Selasa, 28 Juni 2011

My Alerts: Yuli Akhmada (1 article)

The New York Times
My Alerts: Yuli Akhmada
June 28, 2011 1:07 AM
--------------------------------------

Business Day / Global Business: Tobacco Companies Fight Australian Cigarette Bill
By MATT SIEGEL
Legislation that would ban logos on packages is drawing the
ire of lobbying groups and even members of the United
States Congress.

Full Story:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/28/business/global/28ihsmoke.html?emc=tnt&tntemail0=y


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Senin, 27 Juni 2011

CyberJournalist.net

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Same-sex marriage reaction on Twitter – versus traditional media

Posted: 26 Jun 2011 07:50 AM PDT

Watching the news of the same-sex marriage victory spread across Twitter this weekend, especially the real-time reaction from the West Village, it was hard not to be emotionally moved by the events. The experience illuminated how learning the news live through Twitter — via first-person sources — is such a different, and in may ways more immersive, experience than getting news from traditional media.

Many folks learned about the news from Twitter, or even from Foursquare (like this person), after Marriage Equalitocalypse started trending and Mayor Bloomberg checked in.

Stories in the local press were perfectly typical: the requisite quotes and photos of people celebrating. Supporters “danced in the streets.” “Crowds gathered, screamed and embraced.” But the stories felt flat, by comparison, to reading about the news and the euphoria via Twitter, in real-time, from people passionate about the story, from people whose lives it instantly changed. In the traditional news article, a disembodied authority tells you the news. Via Twitter, you hear it in the voice of an excited friend — and that creates experience that feels much closer to being there yourself.

Compare, for example, this perfectly fine article from The New York Times with the excellent collection of Tweets and videos pulled together by Brooklyn tech strategist Deanna Zandt (using the Storify curation tool) — included below. Deanna’s tale gives the reader a very different feel.

Reading this, it’s interesting to try to imagine what the Stonewall Riots might have been like had Twitter been around — and how, as well, the impact might have been different.


Sabtu, 25 Juni 2011

My Alerts: Yuli Akhmada (2 articles)

The New York Times
My Alerts: Yuli Akhmada
June 25, 2011 1:01 AM
--------------------------------------

World / Europe: Amid Criticism, U.N. Food Agency to Elect Chief
By RAPHAEL MINDER
On Sunday, members of the United Nations Food and
Agriculture Organization will elect a new director general
amid pressure on the agency to improve its own
administrative efficiency.

Full Story:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/25/world/europe/25iht-food25.html?emc=tnt&tntemail0=y


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Sports / Tennis: Wimbledon: Playing Nice During the Warm-Ups
By KAREN CROUSE
The prelude to every match at Wimbledon, as elsewhere in
tennis, is a hitting session that lasts five minutes and
unfolds in a predictable manner.

Full Story:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/25/sports/tennis/wimbledon-playing-nice-during-the-warm-ups.html?emc=tnt&tntemail0=y

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Kamis, 23 Juni 2011

CyberJournalist.net

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Knight announces 16 media innovation grants

Posted: 22 Jun 2011 12:18 PM PDT

The Knight Foundation is giving $4.7 million to 16 ideas aiming at creating innovation in media, as part of its annual program to fund digital news experiments that inform and engage communities. Keep an eye on these — past winners have produced very interesting products, including Spot.Us and DocumentCloud.

Winners include experiments to:

  • Help newsrooms organize and visualize large data sets so that they can find relationships and stories they might not have imagined (with projects from the AP and the Chicago Tribune.)
  • Create a mobile platform that will enable residents of a city in India to learn when water is available (an unpredictable event that has residents waiting hours).
  • Build tools that help to verify and display breaking news – with projects from Ushahidi and premier Web design firm Adaptive Path.
  • Leverage efforts to improve the use of government data in the U.S. – with projects from the Open Knowledge Foundation, ScraperWiki, the University of North Carolina and The Miller Center Foundation at the University of Virginia.

A full list is below…


2011 Knight News Challenge Winners

Project: iWitness

Winner: Adaptive Path, San Francisco, Calif.

