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Bill Kuykendall

Novelties - PlaceLocal Automatically Creates Online Ads - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • New software called PlaceLocal builds display ads automatically, scouring the Internet for references to a neighborhood restaurant, a grocery store or another local business. Then it combines the photographs it finds with reviews, customer comments and other text into a customized online ad for the business.
  • New software called PlaceLocal builds display ads automatically, scouring the Internet for references to a neighborhood restaurant, a grocery store or another local business. Then it combines the photographs it finds with reviews, customer comments and other text into a customized online ad for the business.
  • New software called PlaceLocal builds display ads automatically, scouring the Internet for references to a neighborhood restaurant, a grocery store or another local business. Then it combines the photographs it finds with reviews, customer comments and other text into a customized online ad for the business.
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  • New software called PlaceLocal builds display ads automatically, scouring the Internet for references to a neighborhood restaurant, a grocery store or another local business. Then it combines the photographs it finds with reviews, customer comments and other text into a customized online ad for the business.
  • New software called PlaceLocal builds display ads automatically, scouring the Internet for references to a neighborhood restaurant, a grocery store or another local business. Then it combines the photographs it finds with reviews, customer comments and other text into a customized online ad for the business.
Bill Kuykendall

One-Third of U.S. Without Broadband, F.C.C. Finds - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • For many Americans, having high-speed access to the Internet at home is as vital as electricity, heat and water. And yet about one-third of the population, 93 million people, have elected not to connect.
  • the overwhelming majority of people who have Internet access have broadband.
  • “Now we’re at a point where, if you want broadband adoption to go up by any significant measure, you really have to start to eat into the segment of non-Internet-users.”
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  • nonusers are disproportionately older and more likely to live in rural areas. Those with household incomes of less than $50,000 are “much less likely” to have broadband access, according to the F.C.C. report.
Bill Kuykendall

Op-Ed Contributor - Have Keyboard, Will Travel - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • YOU can tell when a print journalist has lost his full-time job because of the digital markings that suddenly appear, like the tail of a fading comet. First, he joins Facebook. A Gmail address is promptly obtained. The Twitter account comes next, followed by the inevitable blog. Throw in a LinkedIn profile for good measure. This online coming-out is the first step in a daunting, and economically discouraging, transformation: from a member of a large institution to a would-be Internet “brand.”
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    YOU can tell when a print journalist has lost his full-time job because of the digital markings that suddenly appear, like the tail of a fading comet. First, he joins Facebook. A Gmail address is promptly obtained. The Twitter account comes next, followed by the inevitable blog. Throw in a LinkedIn profile for good measure. This online coming-out is the first step in a daunting, and economically discouraging, transformation: from a member of a large institution to a would-be Internet "brand."
Bill Kuykendall

Verizon Sells West Virginia Access Lines to Frontier - WBOY-TV - WBOY.com - 0 views

  • Verizon Communications announced May 13 it would sell about 4.8 million access lines to Frontier Communications Corp., including those in West Virginia, in a move that could lead to expanded broadband Internet access throughout the state.
  • A relatively large percentage of West Virginia doesn’t have access to broadband Internet services compared to many other states. State officials have pushed for greater broadband access for the state’s rural areas, and the economic stimulus package recently passed by Congress includes $7.2 billion for expanding broadband throughout the country.
Bill Kuykendall

Island: Please come live here - and make sure to bring the kids - Maine News - Bangor D... - 0 views

  • Every island in Maine is struggling to keep their schools vibrant and open. In the last 100 years, Maine went from supporting 300 year-round island communities to 15, according to Snyder.
  • The filmmaker splits her time between Washington, D.C. and the island. If it were up to her, she would be on Isle au Haut year-round, but her job requires her to sit in meetings with people to talk about her documentary projects. Despite this, Wurzburg said she can work remotely and does as often as possible.
  • The high-speed Internet that her island home is connected to helps a lot.
Bill Kuykendall

