MAYOR BLOOMBERG LAUNCHES NYC MEDIA LAB – Innitiative to Promote Media Innovation

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
PR- 268-10
June 14, 2010

Partnership of the City, Polytechnic Institute of NYU and Columbia University Will Connect Media Companies with Academic Institutions and Drive Independent Technology Research

Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg today launched NYC Media Lab, a new initiative to promote innovation within New York City’s media industry. The new laboratory – a consortium of the New York City Economic Development Corporation, Polytechnic Institute of New York University (NYU-Poly) and Columbia University – will drive new technology research and connect companies looking to advance new media technologies with local academic institutions undertaking related research. NYC Media Lab builds on models established at Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Stanford University and is the nation’s first government-supported laboratory for media innovation. It will be housed within the NYU Polytechnic Institute campus in Downtown Brooklyn. Mayor Bloomberg made the announcement at the Wired “Disruptive by Design” conference held at the Morgan Library and Museum, where he was joined by New York City Economic Development Corporation President Seth W. Pinsky, NYU-Poly Provost Dianne Rekow, Columbia University Vice President for Intellectual Property & Technology Transfer Orin Herskowitz, and AOL Chairman and CEO Tim Armstrong, an advisor to the City’s MediaNYC 2020 initiative. Continue reading

Clay Shirky on the Collapse of Complex Business Models – Media & Newspapers

…Diller, Brill, and Murdoch seem be stating a simple fact—we will have to pay them—but this fact is not in fact a fact. Instead, it is a choice, one its proponents often decline to spell out in full, because, spelled out in full, it would read something like this:

“Web users will have to pay for what they watch and use, or else we will have to stop making content in the costly and complex way we have grown accustomed to making it. And we don’t know how to do that.”

-CShirky read the entire post on Shirky’s blog.

Tim Oreilly and Micheal Gough Discuss the Future of Publishing

O'Reilly Media founder and CEO Tim O'Reilly joins Michael Gough, Adobe VP for Product Experience, discuss the future of publishing.

O'Reilly Media founder and CEO Tim O'Reilly joins Michael Gough, Adobe VP for Product Experience, discuss the future of publishing.

O’Reilly Media founder and CEO Tim O’Reilly joins Michael Gough, Adobe VP for Product Experience, for an in-depth discussion of the rise of electronic content distribution, and its impact on the traditional publishing industry. (30:21 minutes)

Tewspaper: Crowdsourced News Via Twitter and Social Media

Tewspaper pulls information from user contributions on social media websites and creates a topically sorted newspaper. At launch, the website has five local websites covering Baltimore, Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles, and New York City. Each local site also has national news coverage in a variety of subjects such as business, entertainment, and sports.

Baltimore, MD (PRWEB) August 25, 2009 — Tewspaper, an online newspaper without writers, has launched with coverage of five major metropolitan cities – Baltimore, Dallas, Chicago, Los Angeles, and New York City. Tewspaper scours social media websites such as Twitter and filters messages down to breaking news. One of the local sites, Baltimore News, brings algorithmically filtered news to people in Tewspaper’s home town.

Tewspaper is neither endorsed nor sponsored by Twitter or other social media websites; the company uses publicly available APIs to connect with social media sites and find relevant data. One of Tewspaper’s innovations is a system of filtering through the obscure and finding the relevant news on social media sites. For example, Twitter alone has over 2 billion messages, and is growing by thousands of messages per minute. Tewspaper makes it easy to find out what is happening now, in an organized, succinct, and accessible fashion. It is an ideal way for the Internet generation, who text and tweet, to view the news at their rapidly moving pace.

“We began by limiting the news to trusted authorities on Twitter. From there, we are working on an algorithm that can find additional breaking news from anyone on Twitter and other websites as it happens,” said Jared Lamb, the creator of Tewspaper.

Another obstacle Tewspaper had to overcome was the limited content it could locate for each story. To solve this problem, the website automatically matches images to related stories. Tewspaper determines the optimal image to display for every story based upon the author, subject, headline text, date, links, and other context.

Other local editions are available for Chicago News, Los Angeles News, Dallas News, and New York City News.

###

Contact Information
Jared Lamb
Tewspaper
http://www.tewspaper.com
443-857-4829

the Vancouver Project shoots for New Media Coverage of 2010 Olympics

the Vancouver Project

We want a ‘new media’ approach to the Vancouver Olympics so that people can have a ‘behind the scenes’ view of the Olympics as an experience not just a standard audience view point because people are demanding greater and greater access that we are able to deliver.
—Mission Statement

Read all about their efforts at the Vancouver Project blog.

Game Changer – HP Introduces World’s First Web-connected Home Printer

(from yesterday)

HP today unveiled the world’s first web-connected home printer: The HP Photosmart Premium with TouchSmart Web.

HP is bringing the power of the web directly to the printer and combining it with HP’s TouchSmart technology to give people quick, easy, touchscreen access to popular digital content.

Designed for the digital generation and connected households, the HP Photosmart Premium with TouchSmart Web features an entirely new web-based printing platform with HP applications (apps). Similar to other Internet-connected devices, these apps, which are viewable on an extra-large, intuitive-to-use TouchSmart panel, allow people to connect instantly with fun, informative and personal content.

View the entire Release Here

Dave Eggers is Enthusiastic About Print

Dave Eggers, philanthropist, teacher-at-large, and author of You Shall Know Our Velocity among other things is pretty confident about the future of print.  So much so that he will return anyone’s email if they have doubts about print media’s viability.  Here is an Excerpt from an email Gawker published:

“As long as newspapers offer less each day- less news, less great writing, less graphic innovation, fewer photos- then they’re giving readers few reasons to pay for the paper itself. With our prototype, we aim to make the physical object so beautiful and luxurious that it will seem a bargain at $1. The web obviously presents all kinds of advantages for breaking news, but the printed newspaper does and will always have a slew of advantages, too. It’s our admittedly unorthodox opinion that the two can coexist, and in fact should coexist. But they need to do different things. To survive, the newspaper, and the physical book, needs to set itself apart from the web. Physical forms of the written word need to offer a clear and different experience. And if they do, we believe, they will survive. Again, this is a time to roar back and assert and celebrate the beauty of the printed page. Give people something to fight for, and they will fight for it. Give something to pay for, and they’ll pay for it.

