Monday, April 19, 2010
Comprehensives 0774034
"Media Literacy is a 21st Century approach to education. It provides a framework to access, analyze, evaluate and create messages in a variety of forms." (Center for Media Literacy)
Henry Jenkins, USC Annenberg, says its not just about access to technology, its about access to learning experiences....
Wednesday, February 10, 2010
Thursday, January 14, 2010
Rise of the journalist programmer
Valley Wag has a piece about how more journalists are turning to programming as a way of staying one step ahead of the curve.
I'd definitely say that's true after more than a year in this program.
Learning to program is yet another way journalists are becoming generalists, more like pamphleteer, typesetter, postmaster and newspaper publisher Ben Franklin and his fellow ink-stained polymaths than highly specialized publishing types like Bob Woodward, Annie Leibovitz or Mario Garcia.
I'd definitely say that's true after more than a year in this program.
Labels:
journalism,
programming,
Stephen Weigand,
Valley Wag
Newspapers still generate most news, despite Internet
Our friends at Pew's Project for Excellence in Journalism found that 95 percent of stories with "new information" came from traditional media, mostly newspapers.
The study found that most of the newer providers, including online blogs and those that use social media such as Twitter, "did not produce any local content" during the period studied.
In studying six major news "threads," the researchers concluded that "fully 83 percent of stories were essentially repetitive, conveying no new information."
Of the 17 percent that did contain new information, "nearly all came from traditional media either in their legacy platforms or in new digital ones," the researchers said.
All tangible media is going away — it's just a matter of time
Here's an opinion piece by a Web marketer about how he thinks digital media will replace all existing media. I don't agree with everything he says, but he makes an interesting case.
Things like print newspapers and compact discs were made obsolete years ago. They are living artifacts. Digital is the master copy – we’re only waiting for the divide to bridge. It isn’t really an argument, you either can foresee the future where all information, content and forms of media are semantic, social, malleable, searchable entities or you can’t. It may take time but there is no stopping this path, it’s one of the clearer long-term trends.
Labels:
digital media,
future buzz,
media,
Stephen Weigand
AP, Yahoo near deal on content use
Taking a step toward mapping the future of online news, the Associated Press and Yahoo Inc. are closing in on a deal that would impose tighter restrictions and potentially a higher price tag on AP stories distributed on Yahoo's news site, people familiar with the matter said.Link to Wall Street Journal story.
It will be interesting to see how this deal with Yahoo affects the AP's negotiations with Google.
Labels:
AP,
Google,
Stephen Weigand,
Wall Street Journal,
Yahoo
Tuesday, January 5, 2010
So much information
From NYTimes
The average American consumes about 34 gigabytes of data and information each day — an increase of about 350 percent over nearly three decades — according to a report published Wednesday by researchers at the University of California, San Diego.
According to calculations in the report, that daily information diet includes about 100,000 words, both those read in print and on the Web as well as those heard on television and the radio. By comparison, Tolstoy’s “War and Peace” contains about 460,000 words.
The researchers, who built their work on previous studies of information consumption, found that Americans take in data through various channels, including the television, radio, the Web, text messages and video games. Most of this time is spent in front of screens watching TV-related content, averaging nearly five hours of daily consumption.
Second is radio, which the average American listens to for about 2.2 hours a day. The computer comes in third, at just under two hours a day. Video games take up about an hour, and reading takes up 36 minutes.
Most of these experiences happen simultaneously, like talking on the phone while checking e-mail, or instant messaging while watching TV.
Overall, information consumption is increasing at about 6 percent a year, the report estimated.
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