- A fundamental way newspaper sites need to change
Adrian Holovaty discusses the need for structured data for newspapers.
in Public bookmarks with journalism-2.0 newspaper-2.0 by 2 users
- A second life for online content
Yoni Greenbaum suggests repurposing some online content for print including "excerpts of fans debating their favorite play from your sports forum," "readers commenting on the issues of the day," readers commenting on a print story, and some online poll results.
in Public bookmarks with journalism-2.0
- After the 'flop' flap: Lessons learned from Loudoun
Rob Curley explains the criticism he received after the Wall Street Journal article about LoudounExtra was published. He also posts three comments that his team members made on various blogs.
in Public bookmarks with hyperlocal journalism-2.0 newspaper-2.0
- Are you and your news site ready for your local armageddon?
Will Sullivan writes that your newspaper (both in print and online) should be able to handle a local disaster like the I-35W bridge collapse, the Virginia Tech shootings, and 9-11.
in Public bookmarks with armageddon journalism-2.0
- Boston.com's Big Picture: Online News Photography Done Right
"Boston.com recently launched a dead simple photo blog called Big Picture that shows how powerful online news photography can be if you out of the way and let the pictures tell a story."
in Public bookmarks with journalism-2.0
- Breaking news right now
"...Reporting breaking news on the Web is all about speed and updates. When a news story breaks, Bloomberg starts by posting a headline, usually within seconds of the news happening."
in Public bookmarks with journalism-2.0
- Context is king
Zac Echola writes about linking to past articles about a subject in order to provide context to an article.
in Public bookmarks with journalism-2.0
- Court reporting — live updates via Twitter
A cool usage of Twitter, noted by Mindy McAdams.
in Public bookmarks with journalism-2.0
- Curleyize your student newspaper
While this was specifically written for a college student newspaper, most of the concepts can be generalized and applied to your newspaper.
in Public bookmarks with journalism-2.0
- Do people "flip" over your business cards?
Yoni suggests including profiles on twitter, Facebook, MySpace, etc. on your business cards as another way to reach the community.
in Public bookmarks with journalism-2.0
- Elephants can't find peanuts; may go hungry
A post with links to many different takes of the Rob Curley's Loudoun hyperlocal flap.
in Public bookmarks with journalism-2.0 newspaper-2.0
- How to Build a Better Content Model for Your Site: Understanding News Consumption Patterns
"To combat this attention diversion, usability experts like Jakob Nielsen have long suggested that one write scannable content because readers don't have the attention/time to read much web content (and they don't)."
in Public bookmarks with journalism-2.0 newspaper-2.0
- Journalists who want to own their names in Google need follow a few simple steps
Howard Owens lists several steps for journalists to "own" their name on Google.
in Public bookmarks with journalism-2.0
- Local Link Journalism: Pulling Together The Threads Of Local Blogger Reporting
During a March snow storm in Tennessee, the Knoxnews.com used link journalism to describe the storms impact on people.
in Public bookmarks with journalism-2.0
- Looking for a textbook for online journalism?
A textbook the covers many of the Journalism 2.0 concepts including videos.
in Public bookmarks with journalism-2.0
- Mobile data: Next hurdle for journalism
Mindy McAdams makes the case that mobile devices will be an important delivery mechanism of news and the numbers back her up.
in Public bookmarks with journalism-2.0 mobile
- Modernize your newsroom today
Four dirt cheap ideas and one more expensive ways to modernize your newsroom.
in Public bookmarks with journalism-2.0
- Newsletters - your secret to developing sources
Yoni Greenbaum advocates using newsletters as a way to garner more sources for a reporter.
in Public bookmarks with journalism-2.0
- Nutritious French Fries
"'...if we don't ask what the customers want and respond, we’re done. Right now, we're in a limbo between that and some idealistic view of journalism as art form produced for its own sake. I don't think that when the readers ask for french (sp) fries we can insist they take brussels (sp) sprouts. We could offer nutritious french (sp) fries.'"
in Public bookmarks with journalism-2.0
- Obligatory Twitterquake post
Ryan is right on when he says that newspapers should just get "breaking news" information out as fast as possible.
in Public bookmarks with journalism-2.0
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