We’ll keep you posted throughout the summer about our progress with this newspaper prototype, and any other good news we come across.”  Read The Whole Email

Video below, Dave accepting his 2008 TED Prize, author Dave Eggers asks the TED community to personally, creatively engage with local public schools.

Newspaper Association of America Abandons Its Members

 

NAA sent me a letter with this month’s Presstime magazine letting me know that this is the last print edition I will be receiving.  They are moving online only.  Truth be told, it was probably the last print edition I would be getting anyway you see I graduated from NYU in January and NAA wants proof that I still qualify for their student rate. I do, but you know what NAA, I’m not wasting my time to send you the appropriate paperwork. 

Why is NAA, the NEWSPAPER Association of America, eliminating their print publication and moving online only?  The reason they cite in the letter is “to adapt our organization to the realities of today’s newspaper business”.  I’m calling bullshit on their reasoning.  The real reason I suspect is because NAA is too big a coward to try something innovative and instead is hoping to just hang in there a little longer like everyone else and hope for the best.

According to NAA’s website, here is the association’s purpose:

Today, NAA serves the newspaper industry in strategic efforts to:

. Serve as a catalyst for industry growth
. Identify and disseminate examples of industry innovation
. Provide tools to exchange information and ideas
. Advocate and communicate industry views and interests to the Federal Government and to third-party standards and measurement bodies
. Communicate the vitality of newspaper media to external constituencies including the advertising community, Wall Street and the news media.

    Did you read the first and last bullet points?  What an awful message eliminating print sends to NAA’s advertisers, NAA’s members, and to the advertisers who spent roughly 34 Billion dollars in PRINT advertising last year. Continue reading

    What Google Maps and Everyblock’s iPhone App means for Established News Media

    EveryBlock’s iPhone app -from Everyblock

    If you live in an EveryBlock city and have an iPhone you can now have more news access than you ever thought you needed.  The app is available for free at the App Store.

    Here’s how Everyblock explains the features of the app:  The EveryBlock iPhone app lets you explore news that’s happened recently in your immediate area.  We publish dozens of different categories of local news, drawing from hundreds of sources. Much of it is updated every single day. Examples of the information we publish: Continue reading

    Alan Rusbridger on the Future of Journalism

    Alan Rusbridger at the Institut für Medienpolitik in Berlin on April 22, speaking on the future of journalism and explaining how the Guardian opened up its site to a wider pool of contributors.


    Alan Rusbridger on the Future of Journalism from Carta on Vimeo.

    Guardian editor-in-chief Alan Rusbridger’s (@arusbridger) sharing some thoughts.

    Steve Buttry’s Blueprint For News Media Companies

    A Blueprint for the Complete Community Connection is exactly what it sounds like.  Steve Buttry is editor of The Gazette and GazetteOnline a news source for eastern Iowa, Cedar Rapids, and Iowa City. On his blog he graciously shares his detailed 38page blueprint for the path ahead for Gazette Communications.

    This is a must read for all news media professionals.  The document is insightful and creates great potential for reflection on business practices. I’m not saying his blueprint is THE best, but even if you hate his ideas, there are lots of salient points to build on. One obvious forehead-smacking point he raises is that the details of his blueprint, “will be determined not by my decree but by the needs of the marketplace and by the creativity and abilities of the staff”.  Did you catch that?  THE NEEDS OF THE MARKETPLACE.  In the internet paradigm, what needs are you now filling?  I love it.

    Something I wish Steve would have addressed more clearly is the distinction between geographic communities and communities of interest.  Does he agree there is a distinction?  Why or why not?  Can print and online serve both communities equally well? How does his blueprint address these distinct communities?

    I emailed Steve and asked about the above points.  Here is his response:

    Robert, absolutely there is a difference between geographic communities and communities of interest. However, the local media organization has its strongest opportunities to appeal to communities with at least a geographic tie. For instance, we attract attention of Iowa Hawkeye fans around the world. They are a community of interest, but they have a geographic tie. The blueprint details plans to help countless communities of interest within and overlapping a geographic community – the family/friends of each high school graduate or engaged couple, congregations, etc. Print can serve some communities of interest (we have a business magazine and a magazine geared for young adults), but because of the cost of transportation, print is quite geographically based. Thanks for asking.

    There you have it metaprinter readers, ask and you shall recieve.

    RELATED:

    How are you going to make money? By changing your relationship with your community -from OJR.org

    PricewaterhouseCoopers Releases Newspaper Outlook 2009 Report

    Outlook for newspaper publishing in the digital age | 2009 report -from PWC.com (pdf)

    56 page report on the outlook of the industry ask lots of great questions the industry should be asking itself like “What does your audience want from you – and do you
    know what they will pay for?”, many newspapers have not honestly asked themselves this question because if they did they would be the largest creators of business websites in their DMA.

    Newspaper Outlook 2009 Related Video (sorry PWC doesn’t allow embeds at this point).

    Metaprinter Tries Out Printcasting

    What is Printcasting?  From their site:

    Printcasting is a first of its kind online tool that assists users in dynamically creating customized newspapers and magazines comprised of information gathered from local news sources such as blogs, newsletters, news organizations, user content, and other Contributors.  Creating your own publication is as simple as adding the elements you want included in your publication through the easy to use Printcasting.com interface.  Without having to hire a team of editors, graphic artists, or authors you will be able to create your own, professional publication for distribution.

