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PA trials new slideshow tool at Press Awards

Posted by Martin Stabe on 27 March 2007 at 10:29
Tags: British Press Awards, Press Association, Press Gazette, ShowBuilder, slideshows, twitter

Last night, Press Gazette reported the winners of the British Press Awards live on a dedicated blog (on Twitter).

But the most exciting aspects of the project was our first public use of ShowBuilder, a new multimedia slideshow tool being developed by the Press Association and Vexed Digital.

Using the tool, we created audio sideshows to embed in the blog posts announcing the winners of the visual categories and the national newspaper of the year. Each slideshow featured pre-recorded audio commentary by Tony Loynes, Press Gazette’s editor-in-chief and chairman of the BPA judges.

ShowBuilder is designed to allow rapid development of multimedia projects that can include both stills and video clip, along with a an audio track.

The tool is a bit like the Soundslides application that many newsrooms are by now familiar with — except that it is a network application. It is installed on a server, meaning that the application is accessible to any reporter or photographer with a laptop, internet access and a web browser. This also means that the tool can be collaborative — multimedia editors back in a newsroom can, for example, work on a slideshow started by a photographer uploading stills and video in the field.

The Flash movies the software creates are also stored on the server, eliminating the need for large multimedia files to be sent between servers. A snippit of HTML allows the Flash file to be embedded in any other web page, such as our blog.

Once testing is completed, PA will roll out ShowBuilder to its own photographers, and eventually license it to customers, such as regional newspapers.

PA’s Robert Freeman, who burned the post-midnight oil to produce the slideshows, explains more on his excellent blog, MediaBizTech.

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All the news that’s fit to Twit

Posted by Martin Stabe on 21 March 2007 at 13:54
Tags: BBC, British Press Awards, CNET, CNET News.com, CNN, Guardian Unlimited, Journalism, Mashups, New York Times, Press Association, Wired, twitter

Just in time for its first anniversary last week, the Twitter has gained a huge surge in attention to go with accelerating growth in its user base.

The service, which combines social networking and blogging, allow users to send 140-character updates detailing what they are doing at the moment. Users can chose to have their friends’ messages delivered directly to an instant massager account or mobile phone via text message.

Helped by a flurry of adoption among the digerati at TED and SXSW conferences, Twitter has become the current darling among the usual early-adopter crowd — and has frustrated some by slowing down tremendously as a consequence.

Twitter invites users to reply to the question “What are you doing right now?” It then sends the responses — by RSS, IM or, crucially, mobile phone — to all of those friends who have signed up to follow that user’s messages.

Inevitably, this invitation has meant that the service is being used primarily for communicating the most banal aspects of everyday life — and this has led to a Marmite-like devision of opinion among the online commentariat.

Some A-list bloggers are contemplating shifting most of their everyday writing to the service. Weblogs Inc founder Jason Calacanis, for example, announced that “90% of my blogging is now on Twitter”, prompting howls of disapproving comments from some of his regular readers.

While the enthusiasts can’t get enough Twittering, its detractors are equally unflinching.

“Of all the masturbatory ego-fluffers on the Web, nothing chafes me worse than Twitter,” complained Steve Bryant of eWeek. “Not content with blogging — itself a microchunked, short-form version of diary keeping — we’ve taken to journaling the minute-by-minute factlets and factoids of our bite-sized lives.”

Like the blogging naysayers, the Twitter-haters are absolutely right when they complain that 99 per cent of the communication produced with the service is utter rubbish. Even the closest of friends are probably not interested in receiving a text message every time one of their mates farts.

But by focusing on the banality of most Twitter messages, the service’s critics are guilty of the same logical error as those who dismiss blogging because of the stupidity they observe in many bloggers: they confuse medium and message, technology and content.

Twitter may be encouraging its early adopters to use the service in a relatively banal form of content, but technology adoption never works out quite as the developers of new services imagined or even intended.

