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Contents contributed and discussions participated by Bill Kuykendall

Bill Kuykendall

"Is Social Media A Fad?" New Video With Mind Blowing Stats | MakeUseOf.com - 0 views

  • Still skeptic about social media, watch this new video” with mind blowing stats
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

Editorial - The Digital Pulse - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • Like most technologies, our new electronic digisphere is made up of good and bad. How we use it is, as always, up to us.
Bill Kuykendall

Your Brain on Computers - Attached to Technology and Paying a Price - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • While many people say multitasking makes them more productive, research shows otherwise. Heavy multitaskers actually have more trouble focusing and shutting out irrelevant information, scientists say, and they experience more stress.
  • “The technology is rewiring our brains,” said Nora Volkow, director of the National Institute of Drug Abuse and one of the world’s leading brain scientists. She and other researchers compare the lure of digital stimulation less to that of drugs and alcohol than to food and sex, which are essential but counterproductive in excess.
  • The nonstop interactivity is one of the most significant shifts ever in the human environment,
Bill Kuykendall

YouTube - Goose Fight! - 0 views

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    Now THAT's entertainment!
Bill Kuykendall

AP Stylebook Adds 42 New Guidelines for Social Media - 0 views

  • The AP Stylebook has released its new social media guidelines, including the official change from “Web site” to “website” (a move first reported back in April) and 41 other definitions, use cases and rules that journalists should follow.
  • Finally, the AP also offers some basic rules of thumb for how social media should and shouldn’t be used by journalists, with a focus on making sure they continue to confirm sources and information they find on blogs, tweets and other forms of social media.
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

The Media Equation - Bids for Newsweek Due This Week - NYTimes.com - 0 views

  • in the current digital news ecosystem, having “week” in your title is anachronistic in the extreme, what an investor would call negative equity.
  • in a publishing landscape filled with the lame and infirm, weeklies are the most profoundly challenged. A weekly schedule, with its tight turnarounds and frenzied production, is costly as a matter of course. Monthlies can still do step-backs for readers who don’t expect to see what happened five minutes ago, and daily newspapers have co-opted the newsweekly formula to build in real-time analysis.
  • It is axiomatic that in the current epoch, it is much less cost-intensive to build out a new brand than to try to walk back the cat on a legacy business.
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  • “These kinds of businesses garner a disproportionate amount of public attention for their economic significance because they are culturally significant,”
  • One of the biggest logical barriers to buying the magazine has to do with its current ownership: If the Graham family, who are careful, good publishing operators, could not make a go of it, how might someone else? Any publicly owned company that bought the weekly would be raked over the coals by its shareholders, and a private buyer would have to have a plan, a lot of confidence, and a stomach not just for risk, but big losses.
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

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

Morgantown newspaper removes three legislators from front-page photo - WVPubcast.org - 1 views

  • The Dominion Post decided to remove from the picture three delegates who sponsored Erin’s Law.
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,
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  • Germany has a strong local press;
  • German publishers have been much more reticent about the Web, in some cases keeping large amounts of their content offline.
  • 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.
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  • 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.”
Bill Kuykendall

Journalism - 0 views

  • The founder and benefactor of the McCormick Foundation, Robert R. McCormick, was a firm and passionate advocate of journalism and press freedom. As a result, journalism is one of the major priorities of the McCormick Foundation. McCormick spoke widely on the role of the press in a democratic society, had quotes declaring the importance of press freedom inscribed in marble throughout the lobby of the Tribune Tower and even bankrolled the landmark Near v. Minnesota case that established that prior restraint of the press by the government violates the First Amendment. McCormick was the long-time owner, editor and publisher of the Chicago Tribune until his death in 1955.
Bill Kuykendall

Press Releases - 0 views

  • $2.7 million grant to provide universal access to broadband for a seven county region in central West Virginia
  • proposes to bring a wireless broadband system to Braxton, Gilmer, Lewis, Upshur, Randolph, Tucker, and Barbour counties.
  • “The Zone was created to forge a link between counties and higher education to provide tax incentives and advantages in locating the infrastructure needed to deploy wireless broadband,”
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  • To reach the ‘last mile’ customers in some of the most rural counties in our state, thereby providing those citizens, small business community and counties the tool they need for economic development and growth.”
Bill Kuykendall

What You Need To Know About The National Broadband Plan - A good first step, possibly m... - 0 views

  • There's 376 pages of dense policy to dig through, so it's going to take some time to completely digest the plan.
Bill Kuykendall

Study dispels myths about ease of getting exercise in rural areas - Bangor Daily News - 0 views

  • The New Hampshire school is one of a handful of universities looking at ways to encourage active living, health and wellness in rural places. Researchers say the work is important because people living in rural communities are at greater risk for obesity, and past research focused on cities and suburbs has often produced conclusions that are a poor fit for rural towns.
  • “To get kids more physically active, one of the options seems to be getting more kids participating in after-school programs, but the busing situation is such that the bus goes home at 3 o’clock, and if you want to stay later you have to get a ride,” he said. “If you’re from a low-income family, you may not be able to get a ride. Chances are, your parents are already working two jobs, and they just can’t help you out.”
  • researchers at Plymouth State worked with residents of three rural towns to create a Google-style “active living” map, with captions of certain features — a favorite bike route, for example — provided by residents.
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