    Publishers will also be able to allow Advertisers to place targeted advertisements in their publications and, in the future, receive a portion of revenue generated from those advertisements.  Publications created by the user may then be available for print, download, and distribution to Subscribers.

    I wrote about the years-ago-created RSS to print application FeedJournal and it’s potential for a digital newspaper application last year, so Printcasting’s claim to be the “first of its kind” in this realm isn’t necessarily true, what is unique though is their attempt to monetize the resulting product with a simple ad creation tool (among other things).

    Printcasting is a Knight News Challenge winner and their website is inviting so I decided to give it a try for Metaprinter.  I want to emphasize that the Printcasting site was in open Beta / preview mode when I did this so don’t judge too harshly.

    Step 1. Definitely watch this instructional video before doing anything. Continue reading

    @adrianholovaty versus @steveouting in today’s New York Times? No says Outing.

    ‘Hyperlocal’ Web Sites Deliver News Without Newspapers -from NYTimes.com

    “They rely on pulling data from other sources, so they really can’t function if news organizations disappear,” said Steve Outing

    “In many cities, the local blog scene is so rich and deep that even if a newspaper goes away, there would be still be plenty of stuff for us to publish,” said Adrian Holovaty

    In a brief twitter exchange with @steveouting he revealed that the single quote in the NYT article is out of context of a long conversation he had with the NYT reporter. So there is no battle between the two.  Having read his blog and articles for a long time, I believe him, but the NYT set up his quote and the entire article as a battle of old versus new.

    In my interview with Montclair, New Jersey news blog Baristanet.com, cofounder Liz George sees no problem blogging without newspapers.  See the excerpt below. Continue reading

    Mobile Innovation Forum This Tuesday in Boston

    Xconomy’s first-ever Forum on the Future of Mobile Innovation in New England will be held Tuesday April 7, 2009.

    One can’t-miss highlight of the forum will be a “fireside” chat with Rich Miner, who brought the Android platform to Google and was recently named general manager of the new Google Ventures, and Sandy Pentland, the MIT Media Lab luminary who leads the Next Billion Network for mobile entrepreneurs and has been using mobile digital sensors to study social signaling between people. (Pentland just published a book on that subject, Honest Signals).

    This looks like a great event for anyone in the Boston area on Tuesday.  Especially considering Mit’s Next Billion Network states, “Within the next three years, another billion people will begin to make regular use of cell phones, continuing the fastest adoption of a new technology in history”.

    NPR Labs Launches CPB-Funded Study on Power Increase for HD Radio

    NPR Labs Launches CPB-Funded Study on Power Increase for HD Radio TM

    Challenge is to Improve Digital Radio Coverage

    and Protect Today’s Analog FM Services

    April 2, 2009, Washington – The Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) has awarded a grant to NPR Labs to undertake an expedited Advanced Digital Radio Coverage and Compatibility Study to improve innovative HD Radio TM services. The study will establish industry recommendations for the amount of power increase needed to improve digital radio coverage while protecting the existing analog FM system and its subcarriers, which serve more than 32 million public radio and 239 million total FM radio listeners each week. (Source: ACT1 based on Arbitron Nationwide, Persons Using Radio, Fall 2008, Persons 12+, Mon.-Sun Midnight-Midnight)

    The new study will seek to determine how to maximize HD coverage while minimizing interference with essential analog FM radio services.  It will build on earlier research by NPR Labs of digital radio coverage, also funded by CPB. The earlier study revealed that FM services would experience a high level of interference from HD signals in some areas, if the needed power increase was not closely managed.

    “We’re pleased CPB has selected NPR Labs to expedite a detailed technical analysis so we can resolve these critical issues,” said Vivian Schiller, NPR President and CEO. “NPR is committed to advancing HD Radio TM and protecting the quality of the listening experience for all of our audiences.  If the power increase is not carefully managed, NPR member stations risk losing audience to signal interference.”      Continue reading

    Jacek Utko: Can design save the newspaper? TED2009

    Jacek Utko is an extraordinary Polish newspaper designer whose redesigns for papers in Eastern Europe not only win awards, but increase circulation by up to 100%. Can good design save the newspaper? Should newspapers be Free? Tabloid? Local? Niche? Opinion? Breakfast fodder? “In the long run there is no practical reason for newspapers to survive” states Jacek. Regardless, he is working with newspapers to create entirely new workflows and embedding great marketing, via design, right into the products.

    Why you should listen to him:

    Newspaper designer Jacek Utko suggests that it’s time for a fresh, top-to-bottom rethink of the newspaper. (At this point, why not try it?) In his work, he’s proved that good design can help readers reconnect with newspapers. A former architect, Utko took on the job of redesigning several newspapers in former Soviet Bloc nations, starting from basic principles. He worked closely with newspaper executives to figure out the business goals of their papers, and then radically reformatted the product to fit those goals. (And he wasn’t afraid to break a few grids in the process.)

    As the art director at Warsaw’s Puls Biznesu in 2004, he redesigned this small business-focused newspaper and immediately won the SND award for world’s best-designed newspaper. Readers responded, and circulation went up. He’s now art director for the Bonnier Business Press, overseeing papers in Eastern Europe and the Baltic states, and the work he oversees consistently wins major prizes (including another SND world’s-best in 2007 for Estonia’s Äripäev), despite their small teams and limited resources.

    “Who knew that the world’s best designed newspapers are in Poland and Estonia?”

    -June Cohen, TED

    RELATED:
    TED2009 Evan Williams: How Twitter’s spectacular growth is being driven by unexpected uses
    TED2005 Sasa Vucinic: Why a free press is the best investment

    Post Digital Design? Newspapers Return!

    Really Interesting Group is a multi disciplinary organisation working in post digital design. Partners work independently or collaboratively and share resources across the group.  We collected some things from the internet we thought would work well on paper and we made it into a newspaper with a limited edition run of 1,000.

    You can read more about the project and see some great photos via noisydecentgraphics blog.


