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Links to Check Out 09/01/2011

August 31, 2011 in industry news

  • ““This is an increasingly sophisticated and hazardous media world,” said Mr. Tapper, who as a rising media star often found his career and even his personal life the subject of interest by blogs and media critics. “Undermining a 27-year-old reporter — if it is in the interest of a campaign or a party that wants to discredit a news organization — it’s impossible for me to believe that’s not going to happen.” “

    tags: NYTimes.com journalism politics

  • “Visiting an error page is not a pleasurable experience for a visitor but web designers can make it pleasurable by designing beautiful and creative error pages. All it needs is a little bit of creativity and some quality time, and your error pages will stand out. Here is a list of some creatively designed error pages that will inspire you.”

    tags: fun inspiration

  • “As it turns out, we have a way to prevent gangs of humans from acting like savage packs of animals. In fact, we’ve developed entire disciplines based around this goal over thousands of years. We just ignore most of the lessons that have been learned when we create our communities online. But, by simply learning from disciplines like urban planning, zoning regulations, crowd control, effective and humane policing, and the simple practices it takes to stage an effective public event, we can come up with a set of principles to prevent the overwhelming majority of the worst behaviors on the Internet.

    If you run a website, you need to follow these steps. if you don’t, you’re making the web, and the world, a worse place. And it’s your fault. Put another way, take some goddamn responsibility for what you unleash on the world.”

    tags: socialmedia blogging comments community

  • “Moving online? Start here. We’ve compiled the most helpful articles to ease the transition. And if there are any topics you’d like to see addressed that aren’t, or any sections expanded, please contact us at info@JEADigitalMedia.org.”

    tags: jeadigitalmedia.org journalism onlinejournalism

  • “Internships. Portfolio. Real work (not work assigned in a class). Not necessarily paid work — but journalism work that some respectable organization saw fit to publish, with your name on it.

    Lacking these, a new journalism graduate is behind the curve. There are not so many jobs out there that you can afford to make excuses for why you didn’t get it done.”

    tags: journalism interviews jobs

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Links to Check Out 08/31/2011

August 30, 2011 in industry news

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Red & Black takes innovative print/online strategy to new level

August 30, 2011 in College Media News, hope for the future, innovation

randb20The University of Georgia’s Red & Black (previously mentioned here and here and here) has long been an innovative campus media outlet. This semester, they’ve taken that innovation to a new level, abandoning their daily print product in favor of a weekly print/online hybrid and the addition of a monthly full-color magazine. You can see what the new weekly print edition looks like here. The R&B‘s web site is still powered by the WordPress CMS.

Dan Reimold outlines the strategy in a very complete article for PBS MediaShift: Revolution in Georgia: Student Newspaper Goes Digital First.

I interviewed Red & Black Publisher Harry Montevideo about some of the behind-the-scenes details of the development of this new publishing model.

I’m including a transcript of the entire interview below the fold, but I did want to mention a few of the top-level takeaways from the discussion:

  • The Red & Black spent a lot of time looking at the issue before deciding to go from daily to weekly.
  • The staff and board of directors spent a lot of time researching the issue before making a decision.
  • Students were understanding and accepting of the change – a key buy-in.
  • The staff interviewed advertisers and received assurances that the advertising income would be similar even in a weekly format.
  • The Red & Black hasn’t had to spend a lot of extra money on equipment to upgrade.
  • The student staff structure is pretty much the same as it was, with the exception of a few fewer page designers.
  • The new Ampersand magazine is an effort to pull in students who normally wouldn’t work for a newspaper, and provide another vehicle for advertising income.
  • The primary goal of the Red & Black is still training students for their future careers in journalism, no matter what format/publication schedule they have.

Here’s a look at the cover of the first issue of Ampersand:

magazineonline

The full version will be online at the Red & Black web site next week, says Ed Morales, editorial adviser. The magazine might get its own dedicated web site next year.

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Links to Check Out 08/30/2011

August 29, 2011 in industry news

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“All on Paper” leads to camaraderie, but how to make it continue?

August 29, 2011 in College Media

coversThis summer, a group of students, an adviser, and working journalists gathered at Florida Atlantic University with typewriters, photographic enlargers, rubber cement, Xacto knives and other implements of production to put together a newspaper. Without computers.

You can read most of the sordid details about the experiment (called “All on Paper”) at Michael Koretzky’s weblog. He recounts how they tried to figure out how to turn a bathroom into a darkroom (remember those?), and what it was like to push the buttons on a manual typewriter.

So why are we talking about this experiment on a weblog called “Innovation in College Media”? Because of the thing the students say they found through the experience that was missing from their 21st century newsroom.

Gideon Grudo and Mariam Aldhahi – editors with the FAU newspaper – were part of this experiment in cruel and unusual punishment, and came away with an appreciation for the difficulties of putting out a newspaper in a pre-computerized world.

