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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

About the Lens Blog - Lens Blog - NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    "Lens is the photography blog of The New York Times, presenting the finest and most interesting visual and multimedia reporting - photographs, videos and slide shows. A showcase for Times photographers, it also seeks to highlight the best work of other newspapers, magazines and news and picture agencies; in print, in books, in galleries, in museums and on the Web."
Bill Kuykendall

BBC - Viewfinder: Adrian Evans on future funding of photojournalism - 0 views

  • Quality photojournalism is expensive - researching the story, gaining access, spending time with your subjects, post production and editing - there are no short cuts. Newspapers and magazines spend a tiny proportion of their income on content and they certainly don't want to spend it on photography.
  • Success now lies in being multiskilled, merely taking photographs is not enough. My advice to aspiring photographers is that they need to be able to design a web page using html, know their way around a multitude of publishing software programmes shoot and edit video, record audio and most importantly research and pitch stories.
  • rather than sourcing funding from the print media or distributor of a story, photographers are working with organisations who have a message they want to disseminate.
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  • NGOs and foundations
  • active involvement in their visual communications, advising on how best to approach a subject visually and then exploring different outputs for the resulting work
  • A body of work can simultaneously be a print feature or a series of print features, a book, an exhibition, a multimedia piece, a web gallery all of which carry different price structures ranging from the free to the expensive.
Bill Kuykendall

Viewing Feed - 0 views

  • I was confronted with the fact that traditional media was rarely publishing, let alone commissioning, long-form visual journalism. I saw the dearth of assignments as an opportunity that would force me to find different, and potentially more personally fulfilling, ways to reach an audience.
  • "I figured that if my primary goal was not to publish in traditional print media, then I should take on projects that were larger and demanded a broader platform. I began to investigate ways to finance those projects and avenues to distribute them. I began to look for grants to produce the work, but was equally interested in figuring out how to reach an audience outside of traditional media outlets in a way that could still have a significant impact.
  • I'm Phil Coomes, picture editor and photographer for the BBC News website. This is my blog where I'll be exploring the world of photojournalism, photos in the news and BBC News' use of photographs, including those by our readers.
Bill Kuykendall

20 Photojournalists' fantastic portfolios :: 10,000 Words - 0 views

  • The digital era has revolutionized photography. Photojournalists not only have access to high-end cameras with a seemingly infinite number of features, but their photos can be presented in many different ways, including slideshows and multimedia packages. However, it doesn't matter the technology that powers the photography, what matters is the eye and innate skill of the photographer, as evidenced below.
Bill Kuykendall

Maisie Crow Photojournalist - 0 views

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    Maisie Crow is a young, inventive and productive multimedia documentarian. A graduate of the Salt Institute for Documentary Studies in Portland, the University of Texas at Austin, and, soon, I believe, the Ohio University School of Visual Communications MA program, she has won a number of awards and shown tremendous potential. Check out her two documentaries on this site.
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.”
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  • “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

BBC - Viewfinder: Michael Kamber on photojournalism today - 0 views

  • "Yet we are the last stalwarts; my photojournalist friends at other mainstream newspapers say their travel budgets are gone. The LA Times, US News and Newsweek appear to be sliding towards bankruptcy; The Washington Post closed nearly all its foreign bureaux; Time is a shadow of its former self.
  • what is dead is not photojournalism - what is dead is the particular culture of photojournalism that supported us for the past 30 years.
  • new models for raising cash to do projects - the grants, agency workshops, Emphasis, the partnerships with NGOs (which I find troubling for reasons I won't detail here), and others. I myself am using Emphasis to raise money for a book project.
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  • a photojournalist today has to be much more of an overall journalist - video, written pieces, and multi-media are crucial to stitching together a living.
  • "Do I like this new developing model? Not much. Does it allow for a photographer to have job security, raise a family with health insurance, know that someone will evacuate him or her if injured in a warzone? Absolutely not.
  • What troubles me is that we are becoming ghettoised. As the mainstream press dies a slow and ugly death, we increasingly work for each other - for the cultish community of photo festivals and workshops, awards and grants, boutique print collectors.
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.
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