Posts tagged: blogging
- J-Lab report examines new journalism; states the obvious
- Yesterday’s report “New Entrepreneurs: New Perspectives on News” [PDF download] from J-Lab proves what most of us who read local blogs already know. From the press release: The research found that journalism on independent local news and information Web sites is increasingly becoming an act of participation, not just an act of observation. The participatory [...] [10 Nov 2009]
- Blogging: Reclaiming the definition
- You may also be interested in New bloggers new troubles getting traffic from TechWag. I’ve had a few conversations and thoughts about blogging in the last few days: what it is, how it’s changed, what we are getting out of it, and whether being a personal blogger is worth the time and effort it takes. I’ve been [...] [4 Dec 2008]
- My love life. Online.
- I know this post is a bit disjointed. I wrote it in a bit of a rush this morning because I wanted to put it out there while I felt inspired to do it. I learned this lesson the hard way. I blogged about my breakup that started in February 2007, here, on Vox, and on [...] [8 Sep 2008]
- WordPress 2.6 released today
- The big new features? Edit tracking: Tucked way down at the bottom of each post is a revision history. You can see who changed what and when. SSL support for your administrative panel, plus the ability to force SSL logins. That’s critical if you frequently blog from public WiFi spots. Press This: Post links, YouTube and Yahoo! Videos [...] [15 Jul 2008]
- Atlanta, GA: “Ethics and New Media: How the Blogosphere is Affecting Journalism and Business”
- Presented by the Atlanta Press Club, this will be a panel discussion about how the impact of blogs on traditional media. Panelists include: Lea Donosky, interactivity manager, Atlanta Journal-Constitution Jeremy C. Garlington, publisher of The Garlington Report Greg Lisby, professor of journalism, Georgia State University David Rubinger, VP, Corporate Communications, Equifax This panel will be moderated by Dr. John Knapp, [...] [17 Mar 2008]
- Russian propaganda goes online
- Worth a listen: this CBC Search Engine podcast episode on the Kremlin’s use of bloggers as citizen propagandists, as well as government-paid hackers and saboteurs. The Kremlin piece starts about 6 minutes and 17 seconds into the show [MP3 download]. And you can find the T-shirt in the photo accompanying the post on CafePress.com. [10 Jan 2008]