    Really Interesting Group from This Happened – London on Vimeo.

    I stumbled upon this through http://www.thishappened.org/ which I normally would just tweet or bookmark on delicious and move on, but it was just too cool to skip.  I love the design of their printed newspaper.  The lines are so crisp and clean, “I wanted to avoid it looking like a newspaper that a designer had been let loose on. Graphics every-fucking-where. Something you might see from a bad brand”.  Objective accomplished!

    What about the font Robert?  Well, “The brief was to be able to read it in bed without glasses on. So I wanted the type to be biggish and nice and clear”.  Mission Accomplished! The American newspaper industry could have used these types of designs a while back. I know redesigns won’t save an entire industry, but maybe the few surviving newspapers will take some design cues from this project?!

    Big Picture Blog Earth Hour 2009

    More than 1,000 cities in over 80 countries observed Earth Hour 2009 on Saturday March 28th, as homes, office towers and landmarks turned off their lights for an hour starting at 8.30 pm local time to raise awareness about climate change and the threat from rising greenhouse gas emissions.

    The before and after are displayed in really cool javascript enabled pictures which fade to darkness (before and after) when clicked. Go try it out! and Kudos again to Alan Taylor for putting this together.

    RELATED:

    Earth Hour: http://www.earthhour.org

    Las Vegas Uplugs for Earth Hour

    Flickr Earth Hour 2009 Slideshow

    News Media Innovation, Convergence and Sustainability – Interview with Don Carli

    Interview with Don Carli Executive Vice President of SustainCommWorld LLC, and Senior Research Fellow with the Institute for Sustainable Communication.

    Don has been a leading researcher, author, educator and speaker addressing the sustainability of media supply chains for the last decade, and for over 25 years has been a respected media technology and marketing strategy consultant to major advertisers, agencies and publishers.

    RI- Why are newspapers and other traditional publishers pushing the issue of eReaders as a communications medium when something like less than one third of one percent of the reading population of the United States owns these products? Is it a paper sustainability issue? Is it a cost issue? What’s the justification?

    DC- Other than pushing the “cool” factor, one of the main selling points being made by marketers of eReaders is that they are greener than print. It is little surprise that the common view held by consumers who don’t know the backstory is that going digital means going green and saving trees. Many are in for a rude awakening. When subjected to “cradle-to-cradle ” Lifecycle Analysis eReading is not nearly as green as many naively assume it is.

    There is no question that print media could do a better job of managing the sustainability of its supply chains and waste streams, but it’s a misguided notion to assume that digital media is categorically greener. Computers, eReaders and cell phones don’t grow on trees and their spiraling requirement for energy is unsustainable. Continue reading

    SXSW09 The Future of News SBJ

    Old Growth Media And The Future Of News

    The following is a speech Steven Berlin Johnson gave yesterday at the South By Southwest Interactive Festival in Austin.Can we expect the general public to navigate the new ecosystem with the same skill and discretion?

    Let’s say for the sake of argument that we can’t. Let’s say it’s just too overwhelming for the average consumer to sort through all the new voices available online, to separate fact from fiction, reporting from rumor-mongering. Let’s say they need some kind of authoritative guide, to help them find all the useful information that’s proliferating out there in the wild.

    If only there were some institution that had a reputation for journalistic integrity that had a staff of trained editors and a growing audience arriving at its web site every day seeking quality information. If only…

    Of course, we have thousands of these institutions. They’re called newspapers.  continue at link above

    Here is the Qik video of his talk. You can read along at the link above.  The recording starts in section 2, paragraph 3, line 4 here:

    or the print newspaper business: the future of news itself. Because there are really two worst case scenarios that we’re concerned about right now, and it’s important to distinguish between them. There is panic that newspapers are going to disappear as businesses. And then there’s panic that crucial information is going to disappear with them, that we’re going to suffer as culture because newspapers will no long be able to afford to generate the information we’ve relied on for so many years.

    Steven is bullish on news and I like his take on the situation because it raises some new points and turns newspapers role into that of a filter.  Is he right? Who knows but hey, at least he’s thinking it through giving people ideas to knock down, manipulate or affirm.  He did give me one great idea so I fired off the email below to my local police and fire departments.  I look forward to their response.

    To my township officials,

    My name is Robert Ivan, I am an aberdeen-matawan local and run news media blog metaprinter.com.  I am writing to request a meeting with someone at your offices to set up an RSS feed for fire and police information.  I feel this would be a great service to our community and serve as a yardstick by which all other public service announcements will be measured.

    The idea came about when I drove past the train station today to find a building had partially burned down.  Had I not driven past the building I would have known nothing about it.  It made me wonder what other crimes or disasters were occurring in my town, around my home, that I did not know about.

    I hold an MA in Graphic Communications management and technology from NYU, have over 9 years experience in online media and web design, and am a member of the local chamber of commerce.  I would love to speak to someone about this.  I am not looking to profit from this enterprise, just get our community better connected as traditional media becomes increasingly less relevant.  My contact info is below.

    Best,
    Robert Ivan

    The Newspaper Industry, The Dip, Seth Godin

    Seth Godin‘s book, The Dip, is all about quitting.  It’s about learning WHEN to quit and WHEN not to quit.  It’s also about learning WHAT to quit, and WHAT not to quit.  As one of the many examples he gives for quitting, he gives the following common scenario currently unfolding in the American newspaper industry.

    If you work at a big city newspaper, you can see that there’s no light at the end of that career-choice tunnel. Circulation is dropping, and it’s going to drop ever faster. Most papers have little chance of replacing their traditional business with an online alternative.  As a result, every day at most papers is going to be just a little bit worse than the day before. Every day you stay is a bad strategic decision for your career because every day you get better at something that isn’t that useful-and you are another day behind others who are learning something more useful. The only reason to stay is the short-term pain associated with quitting.  Winners understand that taking that pain now prevents a lot more pain later.

