com has published what it believes to be the first ever video of a Wrexham Council meeting following several rejected requests in recent years.”
This week, I’ve been reading… (weekly)
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14 takeaways from the news:rewired digital journalism conference
Does exactly what it says on the tin.
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Crossing the language boundaries across your newsroom: journo to dev and back
An open Google Doc that considers how traditional reporters and developer reports (for Noah Veltman considers them very similar in their goals) can work together and communicate more effectively. I see huge opportunities for better cross-working with these two groups; sometimes it feels like developers occupy that previous Bad Guy space owned by IT. Better communication and empathy is the start. “the secret is not to treat developers like a service desk — what ProPublica’s Al Shaw calls “the deli counter,” where you just hand in your order. The developers are reporters, too, and you should treat them as such. Communication in particular is hard. Email is bad; tickets are slightly better but still aren’t synchronous. Using chat or direct communication is better. Having time to test things can be very contentious. There are other concerns for developers: Are you going to reuse this later? Is this an ongoing project? Will the data be updated? How is that going to work? How is this going to be maintained? What’s the game plan? What is the minimum viable product, and what can be delayed until later?”
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How To Say “This Is Crap” In Different Cultures – Erin Meyer – Harvard Business Review
How different nationalities give management feedback. Very good, and also faintly horrifying… “Managers in different parts of the world are conditioned to give feedback in drastically different ways. The Chinese manager learns never to criticize a colleague openly or in front of others, while the Dutch manager learns always to be honest and to give the message straight. Americans are trained to wrap positive messages around negative ones, while the French are trained to criticize passionately and provide positive feedback sparingly.”
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The Battle of Little Bitcoin: Native American Tribe Launches Its Own Cryptocurrency – Forbes
Really interesting read – how MazaCoin is now the national currency of the Lakota Nation. “After signing a joint venture agreement with the Oglala Sioux Tribe Office of Economic Development early in 2014, Harris immediately began mining his new currency to produce 25 million MazaCoins ahead of its launch to serve as a “national reserve” for the Lakota Nation, which can then be used in times of crisis (like the collapse of Mt. Gox) to help stabilize the currency. A number of these coins were handed out to interested businesses and individuals within the community, to encourage them to get involved in trading and speculating .”
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Slides, Links & Tutorials from NICAR14 // Ricochet by Chrys Wu
A brilliant set of how-to tutorials around data, curated from NICAR14 by Chrys Wu. Shows more than ever how even a basic grasp of coding can make you a far more skilled and effective journalist.
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Some Bot to Watch Over Me – NYTimes.com
“For a month now, I have been spying on my apartment. I have spied in the afternoon, and I have spied late at night. Since I can see most clearly into the living room, my voyeurism has been focused there. Often I see only an empty room that could use a little art on the walls. Sometimes I catch the cat sleeping on the rug. One night last week, I watched my girlfriend watch TV. “
This week, I’ve been reading… (weekly)
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Olympian Bode Miller: ‘Be Gentle With Christin Cooper’ for NBC interview | Poynter.
Never a good look when an Olympic hero cries as a result of your question. However, I don’t think she was insensitive (although the camera work was too much) “Olympic skier Bode Miller told his Twitter followers that NBC’s Christin Cooper was doing her job when she asked him questions about his brother who died last year. Miller cried and viewers jumped online to complain. (“
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BBC journalists’ interviewing techniques – YouTube
This is a fantastic interview with Peter Allen, 5Live’s wonderful Drive journalist, talking about how to interview. It includes a particularly affecting interview with the mother of murdered Lucy Blackman, and you can hear him trying to maintain a professional interviewing manner, even as her hear audibly breaks on air.








