Sky and social networking?

[Keyword: , , ]. Journalism.co.uk is reporting on plans by Sky for “a video-based social networking website with Google”:

“Asked if it will have a creative or news-based focus, Mr Wright said it could be a ‘combination of those things’. However, he added that the site would not follow either the MySpace or Bebo social network formulas – thus offering the possibility of something wholly unique.”

But possibly more interesting is the note that “Google also agreed to provide search and targeted search advertising, email, messenger and VoIP telephony.” While social networking is relatively new and difficult to get right, facilities such as these could make a difference to the user experience and, more importantly, advertisers.

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Paul Bradshaw lectures on the Journalism degree at UCE Birmingham media department. He writes a number of blogs including the Online Journalism Blog, Interactive PR and Web and New Media

Welcome to the Online Journalism Blog

Well, I’ve been blogging for almost three years blogging about online journalism at http://ojournalism.blogspot.com/, but decided the time had come to move from Blogger to WordPress. If you’ve never seen the old Online Journalism Blog, I write about online journalism, citizen journalism, blogging, podcasts, vodcasts, interactive storytelling, publishing, Computer Assisted Reporting, searching and all things internet. For the most part this tends to be scrapbook-style quick links to relevant stories with (I hope informed) comment, but when I have the time I post more extensive analysis and reviews.

For a while I’ll be running both blogs together as I figure out how to make this one do what the other one did (all that time spent on email feeds, mailing lists, CSS styles, blogrolls…). In the meantime you might want to check out my sister site for a Citizen Journalism conference I organised at http://citizenjournalism.wordpress.com/

Citizen Journalism conference blog

[Keyword: , , , ]. Well, the Citizen Journalism 2007 conference finally took place today. Michael Hill, Trinity Mirror’s Head of Multimedia, spoke of the group’s “garlic bread moment” in converting to the new media age, while blogger Tom Reynolds talked of the power of the blogosphere, as well as its self-regulating nature. Vicky Taylor, the BBC’s Head of Interactivity, outlined the organisation’s approach to user generated content, and the whole was riddled with extensive questioning and debate.

You’ll find some coverage already at Journalism.co.uk (Trinity Mirror launches ultra-local citizen journalism sites), but for more on the speeches take a look at the conference blog at http://citizenjournalism.wordpress.com/ – which I’ll be adding to later – and there’s a conference wiki at http://citizenjournalism.xwiki.com/xwiki/bin/view/Main/WebHome which anyone can contribute to.

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Paul Bradshaw lectures on the Journalism degree at UCE Birmingham media department. He writes a number of blogs including the Online Journalism Blog, Interactive PR and Web and New Media

Journalism stories: A multimedia approach

[Keyword: , , , ]. Great series of articles from Mindy McAdams on how to approach interactive storytelling – well worth spending some time on:
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Paul Bradshaw lectures on the Journalism degree at UCE Birmingham media department. He writes a number of blogs including the Online Journalism Blog, Interactive PR and Web and New Media

Labels: interactive storytellingMindy McAdams, ,

 

 

List of guidelines for the BBC’s Web 2.0 project

For some reason I am unable to log in to my Blogger account from work, and so am having to post this via email. So, forgive me if this doesn’t read as smoothly as it could:
 
Quick link for today: Tomski’s list of guidelines for the BBC’s Web 2.0 project. My favourite guideline: “5. Treat the entire web as a creative canvas: don’t restrict your creativity to your own site.”
 

 

Web sites for citizen journalism techniques, tutorials

[Keyword: , , , ]. A list of resources from Danny Sanchez that’s worth browsing if you’re interested in the CJ arena – particularly OurMedia Personal Media Learning Center: “A great resource containing interviews with citizen media pioneers, summaries of media law and more.”

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Paul Bradshaw lectures on the Journalism degree at UCE Birmingham media department. He writes a number of blogs including the Online Journalism Blog, Interactive PR and Web and New Media

PCC to regulate newspaper audio and video

[Keyword: , ]. Journalism.co.uk reports on the move by the PCC to extend its regulation to cover newspaper audio and video, with chairman Sir Christopher Meyer quoted as saying: “We have now persuaded the newspaper and magazine industry of the United Kingdom to agree also the principle of our regulating moving pictures and sound on newspaper’s websites […] we are going to make an announcement, I hope, pretty soon in the next few weeks about exactly what that entails – there are some definitions to be sorted out – but it’s a major step forward, and it’s the first time, I think, that newspapers have voluntarily agreed without outside pressure to extend the remit of regulation through the PCC.”

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Paul Bradshaw lectures on the Journalism degree at UCE Birmingham media department. He writes a number of blogs including the Online Journalism Blog, Interactive PR and Web and New Media

A glossary of online news terms

[Keyword: , ]. The Online Journalism Review have started a potentially very useful glossary of online news terms on their site – and in admirable fashion, have made it a wiki that registered users can edit.

I’ve been in there and said my bit, adding user generated content, crowdsourcing, podcast, vodcast, vlogs, moblogs, photoblogs, CMS, and ‘wiki’ itself – and just to be a pedant, I’ve changed the headings from being simply bold (meaningless), to actually using heading tags (h3, if you must know). I’ll be claiming my percentage when the OJR’s search engine rankings improve.

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Paul Bradshaw lectures on the Journalism degree at UCE Birmingham media department. He writes a number of blogs including the Online Journalism Blog, Interactive PR and Web and New Media

The most popular news video clips online

[Keyword: , , .] How have I missed this before? The Guardian have been featuring a chart of viral news videos since November, with weekly commentary by Jemima Kiss. Well worth bookmarking.

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Paul Bradshaw lectures on the Journalism degree at UCE Birmingham media department. He writes a number of blogs including the Online Journalism Blog, Interactive PR and Web and New Media

Newspaper group to train its 1,500 journalists in online skills

[Keyword: , ]. As if proof were needed of the need for online journalism skills in today’s jobs market, HoldTheFrontPage reports that:

“Every journalist working on a Northcliffe newspaper is to be trained to update its accompanying website, putting stories online themselves and learning how to “add value” to articles.
“The group says fully integrated multi-media newsrooms will soon be in operation across its titles, with all of its 1,500 journalists writing for both print and online.”

What’s particularly notable here is the fact that “Sub-editors are also able to rewrite headlines for online stories.” The punny, cryptic headlines that work in print are not always suitable for search engine-optimised, scannable online consumption – but is this what they mean?

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Paul Bradshaw lectures on the Journalism degree at UCE Birmingham media department. He writes a number of blogs including the Online Journalism Blog, Interactive PR and Web and New Media