Here are some excerpts from an interview I conducted with them recently:

What was the biggest lesson you learned from the experience?

Gideon: No Internet means more talking. More laughing. More camaraderie and community in the newsroom. I hope that Google and InDesign don’t make us forget what we had with each other for those brief two weeks.

Mariam: We take the both the technology we have and the people we work with for granted. This project helped us to create a better functioning newsroom.

Would you do it again?

Gideon: For my own good, it’d take a hurricane to force me to schlep the typewriter back to the newsroom and pop it open. But I do hope to show others the little that I know of the process and help other newsroom recreate our project.

Mariam: No chance. I figure if the people who grew up using that technology don’t want to touch it than I shouldn’t either. I would be more than happy to teach others, though. This project is definitely one that should be recreated.

Have you gotten any requests from other advisers to do the same thing on their campuses?

Gideon: We have, and some from high schools.

How long did the process take to produce the issue?

Two weeks, daily.

What would you do differently if you could do it again? Anything?

Gideon: Buy a linotype.

Mariam: Buy a recycling bin. The amount of paper wasted still makes me feel guilty.

What was your favorite piece of old school equipment?

Gideon: Pica pole paired with an X-Acto knife. Designing was so barbaric and personal.

Mariam: X-Acto knife and rubber cement.

What was your least favorite?

Gideon: The typewriter. While it was fun to set it up and press down the keys, having to retype five or six versions of one story got old fast.

Mariam: Proportion wheel. I still don’t know how it works.

A lot of talk was about camaraderie. Do you think you can replicate that without the old equipment?

Gideon: I sure hope so. We’ve already seen a spike in staffer attendance since the end of the project. The newsroom is more full on the daily (we’re a weekly, mind you) than I’ve ever seen it. And it’s still summer!

Mariam: I’ve already seen a change in the newsroom. We have a good chunk of the staff here at given time and work feels less like work now.

Grudo, Aldhahi and Koretzky all mentioned the sense of camaraderie, of shared purpose, of unity the newsroom experienced while putting together a paper the “old fashioned” way. And the effect seems to have carried over since the experiment.

But the big question is: how long will that camaraderie last? Certainly, the student journalists who personally went through the experience will remember it. But what about the next group of journos who come into the newsroom? Will they catch the “shared purpose” from their peers? Will they need a similar exercise before they catch the feeling.

In some ways, the paper-only experience is similar to those “team-building” exercises that occur in many large organizations. Except, instead of catching a co-worker while she falls backwards, or sharing the experience of walking a ropes course, the students ended the two weeks with a finished product.

I admit I was skeptical of the exercise from the beginning. My new media/get off my lawn hat was on tight. But I do see a deeper desire that surfaces from this type exercise.

We’re all more wrapped in personal bubbles these days. We wear our headphones connected to our iPods with our personal playlists. We download photos and edit them in Photoshop, not in a community darkroom. We don’t spend time in front of giant pasteout desks or futz around with hot wax. And in the midst of our personal reveries, the communal sense of journalism gets subsumed.

You can’t reproduce that sense of coming together to do something important with a Facebook meeting, or a Google+ “hangout.” A weekly meeting or shouting to your coworker over a computer screen won’t do it either.

And honestly, I don’t think any of us would trade the benefits of our technology just for the return of some ideal of “community.” But perhaps there are ways to restore some of that community to the newsroom without having to resort to manual typewriters.

Maybe it means making everyone unplug their headphones, or copy edit pages as a group, or pass around photos and discuss the best crops on deadline.

I admit I don’t have any easy answers for this question. Perhaps you could add to the conversation in the comments.

Oh, and by the way, if you’re interested, you can contact Koretzky at the link above about bringing the experiment to your own campus.

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Google+ for journalism education and student media

August 28, 2011 in Carnival of Journalism

google_plus_logo-276x300This month, I’m making a contribution to the Carnival of Journalism, hosted by Kathy Gill. The topic: What does Google+ mean for journalists, today and tomorrow?

I have been using Google+ (I hate that + symbol, I’ll just spell it Google Plus from now on – what’s the AP style on that, anyway?) for about two months now, since soon after it launched.

As background, I have to confess that I don’t use Facebook that much. Blog posts from the ICM weblog are autofed into my “Feed,” but beyond that, I’m not on there much. So I don’t necessarily have a large area of comparisons to make between FB and Google Plus. But I do follow Twitter closely when I’m near a computer or the iPad.

That said, I do like the way Google Plus lets you put people into Circles. I can see this being useful for a journalist once more people adopt the platform (assuming that they do). Also, for an educator, it can be a useful way to organize students into classes – intro to journalism, for instance – and then feed information only to those circles.

In this particular feature, Google Plus distances itself from Facebook. Maybe there’s a way to organize people into different “categories” on Facebook. I don’t know, and I really don’t care to take the time to find out. It’s pretty easy on Google Plus.

