Skip to main content

Home/ WVUncovered/ Group items tagged online

Rss Feed Group items tagged

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.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • 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

Doing journalism in 2010 is an act of community organizing - 0 views

  • Too few emerging online journalists understand that the function of news publishing has changed in the Internet era. Simply reporting the news, however you might define that, is no longer enough, not when you are publishing in such a competitive environment. The journalists who succeed online are the ones who understand that they are no longer simply reporters... they've become community organizers.
  • you have to have a community that supports you, if you want to make a living online.
  • your past earns you nothing online. Whatever audience you will have there, you must build yourself
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Communities form around common needs and purposes, as will yours. So start by identifying what you can offer a community and which community might need what you can offer.
  • Engage the community by building upon the relationships you've built to enlist community members to do whatever their talents and skills best allow them to do in service to the community's cause.
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.”
  •  
    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

Columbia News Service » Blog Archive » Skype Gives Students Window On The World - 0 views

  • more and more teachers are beginning to discover the enhanced, interactive learning experience that Skype’s free videoconferencing enables.
  • An analysis of controlled studies by the U.S. Department of Education in June 2009 found that “blended” instruction that combined online and face-to-face instruction had a larger advantage than pure online or face-to-face communication.
  • Tolisano insists that these calls are not about learning technology alone, because during these video calls, students are expected to do different jobs. Some prepare to present or ask questions of their online guests such as what the time difference is or what the weather is like. Other students film and photograph the conversation, while still others listen and write about the call. “It is not about using the webcam alone,” says Tolisano. “ It is about communication and presentation skills.”
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • “Skype an Author”
  • The author videoconferences with the class over Skype for about 10 minutes, free of charge. For longer sessions, they could choose to charge a fee.
  • Yet Skype is blocked in several schools because of fears that it hogs bandwidth and can breach security.
  • “The technology department looks at things differently from teachers. You need to get the superintendent on board,” says Fryer. “We want to be creative. But that takes leadership.”
Bill Kuykendall

http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/06/15/40-helpful-resources-on-user-interface-desig... - 0 views

  •  
    In this article, we share with you the best of the best, cream of the crop sites, galleries, online publications, and libraries devoted to sharing information and exploring concepts pertaining to User Interface design patterns
Bill Kuykendall

Starbucks Gets Its Business Brewing Again With Social Media - Advertising Age - Special... - 0 views

  • "This was not [built as a] marketing channel, but as a consumer relationship-building environment."
  • intersection between digital and physical
  • "The experiences you have online can translate to rich offline experiences."
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • An added benefit of Starbucks' social-media progress has been the ability to quickly manage rumors that could have dogged the company for days.
  • Starbucks launched two iPhone apps in September, one for general café purposes, with store locators, details about specific blends and nutrition information, and the other to support its loyalty card. Moving forward, Mr. Bruzzo said the company will be looking for ways that consumers can connect with each other from inside the apps. In the meantime, Starbucks is testing functionality that allows loyalty-card holders to pay with their phones.
  • The brand relies on the 28-year old to translate the Starbucks experience for the online community, search out confused or disgruntled consumers, chat about store offerings and even crack jokes.
Bill Kuykendall

St. Louis Beacon - 0 views

  •  
    Non-profit community news online news source
Bill Kuykendall

MediaStorm: A Multimedia Production Studio - 0 views

  •  
    MediaStorm's online publication is an eclectic showcase for multimedia storytelling. The goal is to tell the story of today's world in a truly in-depth manner. Contributors include a diverse range of exceptional storytellers.
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

Discovery Education: Web 2.0 Tools - 0 views

  • Web 2.0 is about revolutionary new ways of creating, collaborating, editing and sharing user-generated content online. It's also about ease of use. There's no need to download, and teachers and students can master many of these tools in minutes. Technology has never been easier or more accessible to all.
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.
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • 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

News Corporation Prepares to Charge for Online Content - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Speaking to investors last month, Mr. Murdoch said that the News Corporation was in “final discussions with a number of publishers, device makers and technology companies” about digital delivery of news and entertainment. “We will soon develop an innovative subscription model that will deliver digital content to consumers wherever and whenever they want it,” he said.
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