The Bay Citizen - In Battle of the Weeklies, Local Focus Is the Key - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • When you pick up the paper, with its solid reporting on local politics and strong point of view, you know what to expect. A well-defined sensibility, deep local roots and a focus on its one and only market give the publication staying power.
  • In the Internet era, there are plenty of options for those attracted to an alternative sensibility. But even if the Salons of the world capture some of that audience, there’s still a place for the distinctively local approach — and chains, by their nature, find that harder to cultivate.
  • But a strong local voice and brand identity are key to possible new strategies in areas like live events production and participatory journalism. Even on the Internet, where scale matters, local coverage remains a promising frontier.
Bill Kuykendall

Broadband carriers speak out against FCC regulation - washingtonpost.com - 0 views

  • A ruling against the agency would likely derail FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski's signature policy objectives, including open-Internet rules and the reform of an $8 billion rural telephone fund to provide broadband access in underserved parts of the country.
  • Consumer advocates argue the opposite. They say that previous FCC moves to ease regulation of broadband providers are now undermining the agency's attempts to address problems in the Internet age. "The same lobbyists who purport to want 'Broadband for America' are now telling the FCC that the agency should not engage in rulemaking that would achieve it," said Ben Scott, policy director for Free Press, a public-interest group. "The commission must have the authority to promote universal access to affordable broadband."
Bill Kuykendall

Publishers: Triumph From Within the Belly of the Content Beast! - Advertising Age - Dig... - 0 views

  • It is not hard, with 20/20 hindsight, to see what went wrong. In the blink of an eye, the spectacularly long-lived success of the publishing industry succumbed under the weight of too much free content flooding the internet, causing a crash in the value of content.
  • "Building sites that perform well for humans, not search engines, [is one change necessary to] reverse the damage we've done to ourselves in the last 15 years of the internet.
  • Kelly is the poster child for the next-generation publisher who places primacy on creating great content that drives loyal visitors. Not so easy to do -- but ultimately that's probably more profitable than just herding traffic that will leave as soon as they got there.
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  • tying revenue to member participation.
Bill Kuykendall

In 'Mind Movies,' the Word Picture Continues to Appeal to Eager Ears - WSJ.com - 0 views

  • Radio drama, ranging from "Captain Midnight" to the high art of Orson Welles, thrived for 40 years in America. It was all but gone by the 1960s, killed off by television. Yet now that TV must contend with the Internet, the Internet has given radio drama a whisper of new life. It can't be called "radio drama" anymore, since hardly any of it gets on the radio. Mr. Greenhalgh settles for "audio drama," but the catchiest name for it is "mind movie."
Bill Kuykendall

BBC - Viewfinder: David Campbell on photojournalism in the age of image abundance - 0 views

  • our 'photo-op' culture, where much of everyday life seems picture driven and played out in front of the camera.
  • "As a professional practice, photojournalism has historically relied on two forms of scarcity. The first involved the scarcity of skills to make good images, and the second the scarcity of popular access to the dominant forms of print distribution, the newspapers and magazines. Both of these limits have now been fundamentally challenged.
  • "Amateurs are able to purchase and use the best camera technology to make striking photographs, and - although it is not solely responsible for the decline of newspapers - the transformative power of the Internet has reduced the cost of publication to near zero, thereby opening up new channels for the circulation of imagery. Together these transformations have produced a new era of abundant pictures.
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  • The task is to find ways to leverage the new possibilities enabled by the Internet to sustain production and enhance circulation, while presenting the work in a variety of formats across a range of platforms to reach as many people as possible.
Bill Kuykendall

F.C.C. Expanding Efforts to Connect More Americans to Broadband - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Various studies have shown that the major reasons people do not have broadband are: the cost of Internet services and the cost of computers; not knowing how to use a computer; and not understanding why the Internet is relevant.
  • Last week, Mr. Genachowski outlined a plan to transform the $8 billion Universal Service Fund, most of which comes from consumers’ telephone bills nationwide, from subsidizing telephone service in underserved areas to expanding broadband access in those areas. He said Tuesday that some of the money from this fund could be used to help expand computer classes in libraries.
Bill Kuykendall