The technical idea underlying Twitter is interesting: It is a gateway service that lets users easily post and receive between three normally incompatible short-messaging services: web site comments, instant messaging and SMS text messages.

And like many of the Web 2.0 sites, Twitter has been clever about encouraging such unintended uses, by providing an API that makes it easy for skilled users to find innovative uses for the service.

Anil Dash of Six Apart, put it well when he wrote on his blog: “The sign of success in social software is when your community does something you didn’t expect. “

And that is certainly happening. US presidential hopeful John Edwards is using Twitter to keep supporters abreast of his campaign.

One user has created service that automatically provides service updates for the London Underground.

And of course, many people have seen the potential of the service for distributing news alerts. The Press Association announced last week that it would be using Twitter to distribute updates of Gordon Brown’s budget announcement today.

PA’s experiment is not the first attempt to use Twitter as a vehicle for distributing news, but what’s unusual about it is that it is being produced in-house rather than by their enthusiastic readers.

A few months ago, Twitter user Mario Menti created a mashup that ports the latest headlines from CNN and the BBC into Twitter, allowing users to receive headlines and links to breaking news headlines on their mobile phones by joining the publication’s network of Twitter friends.

A similar service have appeared for Google News headlines. Blogger Dave Winer created a Twitter headline service for Wired after a journalist at the magazine suggested it on one of the magazine’s blogs. The New York Times has both an official Twitter account and another one produced by Dave Winer. There is what looks like an official Twitter feed for technology site CNET News.com.

While I was writing this post, my phone chirped with a Twitter message from Guardian blogs editor Kevin Anderson revealing that something Twitter-related is afoot at Graun towers as well.

Of course, we’re not beyond jumping on the Twitter bandwagon ‘round here. Next Monday evening, you’ll be able to get the British Press Awards winners on your mobile phone as they are announced. Just follow the user ‘pressgazette‘ on Twitter.

Update: Even political blogger Guido Fawkes seems to be Twittering.

Update 22/3: The Guardian’s Twitter feeds, created by Ben Hammersley, are ‘guardiannews‘ and ‘commentisfree‘. Simon Dickson notes that Nick Robinson’s frantic budget micro-blogging for the BBC might have been a good use for Twitter (a bit like PA’s experiment, perhaps).

Update 23/3: Jack Lail ponders the journalistic applications of Twitter.

8 comments

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PA will report 2007 Budget in Second Life and on Twitter

Posted by Martin Stabe on 15 March 2007 at 11:57
Tags: Mobile Phones, Press Association, secondlife, twitter

The Press Association has become the latest media organisation to set up shop in the virtual world Second Life with a “Budget Info-Station” that will provide coverage of the 2007 Budget.

A new PA service will give residents of the virtual world live updates from the House of Commons as Gordon Brown announces details of what is likely to be his final Budget as Chancellor of the Exchequer.

The news agency will also be using the SMS social network platform Twitter to deliver news of the Budget.

A number of media organsiations have already set up virtual newsrooms in Second Life. The most ambitious effort to date is from Reuters, which has a full-time correspondent in the virtual world. Headlines from the BBC, CNN, Google News, and several other news organisation are distributed on Twitter via user-produced mashups.

3 comments

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@Society of Editors: ‘The future is already here’

Posted by Martin Stabe on 6 November 2006 at 11:23
Tags: Journalism, Lancashire Evening Post, Observer, Press Association, Society of Editors, The Herald, World Editors Forum

Society of Editors conference

This morning’s second panel, a “digital update” entitled “the future is already here” is chaired by Lesley Riddoch and comprises: PA’s Robert Freeman; Gordon Mack of The Herald; Simon Reynolds of the Lancashire Evening Post; Bertrand Pecquerie of the World Editors Forum; and John Naughton of the Observer.

Freeman, PA’s multimedia editor, starts with a video clip. The public have started to take the multiplatform world for granted, he says. The vox pops on the video clip prove it.