    I was reminded of the above passage while flying home after covering NAA’s mediaXchange in Las Vegas.  I won’t be back.  There were maybe 4 good speakers at the event.  Perhaps worse though was the crowd, a listless mob staring into a dark tunnel hoping to see the light at the end (but was there even a light to see?).  People weren’t asking good, tough questions, they were just kind of.. there.  The annual convention used to be a place where equipment manufacturers showcased their new products and where newspaper execs. came to make sweet deals.  That pretty much fell apart in 2008 because of cost cutting in the industry (and finally a realization that equipment doesn’t manufacture customers) and so this year the name was changed to something more EXTREME! like mediaXchange and a more digital spin was put on the entire proceedings.  They should have served Brawndo.

    How the hell does NAA get away with scheduling Lee Abrams to talk about redesigns for the closing session?  And how the hell does no one in the audience ask him a tough question, like “why is a redesign so good if your papers are still failing”?  or “is it any bellwether that your only growing print product is the FREE METRO TABLOID, Redeye”? or “do you see a fundamental problem with the newspaper industry operating in an internet paradigm”?   Lee Abrams by the way is a retired old man/ radio executive who helped drive XM Radio into the ground and is now the Chief Innovation Officer for the Tribune Company.  Are you kidding me Tribune?  Employees and stakeholders in that company should be livid at his appointment.  Are you kidding me newspaper industry?  This is what you “gathered” everyone up for?  I wish I had the ability to print out Clay Shirky’s latest blog post Newspapers and Thinking the Unthinkableand stuff it in everyone’s free tote bag.  WTF?!

    For all the time and money I spent on attending mediaXchange, I leaned a minimum amount of good, new information.  I hoped to see sessions on paradigm shifts and accepting new realities, but instead heard mostly product pitches.  Hell, I should have been there TALKING to these people.  I wanted to bum rush the stage at the closing session and say, “WAKE UP.  NEWSPAPER REDESIGNS ARE DEAD.  LETS TALK ABOUT NEW MEDIA”.  But the problem was that the audience seemed fine and even INTERESTED!!!! in hearing about redesigns from Lee Abrams.  Jeez!!!   As social media session speaker Kurt Greenbaum (one of the good speakers) followed up on his blog, “5.8% of NAA attendees cared about social media“.

    I should have skipped mediaXchange, I should have quit, I should have went to SXSW.  That’s where the innovation is happening, and that’s where you’ll find me next year.  I hope to find news media execs. there too but I doubt it.  Godin says quit a loser, well I just quit mediaXchange.

    Paywall? Copyrights? Meet The New Elvis

    Kutiman, Big Media, and the Future of Creative Entrepreneurship -from 43Folders

    “Because, this is what your new Elvis looks like, gang. And,
    eventually somebody will figure out (and publicly admit) that Kutiman,
    and any number of his peers on the “To-Sue” list, should be passed
    from Legal down to A&R.”

    He’s probably right, but it’s also a little sad.

    Second Street Media Solutions Owners Matt Coen and Doug Villhard Discuss Upickem

    Interview with Second Street Media Solutions Co-owners Matt Coen and Doug Villhard to learn more about their fastest growing product, Upickem, which is an online contesting platform.

    RI - Simply publishing content on a website is not enough.  How does Upickem bring news sites into the internet paradigm?
    MC - By virtue of the way contests work, ie. participation, we make newspaper news sites much more interactive with their target community.

    RI - How do you drive user engagement? How do you build communities?
    MC - The contests engage a passionate community. “cutest dog contest” for example generated 4.5 million pageviews, 6800 dog photo submissions, over 1million votes, and 15,000 registered users for The Minneapolis Star Tribune.  The users who register to participate in the contest provide the paper with their email info that can be used to drive participation in future contests. Continue reading

    Interview With Mark Briggs CEO Serra Media

     

    First, a little about the company:  Serra Media is a web technology company that’s taken a unique approach to web-based software for local publishers. We think it should be truly innovative, yet easy to use. It should be made for you and leverage the power of your brand in the local marketplace. And it should even be fun. It’s all about technology with style, plus world-class customer service. And it will help you grow audience and revenue, too.

    Hyperlocal imagination. Hyperlocal innovation.

    Newsgarden is our first product and it can revolutionize local news. It is a map-based web application that filters the location of recent news items, blog posts and other information available on the web down to the neighborhood level.

    But it’s not just news on a map; it’s about building new communities online, with new content, in a way that integrates the journalism already being done. It allows a news publisher or local blogger to cover more news with less resources, creates a new market for advertising revenue and helps you move toward a future dominated by location-aware mobile devices

    ###

    With the above in mind, I wanted to learn more about Newsgarden so I met up with Serra Media CEO Mark Briggs.  Here’s what I found out.

    RI - What is Newsgarden? It looks like a Google Maps Mashup.
    MB - Newsgarden is our premier product offering and yes it can be described as a Google Maps mashup, however it is much more powerful than that.  Think of Newsgarden as a social mapping platform where geographically targeted content from news staff or readers is displayed in a familiar Google map.  The content can be in the form of stories, photos, links, video and really anything else where geographic context adds to the experience. Continue reading

    Readability Cleans Up The Clutter

    I’ve been guilty of reading the “print view” version of long interesting articles on news sites to remove all the noise and clutter of those sites. Sometimes I’ll even use the Web Designer’s Toolbar to disable javascript. Some smart people at arc90 labs have gone several steps further and created the above “browser bookmarklet on steroids” to improve the reading experience.

    Purists will say I’m not supporting the site by avoiding their advertising, but you know what? In the 14 years I’ve been using the internet, I have never intentionally clicked on an advertisement. If in the last 14 years, the only thing those sites can come up with to grab my attention is a Pop Under ad, then they fail – not me. Continue reading

    Kindle 2 Review For Newspaper Readers

    Reading the New York Times on Kindle 2 -blog.reifman.org

    I think switching to The Times on the Kindle 2 is a fantastic way to lessen your impact on the environment, reducing tremendous waste from paper, print, delivery and plastic bags. Perhaps saving a forest. However, it’s not for everyone. You’ll need to be willing to commit to the form factor and accept changes in the reading experience.

