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Edinburgh: ‘IPod moment’ could render print extinct, predicts Guardian editor

Posted by Colin Crummy on 25 August 2007 at 16:33
Tags: Channel 4, E-paper, Edinburgh 2007, Edinburgh International Television Festival, Guardian, ITN, Journalism, Podcasting

The newspaper industry could be rocked by its own “iPod moment” where a device reads text so well that renders print extinct, according to the editor of The Guardian.

At a session entitled “Who’ll Win the Web?” at the Edinburgh International Television Festival, Alan Rusbridger said: “For the newspaper there will be an iPod moment where someone creates a device that is so brilliant at reading text, the newspaper becomes irrelevant.”

Rusbridger also said the death of The Guardian in print would “in some ways make life simpler” and said that he was confident his team would continue to produce the product within the same Guardian spirit elsewhere. “I’d be quite relaxed about it,” he added.

He admitted that The Guardian was tying up people experimenting with podcasts that gained few listeners but said it was because the newspaper was experimenting with everything. “There’s a fair amount of wasted effort at the moment but we’re learning all the time.”

The debate centred on whether print media or broadcasters might prosper in the digital age.

Rod Henwood, new business director at Channel 4 said: “In some ways we are less threatened than newspapers because free broadcasters don’t have paying customers to lose. We have paying customers to gain through the internet.”

He said that broadcasters could better retain exclusivity on products in a way that news providers could not. “News is very much commodised on the net. Immersive, long form video entertainment is harder to commodise. For broadcasters that have got rights that are their own, have a chance to stand out on the internet more than purely news providers.”

ITN chief executive Mark Wood said newspapers were more than just news and it was crucial to make those elements – like lifestyle sections - pay in a multimedia strategy.

Rusbridger said: “The BBC, CNN, ITN – it’s sort of an article of faith that they are impartial and unbiased. We can be as impartial and biased as we like and on comment is free we have thousands of robust opinions.” He foresaw this as “an interesting battleground” which would be partly settled by regulator.

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@NMK Podcast: Dan Gillmor’s keynote

Posted by Martin Stabe on 13 June 2007 at 15:34
Tags: Blogs, Journalism, Mashups, Podcasting

(Many thanks to Kevin Anderson for helping me overcome the perennial problem of trying to do interesting things on The Man’s Computer)

In the keynote, Gillmor said we need to think of new ways of telling stories online as journalism. One example he gives is an estate agents Google Maps mashup that plots properties that have been sold for less than their tax-assessment value. Gillmor asked why newspapers aren’t doing things like this, when it is clearly a journalistic story. I gave a similar example last week in the magazine column that this blog feeds into. I don’t always post the column-length versions here because they usually just expand on the blog posts, and this was no exception. But here’s what I wrote last week:

Mapping out stories is great local journalism. So why aren’t more people doing it?

… [Adrian] Holovaty announced that he will be leaving his job as editor of editorial innovations at WashingtonPost.com after collecting a $1.1m (£555,000) grant from the Knight Foundation News Challenge to begin a hyperlocal news startup called Everyblock. Holovaty’s organisation will create and release “open-source software that links databases [together] to allow citizens of a large city to learn (and act on) civic information about their neighbourhood or block”.

News organisations in Britain are generally leaving this sort of public-interest programming to entrepreneurial mashup-makers and the civic hackers such as those at MySociety.org. Consider, for example, PlanningAlerts.com, a mashup that scrapes planning application data from dozens of local councils’ websites, plots the locations onto a Google Map, and then sends email alerts to registered users in the area.

Systematically monitoring local planning applications and informing local residents about developments that affect them is bread and butter community journalism. Regional newspaper groups could be doing this for all the geographical data available from councils in their areas.

Still, there are stirrings in the right direction. Archant is planning to begin geocoding its stories when it relaunches its regional websites later this year. This is a crucial first step towards better use of spatial data.

Others are already experimenting on live sites. Christian Dunn, head of digital news at the Evening Leader in Wrexham, has been experimenting with plotting stories from the paper onto online maps using Platial.

Sky News, meanwhile, is adopting a new tool from Puffbox, a consultancy owned by former Sky web hand Simon Dickson, to allow its journalists to do similar things without specialist knowledge. The tool is being used for the first time this week as part of Sky’s Crime Uncovered special.

The tool, Dickson explains on his blog, makes it “a doddle for a non-geek journalist to throw a ‘flowing narrative’ mashup together in a matter of minutes.”

More of these new forms of journalism, please.

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Could Kelner be right about podcasting?

Posted by Patrick Smith on 20 March 2007 at 20:15
Tags: Independent, Podcasting

Only 13 per cent of people in America have “ever” listened to a podcast, according to a new study.