I’ve also used the Hangout feature twice, and found it useful. In one interview, I talked to people in two different places, so I could use the video feature and see everyone I was talking with. This is not a “new” feature, necessarily, as iChat has had the ability to videochat with more than one person for a while.

But it is seamlessly integrated with Google products (you do need to download a plug-in for it to work with your webcam). Others have used the Hangout feature for press conferences. I imagine there are people who have used it for meetings, as you can have up to 10 webcams in one “hangout.”

This could be useful for a journalism instructor to host a webchat with professionals around the world so that students could interact with several professionals from the local classroom.

For a student journalist,  it could be a good way to conduct an interview with a subject who’s not easily accessible for an in-person interview (taking the place of the phone interview).

Another feature I’ve used is the integration with smart phones. I can take a photograph on my Android phone and it’s automatically uploaded to Google Plus (you can set this feature to automatically publish the photo, too). I can then go into Google Plus on the web and tweak the photo, add a cutline or other information, and then publish it to my stream. This would be more useful for journalistic purposes than in the classroom.

The main drawback for a more consistent use of Google Plus in the academy, in my opinion, is the lack of adoption.

It’s only been around two months, and although there are a lot of people I follow from Twitter already using it some, they are mostly early adopters.

And there are a number of people in my circles who joined and haven’t posted anything yet.

Certainly, this is going to be a huge obstacle for Google Plus to overcome. By comparison, Facebook started on high school and college campuses, and thus built a reliable core of users before everyone could join.

On the other hand, Twitter seems to have captured the market at the moment with regard to “breaking news” or instant updates. Until Google Plus begins to feed updates like Twitter, it won’t take over that space. But I’m not sure that’s the space Google wants to occupy.

Also, Google Plus still has a “beta product” feel to it. Early users have had complaints about the use of real names, and the lack of “corporate” accounts. I’m sure Google will iron out these issues, but in the meantime, it still seems somewhat “toy-like.”

Of course, all this could change in 6 months, or a year. I expect it will. And I think it would be wise to revisit this topic in the future.

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Make smaller YouTube clips with Splicd

August 26, 2011 in Academics, online software

I found this site via the JEA Digital Media Resources, and it looks like a great tool for educators and student media organizations who use YouTube videos on their sites or in the classroom.

Splicd allows you to enter a YouTube URL, along with a start and stop point, and then it outputs a link and embed code to put on your site.

For an example, I often like to share this clip of This American Life host Ira Glass talking about getting from the point where you don’t have the skills but want to do something creative, to the point where you have the skills:


powered by Splicd.com
The original YouTube video is five minutes long, and there’s a bit of talking before the clip I selected. But I was able to trim the clip to exactly what I wanted to share without having to load the entire 5 minute clip.

This would be especially useful for a student journalist who wants to highlight a certain portion of a press conference, for instance; or an instructor who wants to showcase a particular section of a YouTube clip that exists within a larger 10 minute clip.

I’m almost certain YouTube has a similar internal feature, but you have to have a YouTube account. This tool is available to anyone.

Redesigns 2011: Ga. Tech Cable Network

August 26, 2011 in Redesigns, Websites

Georgia Tech’s Cable Network recently redesigned their web site. Here’s the new look:

Georgia Tech

Georgia Tech

I don’t have a screenshot of what the earlier design looked like, but you can check out an archived version of what the site looked like in Feb. 2009 at the Internet Archive.

The front page of the web site is very graphic. If I could change anything, I’d probably try to make the white space between the elements more even, especially within columns (note the width of the video player center page above the MTV casting call graphic).

As always, if your media site has done a redesign recently, send me an e-mail at scmurley -at- gmail.com to let me know for a future post. And if possible, please include a screenshot of what the site looked like before the redesign for comparison.

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CMA relaunches web site and National College Media Convention Details: Orlando

August 25, 2011 in College Media, Redesigns

Earlier this week, College Media Advisers, Inc., the national organization representing those who advise college news organizations, relaunched their web site with a new design and a new CMS from WildApricot. Here’s the new look collegemedia.org:

collegemediaredesign

It is less cluttered than the previous version of the site, which was put up in 2008, although I’m not a fan of too many items in a left nav bar. There are other changes in store for the new site, so it will likely change in the future. Any thoughts.

In a related vein, the planning for the Fall National College Media Convention is almost complete. You can see what’s going on in Orlando this October by downloading the convention brochure (PDF link).

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Redesigns 2011: Penn State Collegian

August 25, 2011 in Redesigns, Websites

The Penn State Daily Collegian redesigned their site this summer. Here’s the new version:

Penn State Daily Collegian

Penn State Daily Collegian

The Daily Collegian upgraded their design last summer as well. Here’s what it looked like when we showcased it in 2010:

collegian2010

The move from a color background to a white background looks good. Also, they’ve moved more information “above the fold.”