    Overall, I give the Kindle 2 with the New York Times a B to B+. If Amazon makes the software updates I mentioned above, this would raise the experience to an A-.

    I love my iPhone and I’ve used both the NetNewswire application and the New York Times application on it – but reading The Times on the Kindle is better in enough ways to make me carry both…before even considering the Kindle’s blog and book reading capabilities… continue

    Thorough review of the kindle 2 for newspaper readers.  I’m still not convinced that it is cheap enough for the masses. The cost of reading the NYTimes.com site from home, office, laptop, or on my blackberry is free (right now). If the economics of this change, then the kindle 2 and others, will become more attractive.  Having said that, if the cost becomes prohibitively expensive or constrained (ie. you must buy our Hearst eReader to read Heast content) then quality free content will continue to grow in popularity.

    Newspaper Industry Advice Via Smithsonian 2.0 Gathering

    Substitute the name “Smithsonian” below with the name of your favorite Print Newspaper and we may have something to work with towards effecting positive change in the newspaper industry.  *Note my hyperlinks and bolding added for emphasis.  Note also that not once do they whine about the destructive or disruptive nature of the internet on their business model, they embrace it and seek to leverage it for furthering their mission.

    Smithsonian 2.0: A Gathering to Re-Imagine the Smithsonian in the Digital Age

    Twenty-four million visitors come through the Smithsonian’s doors each year to view our collections and to learn about science, technology, history, art and culture. We host 175 million (more than seven times the number of our physical visitors) through the Web. As digital technology accelerates and the Web becomes an even more essential part of our everyday lives, that number will grow, possibly reaching billions.

    As part of Secretary Wayne Clough’s strategic planning initiative, the Institution will host “Smithsonian 2.0: A Gathering to Re-Imagine the Smithsonian in the Digital Age”—a two-day conference on Jan. 23 and 24, supported by the Smithsonian National Board. Smithsonian 2.0 will bring more than 30 creative leaders from the Web, digital and new media worlds (chosen for their engagement of large audiences, including youth) to meet with a core group of Smithsonian staff to look at our vision, our challenges, and our current level of achievement in Web and new media. This group will try to identify how to move the Smithsonian forward toward a “Smithsonian 2.0.” Continue reading

    New York Times Article Skimmer Prototype

    Grid Format User Interfaces All The Rage?

    Navigating the home page of most newspaper websites stinks.  There are literally hundreds of links scattered about with very little thought toward user engagement and ease of use.  In the 14 years that most news sites have been in use, it still seems easier to navigate a printed newspaper than a news site.

    Personally speaking, I can skim through an entire Wall Street Journal in about 5 minutes before going back and reading entire articles that interest me.  Try doing this on a news site and you will quickly realize that there is no seamless way to recreate the speed and effectiveness.  The New York Times article skimmer and others below attempt to solve this problem.

    The New York Times is working on the new user interface prototype for their content called ‘article skimmer’.  Below is a screen shot of their Dining & Wine section in Article Skimmer. It’s a nice clean layout, good for scanning.

    Continue reading

    Washington Times Evaluating Personalized Editions of its Newsweekly

    Wash. Times evaluating tailored pub -from newspapers&technology

    “We have agreed to create an environment where a certain number of customers can go online and customize their weekly edition of The Washington Times by adding or subtracting content on the fly,” he said. “We are shooting to do that four times and then we will go back to readers and take a poll as to their reactions.”

    The results of the poll will be released at the Summer 2009 Individuated News Conference in June.

    Related:

    Hewlett Packard Inkjet Web Press For Newspapers

    Syntops Technology: fully automated workflow

    Océ Digital Presses

    Adrian Holovaty Puts Out A Call For Revenue Ideas

    Looking toward EveryBlock’s future -from holovaty.com

    “…we’ve reached an interesting point in our project’s growth: our grant ends on June 30, and, under the terms of our grant, we’re open-sourcing the EveryBlock publishing system so that anybody will be able to take the code to create similar sites. That’s a Good Thing, in that EveryBlock’s philosophies and tools will have the opportunity to spread around the world much faster than we could have done on our own, but it puts the six of us EveryBlockers in an odd spot. How do we sustain our project if our code is free to the world?

    We have a number of ideas for sustaining our project beyond a dependency on grants, like building a local advertising engine and/or selling hosted versions of the open-source software, but we’re sure there are other ways for EveryBlock to be a successful business. That brings me to the reason I’m posting this — we’re looking for ideas and partners who would be interested in helping us figure this out. If you have any ideas or suggestions, get in touch with me. I’m confident we’ll make something happen; it’s just a matter of how.”

    How do I think EveryBlock can become economically sustainable?

    1. Gannett or Advance Publications buys the services of the entire EveryBlock team to incorporate EveryBlock into their news sites.  Most importantly the team is tasked with creating logical, simple, cheap ad placement on news sites.   The Code remains open source.

    2. Go the Firefox route and partner with Google to make their search the default search on EveryBlock. Make millions a year, remain open source.

    3. Partner with Apple to to have Everyblock preloaded onto every iPhone and iPod.  This frees Apple up from using popular Google apps like Maps and Yahoo apps like Local. This make even more money when partnered with the applestore.

    4. Go the WordPress route and offer consulting and other services.

    5. If anyone knows how to make money online it is Amazon.com.  Maybe they can use EveryBlock for geo-tagging their products and services.

    6. Make Weichert or some other huge realtor the default real estate search for EveryBlock.

    7. Offer EveryBlock and EveryBlog (currently taken by drupal)  franchises to locals looking to get into publishing.

    Lastly, I just want to mention that in its current iteration, Everyblock is extremely impersonal and that adding or partnering with content producers like blogs or news sites could add real value via increased community participation.

