Mark Luckie of the blog 10000 Words pointed to this HowStuffWorks primer. (seen first on Twitter)
Augmented reality adds graphics, sounds, haptic feedback and smell to the natural world as it exists. ... more »
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Friday, November 13
by
billdoskoch
on Fri 13 Nov 2009 12:29 AM EST
Mark Luckie of the blog 10000 Words pointed to this HowStuffWorks primer. (seen first on Twitter)
by
billdoskoch
on Fri 13 Nov 2009 12:14 AM EST
Ruth Teichrob -- formerly of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, which shut down in March -- surveyed her former newsroom colleagues to see how they are doing. Seventy-one of 140 responded. The results are sobering. more »Thursday, November 12
by
billdoskoch
on Thu 12 Nov 2009 01:40 AM EST
Lindsey Hoshaw, a young journo, travels out to a Pacific Ocean garbage patch. Blogs about it over a period of weeks. Her travel is funded by Spot.us, which crowdsources funding for worthy journalistic ventures. Spot.us does a deal with the New York Times to have a news story published. Approximate length - 900 words. Critic Megan Garber, writing at CJR.org, pronounces the NYT story to be not so good: more »Sunday, November 8
by
billdoskoch
on Sun 08 Nov 2009 11:58 PM EST
The kettle started boiling when Paul Carr, writing at TechCrunch on Nov. 7, wrote a provocative post entitled After Fort Hood, another example of how ‘citizen journalists’ can’t handle the truth. A sample:
Citizen journalism and social media defenders rode to the rescue. more »
by
billdoskoch
on Sun 08 Nov 2009 10:59 PM EST
This could well be the future of media. A correspondent emailed me the link to this Wired story: "The Answer Factory: Demand Media and the Fast, Disposable, and Profitable as Hell Media Model." more »
by
billdoskoch
on Sun 08 Nov 2009 10:17 PM EST
Last Thursday, CBC TV's The National hosted a panel discussion on the media's coverage of the swine flu issue. It featured Dr. Allison McGeer, an infectious disease consultant at Mount Sinai Hospital in Toronto, and Dr. Richard Schabas, a former chief medical officer of health for Ontario. Here are some tweets I made, in chronological order: more »
by
billdoskoch
on Sun 08 Nov 2009 08:15 PM EST
While travelling in the Ukraine in the fall of 1989, I met up with a fellow named Tom Koppel, a journalist working for a communist newspaper in Kyiv on an exchange program. With the 20th anniversary coming of the fall of the Berlin Wall on Nov. 9, 1989, I thought I'd excerpt an article I wrote for Bulletin, then the magazine of the Canadian Association of Journalists. It was published in the Fall 1990 issue and outlines how the paper that hosted Koppel covered the Wall story: more »Saturday, November 7
by
billdoskoch
on Sat 07 Nov 2009 12:06 AM EST
John Miller, before he became a Ryerson j-prof, toiled at 1 Yonge St, home of the (once mighty?) Toronto Star. He's mortified by the paper's apparent plan to outsource its editing and page production work. more »Friday, November 6
by
billdoskoch
on Fri 06 Nov 2009 11:33 PM EST
by
billdoskoch
on Fri 06 Nov 2009 08:56 AM EST
Jayson Blair, whose fabrications triggered the worst ethics crisis in the history of the New York Times and cost two very senior editors their jobs, will be speaking later today at a journalism ethics conference. more »
by
billdoskoch
on Fri 06 Nov 2009 08:44 AM EST
James Poniewozik makes an argument out of a point that I've long believed; centrism can be a form of bias. It's about coverage of American politics, but ask yourself whether the same effect plays out in this country. more »Thursday, November 5
by
billdoskoch
on Thu 05 Nov 2009 01:05 AM EST
This isn't a new story, but this is certainly a poignant photo essay at the BBC website -- a visual record of dead British pubs, as captured by Chris Etchell (seen first on Twitter).
by
billdoskoch
on Thu 05 Nov 2009 12:09 AM EST
From a posting at the Nieman Lab blog: (seen first on Twitter)
As an aside, I posted the following on Twitter to see what the deep thinkers would say: Why shouldn't 'hyper-personalized' news be thought of as another form of filter
failure? Alas, no takers. Wednesday, November 4
by
billdoskoch
on Wed 04 Nov 2009 12:56 AM EST
Peter McNelly, who once toiled in the Corpse's trenches (and had been a CTV News consultant), finds some good things to say about the CBC News redesign. more »
by
billdoskoch
on Wed 04 Nov 2009 12:07 AM EST
How drastic? Publisher John Cruickshank is calling it the biggest restructuring in the company's history. And if some early musings are correct, copy editors could be the big losers. more » |
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