New Formats
Monday January 29, 2007
Posted by Hash | Tags: Dangers, New Formats and Old Media
Avoid any easy hype about the potential of the internet to usher in a new age of democracy, warns Jackie Ashley.
Murdoch and the better-off are mapping their monopolistic powers over to the new digital medium while the old medium’s powers to question these elites are being sidelined:
We should be nervous when politicians start boasting, as they are, that the net allows them to bypass irritatingly persistent, difficult interviewers such as John Humphrys and Jeremy Paxman. Obviously, they need to be scrutinised and cross-questioned by well-briefed interrogators, secure enough in their jobs to push the point. Democracy demands it. Putting up your own website, conducting online question-and-answer sessions, is a doddle by comparison. They allow the politician to control the terms of the exchange and never face a public challenge on questions they don’t want to answer.
- Jackie Ashley, Guardian
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Tuesday November 21, 2006
Posted by Hash | Tag: New Formats
More convergence at the BBC. Yesterday, its TV and radio departments shut up shop. And were then born again. Following Director-General Mark Thompson’s restructuring plans, the Beeb is regrouping into Vision, Audio & Music, Journalism and Future Media & Technology.
- BBC Vision launches with a promise to audiences
The BBC needs to be ready for “360 degree multi-platform content creation”, according to Thompson.
- BBC reorganises for an on-demand Creative Future
Or as one BBC radio, sorry, Audio and Music presenter put it:
You can’t say radio any more in case people are listening on a mobile phone or a toenail, or a haddock, or something.
via Ben Hoyle, London Times
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Thursday September 7, 2006
Posted by Hash | Tag: New Formats
Yes, Google’s newly launched News Archive Search is a great boon to those lacking subscriptions to super expensive public record/newspaper/academic databases - all the news going back decades that’s unclassified and fit to print - such as LexisNexis and JSTOR.
For a few dollars a shot, bloggers can now sample what journalists have become totally hooked on.
Click over to one place and search. Cut and paste from a clutch of database cuttings. Leaving no citations to indicate that your great thoughts aren’t your great thoughts alone, damn, you sound authoritative.
Due respect to old skool Google, but you won’t want to go back. It’s like coca leaves v. crack cocaine.
And you won’t talk about it. In the last month, no journalist at any British quality newspaper, not the Guardian nor the Times nor the Telegraph, has mentioned, casually, in passing, that he or she uses LexisNexis. No mention in any US newspaper either. But everyone’s doing it. Quick and easy access to vast databases of information must be one of the most significant changes to journalistic practice in recent years.
Continue reading Two Cheers For Google
(200 words read, 586 words in all, around 2:21 mins to read)
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Tuesday August 22, 2006
Posted by Hash | Tag: New Formats
Video marketeers beware. As Paris Hilton and Tony Blair both get down with the new brand-driven YouTube - yay! the Official Paris Hilton YouTube Channel as well as Tony’s Transformational Government & Leadership Challenge, angry, bored, plain delinquent consumers citizens are sharpening their keyboards:
For a long time Governments have been looking around for way to get their ‘messages’ out to the public without the bothersome annoyance of journalists asking difficult questions. They may see YouTube as the fix for this.What they may not have taken account of is the video replies or text comments that people can leave in response.
- Simon Perry, Digital-Lifestyles
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Monday June 26, 2006
Posted by Hash | Tag: New Formats
A room where bloggers blog about blogging, the Bloggercon conference, San Francisco:
The weird thing about live-blogging a conference is that you are multi-tasking on many levels. You are in a room with a laptop on your lap, typing away about what you hear and see. You might snap a digital photo of your fellow participants. But when do you stop blogging and join the discussion going on? And how do you read all the other blogs that people are writing who are sitting right next to you?
- Michael Glaser, Mediashift
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Monday April 10, 2006
Posted by Hash | Tag: New Formats
The motto of the bubble was get big fast. The rule today is get big cheap… What tickles my checkbook is the success of capital-efficient startups where the users themselves often contribute the feature road map, software and marketing.
- David Cowan, Bessemer Ventures in Forbes Magazine
[The bankrollers] don’t care about your newfound ability to publish your thoughts or your pictures. They are just glad that you are doing so. Why? Because in an information based economy, data is your primary natural source. And flow of data creates movement which can be harnessed.
Like a water-mill.
- bopuc/weblog
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