    I’m sure there are others.  Share your ideas!

    Q&A with Social technology and business strategist Peter Kim

    I’m interested in Peter Kim’s opinions regarding newspaper websites and general interest news sites.   Instead of keeping his comments private he agreed to this Q&A for metaprinter.com.  Enjoy!

    First, Introduce Yourself.
    RI Who are you?
    PK Peter Kim

    RI What is your specialty?
    PK Social technology and business strategy.

    RI What have you done?
    PK Strategy consulting with PwC; Managed global marketing operations for PUMA AG; Industry analyst at Forrester Research.

    RI What are you doing?
    PK Building a social technology + services firm based in Austin, Texas. Continue reading

    Podcast – Video Game Revenue Models To Save The New York Times?

    I am Following up my original post below about micropayments with this interview I conducted with GamesOverGirls.com founder Jack Bartolucci.  The purpose of this interview is to learn more about the different revenue streams game companies and console manufacturers use to make money.

    Through the interview I learn that money comes not just from selling the games themselves but also:

    1. Add ons (like buying new songs for RockBand via their in game store – 28million downloads since Dec.2008)
    2. New Chapters (like for Grand Theft Auto 4)
    3. Peripherals (like game specific controllers)
    4. In-game advertising  (like the ads Barack Obama ran in Burnout Paradise and 17 other games)

    And the point-of-purchase is really simple.  Depending on what system you are using it’s either done online or right through the console.  Regardless of what system you are using all the major gaming systems work like E-ZPass. Just set up a one time account with your credit card and all purchases from that point on are transacted with one click.  iTunes works similarly.  Super Easy, Super Convenient.

    What newspapers are doing now is not working.  If NYTimes.com can’t break even with advertising revenue, who can?  LATimes.com thinks they can, but they can’t.

    How can newspaper sites use these types of revenue streams to make money?  As I say below, I would have paid 10cents to watch the Mike Tyson interview.  What would NYT need to do to get my account info to enable such a “one click transaction”?  How about having the video cut out halfway through at which point you are asked to submit any monetary amount above zero cents? Just like the the videogame companies you would only have to input your credit card info One Time.  After that, transactions occur through one simple click as described earlier.

    Obviously you can’t do this with every single article, but you can absolutely do it for every single video and audio slideshow.  Make sure to allow comments and ratings viewable by everyone so people will be even more inclined to pay to view the multimedia piece.  If people don’t want to pay?  That’s their loss, you’ve got bills to pay NYT.

    Here’s how Nintendo and Activision are doing compared to NYT stock over the last 2 years.

    The interview is safe for work until about halfway through when Jack decides he wants to interview me and we wind up talking about all sorts of things we are not qualified to talk about like Professional Journalism, Sexism, Maria Bartiromo, and Race Relations in the USA.  But it sure is funny to listen to and if you are a gamer and not easily scared by political incorrectness then head on over to GamesOverGirls.comfor more.

    [display_podcast]

    Continue reading

    Print CEO Blog revisits Digital Newspapers

    Will the Printed Blog Save the Newspaper Industry? -from PrintCEOblog

    Ran across this recently and found it pretty interesting:

    http://www.theprintedblog.com

    The stated intent is to turn around the newspaper industry:

    The Printed Blog is changing the way people read and consume news and other information. We hope to play a vital part in reversing the fortunes of the newspaper industry with this new media project… but we need your help.

    I wish them the best of luck. I pitched a similar product to the washington post and tribune however neither was interested.

    My idea, found here, uses feedjourn.com’s software to aggregate and paginate content and images.

    The real up-sell here is taking the one competitive advantage newspapers have (distribution) and leveraging it to deliver ads and other products better than direct mail and the internet can.

    Take a look at this mockup (PDF) and the advertising associated with it.

    The revenue potential is great. General interest newspapers that just move their product online are dead.

    Slate.com’s Jack Shafer asks for Ideas – more MonkeyFishing?

    In this article: Building an iTunes for Newspapers Answering David Carr’s excellent challenge. Slate.com writer and PressBox editor Jack Shafer asks for ideas regarding news dissemination.

    “I’m not a fan of the PDF-like editions powered by NewspaperDirect.com, are you? I’ve got a couple of editorial ideas for what a paid online newspaper could do for me that a Web or print version can’t. Send yours to slate.pressbox@gmail.com, and we’ll write the sequel together. (E-mail may be quoted by name in “The Fray,” Slate’s readers’ forum; in a future article; or elsewhere unless the writer stipulates otherwise. Permanent disclosure: Slate is owned by the Washington Post Co.)”

    Here is my email to slate.pressbox.@gmail.com: Continue reading

    Congratulations to the 2009 duPont-Columbia Awards Winners!

    Congratulations to the 2009 duPont-Columbia Awards Winners!

    New York, NY, January 12, 2009—Thirteen winners of the Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Awards have been announced by Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism.

    WFAA-TV, Dallas, Byron Harris & Brett Shipp
    Money for Nothing, A Passing Offense, The Buried and the Dead

    ABC News, Tim Hetherington & Sebastian Junger
    Nightline, The Other War: Afghanistan

    All Things Considered, NPR, Melissa Block & Robert Siegel
    Coverage of the Chengdu Earthquake

    California Newsreel, San Francisco, & Vital Pictures, Boston
    Unnatural Causes: Is Inequality Making Us Sick? on PBS

    Chicago Public Radio, PRI, NPR, Alex Blumberg & Adam Davidson
    This American Life: The Giant Pool of Money

    CNN & Christiane Amanpour
    God’s Warriors

    Current TV & Christof Putzel
    From Russia with Hate

    HBO, Thomas Lennon & Ruby Yang
    Cinemax Reel Life: The Blood of Yingzhou District

    NPR & Laura Sullivan
    All Things Considered: Sexual Abuse of Native American Women

    Oregon Public Broadcasting
    The Silent Invasion

    Safari Media, ITVS, Chris Sheridan & Patty Kim
    Independent Lens, Abduction: The Megumi Yokota Story on PBS

    WJLA-TV, Washington, DC, & Roberta Baskin
    Drilling for Dollars: Children’s Dentistry Investigation

    WTVT-TV, Tampa, & Doug Smith
    Small Town Justice

    Quality journalism and investigative reporting without newspapers? Yes, it can happen. More info about the Alfred I. duPont-Columbia awards

    Newspaper Publisher with an Excellent Attitude and A Solid Plan!