Award: $360,000

Project Lead: Jesse James Garrett

Web: www.adaptivepath.com

Twitter: @AdaptivePath

To bridge the gap between traditional and citizen media, iWitness will create a web-based tool that aggregates user-generated content from social media during big news events. Whether a parade or protest, election or earthquake, iWitness will display photos, videos and messages in an easy-to-browse interface. Created by a premier web design firm, iWitness will make it easier to cross-reference first-person accounts with journalistic reporting, opening up new avenues for storytelling, fact-checking and connecting people to events in their communities.

Project: Overview

Winner: The Associated Press, New York, N.Y.

Award: $475,000

Project Lead: Jonathan Stray

Web: overview.ap.org

Twitter: @overviewproject

Overview is a tool to help journalists find stories in large amounts of data by cleaning, visualizing and interactively exploring large document and data sets. Whether from government transparency initiatives, leaks or freedom of information requests, journalists are drowning in more documents than they can ever hope to read. There are good tools for searching within large document sets for names and key words, but that doesn’t help find stories journalists are not looking for. Overview will display relationships among topics, people, places and dates to help journalists to answer the question, "What's in there?" The goal is an interactive system where computers do the visualization, while a human guides the exploration – plus documentation and training to make this capability available to anyone who needs it.

Project: The Awesome Foundation: News Taskforce

Winner: The Awesome Foundation, Boston, Mass.

Award: $244,000

Project Lead: Tim Hwang

Web: www.awesomefoundation.org

Twitter: @higherawesome

To experiment with a new funding model for local journalism, The Awesome Foundation: News Taskforce will bring together 10 to 15 community leaders and media innovators in Detroit and two other cities to provide $1,000 microgrants to innovative journalism and civic media projects. By encouraging pilot projects, prototypes, events and social entrepreneurial ventures, the News Taskforce will encourage a wide swathe of the community to experiment with creative solutions to their information needs.

Project: PANDA

Winner: Chicago Tribune, Chicago, Ill.

Award: $150,000

Project Lead: Brian Boyer

Web: http://blog.apps.chicagotribune.com/

Twitter: @pandaproject

To help news organizations better use public information, the PANDA Project, in partnership with Investigative Reporters & Editors (IRE), the Chicago Tribune and The Spokane Spokesman-Review, will build a set of open-source, web-based tools that make it easier for journalists to use and analyze data. While national news organizations often have the staff and know-how to handle federal data, smaller news organizations are at a disadvantage. City and state data are messier, and newsroom staff often lack the tools to use it. PANDA will work with tools like Google Refine to find relationships among data sets and improve data sets for use by others. PANDA will be simple to deploy, allowing newsrooms without software developers on staff to integrate it into their work.

Project: DocumentCloud Reader Annotations

Winner: Investigative Reporters and Editors (IRE), Columbia, Mo.

Award: $320,000

Project Lead: Aron Pilhofer

Web:        www.documentcloud.org

Twitter: @documentcloud

A 2009 Knight News Challenge winner, DocumentCloud helps journalists analyze, annotate and publish original source documents. Hundreds of newsrooms are already using the tool. With this grant, DocumentCloud will develop a new feature allowing newsrooms to invite public participation in annotating and commenting on source documents. The tool will help newsrooms involve their readers in the news and improve DocumentCloud as a journalistic tool and investigative reporting resource.

Project: FrontlineSMS

Winner: The Kiwanja Foundation, Palo Alto, Calif.

Award: $250,000

Project Lead: Sean McDonald

Web link: www.frontlinesms.com

Twitter: @frontlinesms

FrontlineSMS: Media will create a new platform that allows journalists to more effectively use text messaging to inform and engage rural communities. The Frontline SMS platform already enables users in underserved areas to organize interactions with large numbers of people via text messages, a laptop and a mobile phone – without the need for the Internet. This grant will enable FrontlineSMS to expand its software platform and work with community radio stations and other rural journalists.

Project: Zeega

Winner: Media and Place Productions, Cambridge, Mass.