Freeman echos Carolyn McCall’s stress on software development from the AOP and World Digital Publishing conferences.

Mack is the digial media editor of the Herald, and describes himself as a “paidup member of the old media”. The Herald has increased onllne readership 45 per cent year on year, he says. It has worked with PA to produce online multimeida content, particuarlly at the Edinbourgh festival. But the paper has been “unmoved” by mobile. And there’s a digital editon, which has extended the Herald’s reach — for a few subscribers.
Web content remains wedded to print, he admits, and says this is a mistake. But now the first multimedia journalists are making their mark at the paper.Human resources, he says, is a major stumbling block to making
Another challenge are legacy print workflows that are not really adaptable to multichannel delivery.

Referring to Tim O’Reilly’s AOP speech, Mack says compares his online staff — two producers, a quarter-share of a developer and one salesman — to the 9,000 staff at Yahoo! and 85,000 and Time Warner. Asymetrical competition indeed. But perhaps old media are not the big media.

Simon Reynolds says the 120-year-old Lancashire Evening Post in Preston is no longer a newspaper, but a “fully integrated news organisation”. He shows a hilarious clip from the paper’s News Idol competition, with the mayor of Preston reading the news in a monotone that was “hardly Jeremy Paxman”. A more sombre clip shows the return of the remains of a local soldier who had been killed in Iraq. The paper managed to cover this event better than local television as well.

“The result of this revolution really speaks for themselves,” he says. “We’re doing well over 500 stories a week on our site; 500 photographs and much more audio and video”. The site has 1.5m page impresssions month, had quadrupled to 120,000 unique users, all while the paper’s print circulation has increased.

Bertrand Pecquerie tells newspapers to become a news aggregator for their region by building a network of targeted web sites, giving Dagbladet.no in Norway as an example.

Sharing tools, like links to Digg and Technorati, should be on each story page, he says, showing the sharing sidebar from WashingtonPost.com.

Next, he shows Bluffton Today as an example of hyperlocal coverage. Social community news, not breaking hard news is the centre of papers that are embracing this approach, he says.

Only one newsroom will be vry difficult to manage. He shows Axel Springer’s Die Welt group, which has three newspapers: the quality national Die Welt, the regional Berliner Morgenpost, and compact edition targeted at young readers, Welt Kompakt. They have three different teams, but they share several services. This sort of multiple paper platforms will become more common as freesheets and other

Then it gets interesting. He compares the Telegraph’s new hub-and-spoke newsroom design to Jeremy Bentham’s panopticon prison. No seriously. It reflects an authoritarian tendancy for managment to control jorunalists, he says.

“I believe this kind of newsroom will fail,” he says, stressing that it undermines the creativity journlists need in favour of a Modern Times-style industrial news production on multiple platforms.

John Naughton deserves his own post for his presentation about future generations of “digital native” readers.

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Freemasonry in the lobby

Posted by Martin Stabe on 23 February 2006 at 16:40
Tags: Express, Mirror, New Statesman, Press Association, Times

Writing in the New Statesman, associate editor Kevin Maguire of the Daily Mirror notes the Masonic goings-on in the Parliamentary press gallery:

I read in the minutes of the parliamentary press pinny boys the names of an old Times hand, a couple of ex-Express scribes and my former boss at the Press Association news wire, yet disappointingly none of the Gallery galacticos. Word was that the masons operated two lobby lodges, so perhaps chapter 1928 is the retirees. Anyone who’d like to peruse what this funny-handshake brigade got up to at their 366th convocation should get in touch.

Surely Maguire refers to the minutes of lobby hacks’ Masonic lodge, which, as our very own Axegrinder recently reported, were accidentally e-mailed to MPs by former Daily Express political editor Rob Gibson.

Maguire should get in touch with Paul Linford, who noted that the Westminster hacks’ Masonic lodge was a major topic of gossip during his time as a lobby correspondent.

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