    Scot Morrissey becomes the new Publisher of The Athens Banner-Herald and OnlineAthens.com today. Read his statements here. Somebody forward that article to Paul Mulshine.

    Scot Morrissey:

    While some newspaper executives complain that free access to news content online is killing paid circulation, turning a profit from an online product is just “logistics of business,” Morrissey said.

    “We are no longer mass marketers. We are niche warriors,” he said. “We are putting out magazines for women’s issues only. We are putting out magazines for music. We are putting out products for Georgia football only. Those are unique segments of our market.

    Again, go read this article. I really like Scot’s positive attitude but more, I like his ideas for innovation. Many times you hear publishers, like the Detroit Duo, who stay positive on newspapers but then completely blow it by staying the course.

    The OnlineAthens.com website has pretty good stats for the area it serves. The Quantcast stats show it has roughly 28k uniques per day, and 176k per month. The one big problem is that every single metric for the site has been falling for the last 3 months. However, if Scot sticks with his plan for diversified revenue streams and niche content, this will not be a problem.

    Congratulations Scot! We’ll be tracking your progress here at metaprinter.

    UPDATE:
    January 18, 2009 Quantcast shows online visits still trending downward.

    RELATED LINKS:

    Here is another one-man story of enthusiasm 
    Starting Your Own Paper Blog… er Newspaper – The Ed Shamy Model

    Paul Mulshine Waxes Romantic About “Real Journalism” and Hates on Stupid Bloggers

    Re: this Wall Street Journal column:

    Paul Mulshine,

    Your professors and the graduate students at Rutgers were right.

    See also: Pros VS Pajamas

    To answer Mr. Mulshine’s question; What is the New Model for generating revenue? The answer for general interest newspapers and news sites is that there is none. NONE. That’s no mystery. Continue reading

    Brave News World – The Detroit Newspaper Experiment

    As reported everywhere The Detroit Free Press (GCI) and The Detroit News are going paperless (somewhat) in their quest to remain a going enterprise. There is a thorough story about the specifics on MarketWatch.

    Here is Dave Hunke, CEO of Detroit Media Partnership and Publisher of the Detroit Free Press:

    “The dynamics of delivering information to audiences has changed forever due to technology. Today, consumers are more empowered than ever before. In order to serve them well, we must find ways to be more nimble. That means we have to change the way we deliver that news – not just in subtle ways, but in fundamental ways.”

    I applaud the effort to innovate their business model. I have some serious reservations about their strategy however. Simply going online will not save the news business. Bragging that you’ve had “50 million pageviews” and “won Pulitzer Prizes”, while not being able to become economically sustainable should raise red flags about how inefficient newspaper websites are. Continue reading

    There does not exist one general news website that is economically sustainable

    I’ve been looking everywhere but I simply cannot find one single general news site that is economically sustainable.  I’m asking my readers to present me with a verifyable example of the existence of such a site. I’m looking to refute the following claims:

    . No newspaper website can sustain itself

    . NPR cannot sustain itself

    . No general news blog can sustain itself (Huffpo, Politico)

    . No news startup can yet support itself (spot.us is an interesting experiment at this point, grant funded)

    Someone please tell me there is someone somewhere perhaps in a small town, capable of doing journalism for profit.

    Recap from Changing Media Landscape event at Columbia Journalism School November 11, 2008.

    Columbia J-school’s annual look at the media revolution, with several media influencers – and no Powerpoint! Columbia-Hearst Journalism Dialogues and the Columbia Journalism Alumni Association present: Changing Media Landscape 2008

    Comments in Bullet Points and direct quotes appear in quotes.  Moderated by Sree Sreenivasan -Dean of Student Affairs & Professor Columbia Journalism School.

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    “Any Idiot Can Do This” – Michael Rosenblum Society of Editors Conference 2008

    Michael Rosenblum (former CBS News producer) presenting at the Society of Editors conference November 10, 2008. This is excellent. Exactly the type of paradigm shift and reaction we report on at Metaprinter. He argues, quite convincingly, that in the new information and news paradigm ONE person with a camera can outperform an entire news agency.

    “The technology today is all automatic and dirt cheap.  The cost is effectively zero.  The problem that you’re (news producers) encountering is that you’ve come up against a new technology and you don’t like it. ”


    Michael Rosenblum @ Society of Editors 08 from Paul Bradshaw on Vimeo.

    Click to continue for the other 2 videos.

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    Metaprinter to Twitter Changing Media Landscape, 2008 NYC

    Changing Media Landscape, 2008
    November 11, 2008
    Columbia J-school’s annual look at the media revolution, with several media influencers – and no Powerpoint! Columbia-Hearst Journalism Dialogues and the Columbia Journalism Alumni Association present:
    • Sewell Chan, blogger/editor, The New York Times “City Room” blog (from midtown)
    • Adriano Farano, executive editor, CafeBabel.com (from Paris)
    • Erica Smith, news designer, St. Louis Post-Dispatch and “Paper Cuts” blog (from St. Louis)
    • Jacob Weisberg, chairman, Slate (from midtown)
    Tuesday, 6:30-9 pm (reception from 6:30-7 pm)

    Follow My Twitter Feed for Updates as they happen and revisit this site for complete coverage of this event.

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