Diane Russell: Coming Out of the Black - 0 views

  • it turns out that some powerful Republicans in some agricultural states have supporters who have been poaching into the spectrum LightSquared owns and intends to use for a new nationwide broadband network.
  • the LightSquared initiative is a game changer. It builds on the satellite network already familiar to boaters and first responders to create a national wireless network with no dead zones -- if you have access to the American sky, you have access to your phone and the Internet.
  • While LightSquared now says it has fixed most of the GPS interference problems, including issues with "high precision" GPS devices , the GPS industry said "no way," and -- finding that perhaps the FCC was not buying the story -- spent millions to expand the debate into Congress and anywhere else it could find, like the Department of Defense.
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  • "GPS industry insiders and government end users manipulated the latest round of tests to generate biased results."
  • In Maine, we used Recovery Act funds to invest in the Three Ring Binder project that is bringing broadband to parts of the state that did not have it. But there are still places that need broadband for businesses to compete, their kids to learn and to bridge a very real digital divide.
Bill Kuykendall

Stimulus Projects Bring Broadband to Disconnected - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • The $7.2 billion plan in the last stimulus package was approved without significant debate. The program is intended to extend broadband service to what is known as the “middle mile,” which can connect to institutions like schools and hospitals, and the “last mile” — homes and businesses — that big Internet providers have bypassed because the expected revenue was too small to justify the big investments needed.
  • For some of the beneficiaries, the program will mean the difference between isolation and being connected to the rest of the world.
  • The stimulus law requires that all the money in the program be allocated by Sept. 30.
Bill Kuykendall

When Companies Respond to Online Criticism With Lawsuits - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • the latest incarnation of a decades-old legal maneuver known as a strategic lawsuit against public participation, or Slapp.
  • meritless defamation suits filed by businesses or government officials against citizens who speak out against them. The plaintiffs are not necessarily expecting to succeed — most do not — but rather to intimidate critics who are inclined to back down when faced with the prospect of a long, expensive court battle
Bill Kuykendall

Techmeme Offers Tech News at Internet Speed - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • relies on software algorithms to collect technology news in real time into what is essentially the front page of an ever-changing industry newspaper.
  • turns to humans to filter the ever-growing number of articles and blog posts published online each day
  • Mediagazer, a new sister site for media industry news.
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  • They also play a crucial role in contemporary journalism, as media outlets and amateur reporters churn out an ever-higher quantity of often lower-quality content
  • Humans do things software cannot, like grouping subtly related stories, taking into account sarcasm or skepticism, or posting important stories that just broke.
Bill Kuykendall

Media Cache - London Newspapers Challenge Web's Gratis Orthodoxy - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • As The Times and its Sunday sibling challenge the Internet orthodoxy that readers will refuse to pay for general news online, some of the conventions of newspaper Web design are already tumbling. Freed from the imperative to generate clicks and to lure search engines, The Times and Sunday Times have taken a novel, reader-focused approach that minimizes distractions.
  • advertisers are most interested in audiences who actually care about what they read or watch, rather than the casual Web surfers.
  • The new Sunday Times site is particularly striking visually, with a heavy emphasis on photography. Clicking on an article brings it up in a separate box, with everything else on the page shrouded in a dark gray screen that makes for easier reading.
Bill Kuykendall

A New Plan for a New Year. Category: Editorials from The Berkeley Daily Planet - Thursd... - 0 views

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    California newspaper goes web-only due to declining ad revenues
Bill Kuykendall

71 Journalists Killed in 2009; 29 Died in Philippines Attack - NYTimes.com - 1 views

  • Twenty-nine of those deaths came in a single, politically motivated massacre of reporters and others in the Philippines last November, the worst known episode for journalists, the committee said.
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    ""They are turning the technology that should liberate the press, against the press - this is a worrying development,""
Bill Kuykendall

Wired Shows Off Its Planned IPad Edition - Advertising Age - MediaWorks - 0 views

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    Wired editor in chief Chris Anderson used an appearance last Friday at the TED Conference to show off how his magazine will look as an edition for tablets and other devices. The video shows the product using live code, not just a vision of what might be, a spokeswoman added.
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