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Michael Pogachar

Random House, Politico launch online bookstore - 1 views

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    From Politico: "Curated by POLITICO's editors, the Bookshelf will be operated by Random House, Inc., and will include title selections and recommendations from a wide range of publishers that align with POLITICO's news content in the areas of current events, politics, history, and biography. The Bookshelf allows consumers to browse and search for titles and then purchase both physical and digital copies directly through a range of retailers."
Derik Dupont

Washington Post's Bo Jones on Paid Content, Politico, Newsroom Culture :: The Future of... - 0 views

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    The Washington Post will take a "watch and see" approach rather than rushing into a system to force its Internet readers to pay for content online, the vice chairman of the Washington Post Co., Boisfeuillet Jones, Jr., said over the weekend. Mr. Jones,
Stephanie Wynn

Twitter, Flickr, Facebook Make Blogs Look So 2004 - 0 views

  • Writing a weblog today isn't the bright idea it was four years ago.
  • Scroll down Technorati's list of the top 100 blogs and you'll find personal sites have been shoved aside by professional ones.
  • ssional ones. Most are essentially online magazines:
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • When blogging was young, enthusiasts rode high, with posts quickly skyrocketing to the top of Google's search results for any given topic, fueled by generous links from fellow bloggers. In 2002, a search for "Mark" ranked Web developer Mark Pilgrim above author Mark Twain. That phenomenon was part of what made blogging so exciting. No more. Today, a search for, say, Barack Obama's latest speech will deliver a Wikipedia page, a Fox News article, and a few entries from professionally run sites like Politico.com. The odds of your clever entry appearing high on the list? Basically zero.
  • Further, text-based Web sites aren't where the buzz is anymore. The reason blogs took off is that they made publishing easy for non-techies.
  • Twitter — which limits each text-only post to 140 characters — is to 2008 what the blogosphere was to 2004.
  • And Twitter posts can be searched instantly, without waiting for Google to index them.
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