This grim view of the online audio world was given by Tom Webster at this week’s Commercial Podcasting Summit in London. The figures come from the as-yet unreleased Arbitron/Edison Internet and Multimedia Study 2007.

The gathered new media industry chiefs did learn however that the figure had risen since last year. By two per cent.

In a move that seems to closely resemble clutching at straws, the chairman of the summit, Paul Colligan, whose mission is to prove the profitability of podcasting, said that awareness of podcasting had increased from 22 per cent last year to 37 per cent now.

He may be right in saying that the study shows that 40 per cent of those who had ever downloaded a podcast had paid for it, but this figure represents a low percentage of a very low percentage of people.

This news comes hard on the heels of Independent editor-in-chief Simon Kelner’s remarks about the irrelevance of podcasting. “I’ve never met anyone who listens to podcasts”, he asserted. It seems ironic that he chose the new media-crazy, and better performing, Guardian as the stage to denounce industry innovations.

The Guardian itself estimates that the podcast figures are a bit better in the UK. In October 2006, The Guardian found that 8 per cent of UK internet users — about three million people — have downloaded a podcast. And the paper claims to be reaching more than 1 million audio downloads each month

And Kelner clearly hasn’t met Adrian Monck or his fellow commuters. Monck points out that the podcast Kelner picks out as particularly pointless — Simon Heffer analysing David Cameron’s latest policy announcement — may not even exist.

7 comments

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PCC wants to take podcast complaints

Posted by Martin Stabe on 5 November 2006 at 07:37
Tags: Ethics, Journalism, Podcasting, Press Complaints Commission, Society of Editors, Vodcasting, text, video

The Press Complaints Commission wants to accept complaints about podcasts found on newspaper’s web sites, reports Stephen Vass in the Sunday Herald.
The Sunday Herald report also suggests that convergence is proving a bit of a headache for PCC chairman Sir Christopher Meyer — while newpapers’ audio and video content appears to be covered by the PCC code, text on broadcasters’ websites is not.

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BBC progamme enlists bloggers for election coverage

Posted by Martin Stabe on 25 October 2006 at 13:52
Tags: BBC, Blogs, Journalism, Podcasting, Radio, Vodcasting

BBC Five Live’s programme Up All Night is hoping enlist citizen journalists’ help to cover the US election.

The programme is looking for bloggers, podcasters and vloggers who are covering their local races, along with “people with an interesting perspective” willing to offer personal views.

On the progamme’s blog, Chris Vallance wrote: “Our hope is that by enlisting your help we’ll have coverage that isn’t just about pundits and experts but gives us a real flavour of what the race is like for ordinary Americans that cuts through some of the stereotypes about politics in the US.”
The plan has gained the attention of Craigslist founder Craig Newmark, and the Sunlight Foundation — one of the groups behind an earlier successful networked journalism effort. That should bring it to wider attention among American bloggers.

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Additional links for Wednesday

Posted by Martin Stabe on 11 October 2006 at 13:39
Tags: 18 Doughty Street, Blogs, Daily Telegraph, Guardian Unlimited, Journalism, Podcasting, Telegraph.co.uk

  • The First Post: The spin man takes on the Binman
    Benjamin Pell, aka “Benjie the Binman”, is back in the news. Apparently these days he spends most days in the High Court, “exercising his legal right of access to documents produced in open court”.
  • Cybersoc: Would Guido really ‘not get out of bed’ for £21k in blog ads?
    Robin Hamman challenges blogger Guido Fawkes’ assertion (in this parish) that he would not get out of bed for the pay be
  • Cybersoc: Guardian looking for a discussion moderator
    Guardian head of blogging Kevin Anderson needs a moderator to look after Comment Is Free comments for a few weeks. An unenviable task, no doubt.
  • Buzzmachine: Shoot the geeks
    Jeff Jarvis is unimpressed with last night’s debut of 18 Doughty Street, because of their use of “needlessly complicated” software technology.
  • Frank Barnako’s Media Blog: 3 best categories for your podcasts
    Frank Barnako at Marketwatch tracks down a study showing the best ways to make money from podcasts: talk about family, science or games.
  • Editor’s Weblog: Telegraph to rival iTunes?
    Telegraph.co.uk is launching a music downloading site, based on its Perfect Playlist.

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Britons baffled by new media buzzwords

Posted by Martin Stabe on 3 October 2006 at 17:53
Tags: IPTV, Journalism, Podcasting, RSS, Wikis

Data from a new survey just released by Nielson/NetRatings suggests that most Briton’s who are online don’t know the meaning of new media jargon acronyms.
According to the Nielsen/NetRatings MegaPanel UK Digital Consumer Survey, just 42 per cent of Britons know what podcasting is. Another 35 per cent has heard of podcasting, but doesn’t know what it is — and 23 per cent have never hard of it at all.