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

Iowa City Senior Center Television Online! - 0 views

shared by Bill Kuykendall on 01 Feb 10 - Cached
  •  
    Iowa City seniors partner with University of Iowa students to cover issues of interst to senior citizens from a senior's perspective.
Bill Kuykendall

A Cover Ad Mimics The Los Angeles Times's Front Page - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • The top editor of The Times, Russ Stanton, and several of his deputies vigorously opposed the ad before it was published, but they were overruled by the paper’s business executives, according to people with direct knowledge of the dispute,
  • Mr. Conroy noted that however unorthodox the ad may be for print, it mirrors a common practice online of having an ad cover part or all of a Web site’s home page for a few seconds.
  • “It’s taking a concept that we normally apply to new media and reimagining it to a concept in a newspaper,”
  • ...4 more annotations...
  • In the last few years, The Los Angeles Times, The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal all began publishing ads on the lower parts of their front pages.
  • But The Los Angeles Times has gone several steps further. In April, it published a front-page ad for the TV series “Southland” that was made to look like a news article, prompting harsh criticism from media critics and its own journalists. Two months later, it published its first full front-page wrap-around ad, for the series “True Blood.” The “Alice in Wonderland” ad, which also wraps around the paper, introduces a new wrinkle, lending the name and work of The Times to an advertiser.
  • the paper received several hundred thousand dollars for such an ad.
  • “It’s a little troubling that they’re blending editorial content with advertising,” she said. “This isn’t newspapering as it used to be, but that can’t be the determinant any more.”
Bill Kuykendall

News Sites Rethink Anonymous Online Comments - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • When news sites, after years of hanging back, embraced the idea of allowing readers to post comments, the near-universal assumption was that anyone could weigh in and remain anonymous. But now, that idea is under attack from several directions, and journalists, more than ever, are questioning whether anonymity should be a given on news sites.
  • anonymity has made comment streams “havens for a level of crudity, bigotry, meanness and plain nastiness that shocks the tattered remnants of our propriety.”
  • “But a lot of comment boards turn into the equivalent of a barroom brawl, with most of the participants having blood-alcohol levels of 0.10 or higher,” he said. “People who might have something useful to say are less willing to participate in boards where the tomatoes are being thrown.”
  • ...2 more annotations...
  • Adapting the Facebook model, some news sites allow readers to post a picture along with a comment, another step away from anonymity.
  • “There is a younger generation that doesn’t feel the same need for privacy,” Ms. Huffington said. “Many people, when you give them other choices, they choose not to be anonymous.”
Bill Kuykendall

Media Cache - For U.S. Newspaper Industry, an Example in Germany? - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • U.S. publishers come in for withering criticism in a report this month from the German Newspaper Publishers’ Association.
  • While daily newspaper circulation in the United States fell 27 percent from 1998 through 2008, it slipped 19 percent in Germany. While fewer than half of Americans read newspapers, more than 70 percent of Germans do. While newspapers’ revenues have plunged in the United States, they have held steady in Germany since 2004.
  • Most German newspapers are owned by family concerns or other small companies with local roots,
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • German publishers have been much more reticent about the Web, in some cases keeping large amounts of their content offline.
  • Germany has a strong local press;
  • the Internet generates only low-single-digit percentages of most German newspapers’ sales, while online revenue has reached double figures at some U.S. papers.
Bill Kuykendall

Online Journalism Entrepreneurs - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • one of the very forces that was sapping industry profits — the Web’s demolition of barriers to entry — also made it quite simple and cheap for anyone to become a journalism entrepreneur.
  • he promised contributors 75 percent of the revenues from all advertisements placed next to their articles.
  • it was a small experiment in capitalistic incentives: contributors would profit directly from their work, according to the market’s assessment of its value.
  • ...3 more annotations...
  • the sheer volume of words has overwhelmed a business model that was once based on scarcity and limited choice
  • “It’s dawning on people that the marketplace will no longer pay the freight,”
  • “You can have destroyed hundreds of millions of dollars, or billions of dollars, of revenue for other people,” Denton says, “but without capturing it all yourself.”
1 - 19 of 19
Showing 20 items per page