Other new media jargon also leaves most people scratching their heads, particularly all the acronyms.

Seventy-five percent have never heard of V-O-D, an acronym for “video-on-demand”. Equally unknown are wikis (70 per cent “never heard of it”), IPTV (69 per cent), PVR (68 per cent), Web 2.0 (67 per cent), Triple-play (66 per cent) and VoIP (59 per cent)
and IM (57 per cent).

The numbers jumped significantly when the full term was used rather than the acronym. At the most extreme, there was a 350 per cent increase in recognition when PVR was explained as “personal video recorder”.

Sixty-seven per cent have still never heard of RSS, but at least 2 per cent more people know the acronym than one of the things it supposedly stands for, “Really Simple Syndication”. However, 40 per cent said they receive automatic news feeds to their browser or desktop.

Clearly, a large number of people are using technologies which they can’t name.
It’s a perfect illustration of something that the Guardian’s Ben Hammersley pointed out at the Frontline Club last week: None of this may matter in the long run. As RSS becomes embedded in the new version of Windows and various browsers, it’s a technology that will become invisible. More and more people will use it, but fewer and fewer will know what it is called.

In fact, Hammersley suggested, it’s usually a clear sign that a technology is still in its early stages of adoption when it is known to its users by its technical name rather than some simplified brand name.

Update: Dave Sifry of Technorati has made the same point in an interview with BusinessWeek, as has Simon Waldman speaking with Journalism.co.uk. I knew that sounded familiar…

1 comment

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Economist tackles blogs, podcasts and “metaverses”

Posted by Dominic Ponsford on 20 April 2006 at 11:38
Tags: Blogs, Economist, Journalism, Podcasting, Wikis

Blogs, interactive journalism, wikis, podcasts and something called metaverses are all the subject of a special report in this week’s Economist out tomorrow.

According to author Andreas Kluth: “The era of new media is giving way to one of personal and participatory media.”

In addition to the report the Economist has a podcast series including interviews with: David Sifry of Technorati; Chris Anderson of Wired magazine; Jerry Michalski, founder and president of Sociate; and Paul Saffo and Roy Amara of the Institute For The Future.

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Music to ears of the classical magazines

Posted by Colin Crummy on 28 March 2006 at 10:51
Tags: Guardian, Magazines, Online, Podcasting

The Guardian reports that digitised back catalogues are reviving the fortunes of the of the classical record industry — a fact already highlighted in Press Gazette’s interview with Gramophone editor James Inverne.

The strength of webcast also gets a nod too in the week that the Guardian ups its own podcast production. According to the paper’s story, the Philharmonia orchestra was the first British orchestra to podcast and ran a webcast of a concert last year that garnered 600,000 hits.

Yesterday, the International Herald Tribune reported that Universal Music’s Deutsche Grammophon and Decca labels will be making concerts by 10 orchestras available on iTunes.

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Do old media risk becoming irrelevant?

Posted by Martin Stabe on 10 March 2006 at 09:44
Tags: BBC, Blogs, Citizen journalism, Financial Times, Journalism, Mashups, Podcasting, Reuters, Wikis

On the essential reading list this week is the speech by Reuters chief executive Tom Glocer at last week’s Online Publishers Association conference. In the speech, which was later published in the Financial Times, Glocer explained why “old media must embrace the amateur“. (Also available from Reuters as a Word document [DOC])
Refering to Daniel Defoe, Samuel Pepys and James Boswell, Glocer argued that people akin to today’s bloggers or “citizen journalists” have always existed: “The difference now is the scale of distribution and the ability to search”.

Glocer advises media organisations to become “seeders of clouds” who produce high-value new content, “providers of tools” that allow news consumers to recombine disparate content as they see fit, and become better “filters and editors” who provide a valuable service by finding the scarce valuable droplets in the information deluge.

Old media, Glocer says, have a choice: “integrate the new world or risk becoming irrelvant”. FT.com will be holding an online Q&A with Glocer about his views next Wednesday and are currently inviting readers to e-mail their questions for Glocer to ask@ft.com.

In a related item on on the must-read list, journalism’s best-known advocate of these participatory media, Dan Gillmor, has begun writing a series of articles for BBC News Online. The former San Jose Mercury News columnist, author of We the Media, and director of the Center for Citizen Media explains the tools whose widespread diffusion he sees as the democratising of media production: blogs, podcasts, wikis, discussions, multiplayer games and mashups. It’s a nice overview of these terms.

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