Award: $420,000

Project Lead: Kara Oehler

Web: www.zeega.org

Twitter: @karaoehler

To help tell rich multimedia stories, Zeega will improve its open-source HTML5 platform for creating collaborative and interactive documentaries. By using Zeega, anyone can create immersive, participatory multimedia projects that seamlessly combine original content with photos, videos, text, audio and maps from across the Web. With this grant, Zeega will expand their experimental prototype to work on Web, tablet and mobile devices and pilot a series of collaborative and interactive documentary projects with news organizations, journalists and communities across the globe.

Project: The State Decoded

Winner: The Miller Center Foundation, Charlottesville, Va.

Award: $165,000

Project Lead: Waldo Jaquith

Web link: www.statedecoded.com

Twitter: @waldojaquith

The State Decoded will be a platform that displays state codes, court decisions and information from legislative tracking services to make government more understandable to the average citizen. While many state codes are already online, they lack context and clarity. With an improved layout, embeddable definitions of legal terms, Google News and Twitter integration, and an open API for state codes, this project aims to make important laws the centerpiece of media coverage.

Project: Poderopedia

Winner: El Mostrador, Santiago, Chile

Award: $200,000

Project Lead: Miguel Paz

Web: http://poderopedia.com

Twitter: @poderopedia

To promote greater transparency in Chile, Poderopedia (Powerpedia) will be an editorial and crowdsourced database that highlights the links among the country's elite. Using data visualization, the site will investigate and illustrate the connections among people, companies and institutions, shedding light on any conflicts of interests. Crowdsourced information will be vetted by professional journalists before it is posted. Entries will include an editorial overview, a relationship map and links to the sources of information.

Project: Nextdrop

Winner: NextDrop, Berkeley, Calif., and Hubli-Dharwad, India

Award: $375,000

Project Lead: Anu Sridharan

Web : www.nextdrop.org

Twitter: @NextDrop

To develop a new way of disseminating critical community information, NextDrop will launch a service, in conjunction with local utilities, that notifies residents of Hubli, Karnataka, India when water is available. NextDrop will work with water utility employees who operate the valves that control the infrequent flow of water. The service will notify neighborhood residents via text when the water is turned on. This system will be replicable in any community as a way to distribute all types of community information.

Project: Spending Stories

Winner: Open Knowledge Foundation, Cambridge, England

Award: $250,000

Project Lead: Martin Keegan

Web: http://okfn.org

Twitter: @okfn

News stories about government finances are common, but readers often find it challenging to place the numbers in perspective. Spending Stories will contextualize such news pieces by tying them to the data on which they are based. For example, a story on City Hall spending could be annotated with details on budget trends and related stories from other news outlets. The effort will be driven by a combination of machine-automated analysis and verification by users interested in public spending.

Project: The Public Laboratory

Winner: The Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science, Cambridge, Mass.

Award: $500,000

Project Lead: Jeffrey Warren

Web: www.publiclaboratory.org

Twitter: @publiclab

 

To make technology work for communities, The Public Laboratory will create a tool kit and online community for citizen-based, grassroots data gathering and research. The Lab is an expansion of Grassroots Mapping – a project originated at the Center for Future Civic Media at MIT. During the project, residents used helium-filled balloons and digital cameras to generate high-resolution "satellite" maps gauging the extent of the Gulf of Mexico oil spill – at a time when there was little public information on the subject. Expanding the tool kit beyond aerial mapping, Public Laboratory will work with communities, both online and offline, to produce information about their surroundings.

Project: ScraperWiki

Winner: ScraperWiki, Liverpool, England

Award: $280,000

Project Lead: Francis Irving

Web: http://scraperwiki.com

Twitter: @scraperwiki

ScraperWiki.com provides a way to make it easier to collect information from across the web from diverse sources. The site helps anyone freely create "scrapers" to collect, store and publish public data, and make it freely available for anyone to use. As such, the site provides journalists with updated, aggregated data that allows them to produce richer stories and data visualizations. This grant will add a "data on demand" feature where journalists can request data sets and be notified of changes in data that might be newsworthy, and data embargos that will keep information private until a story breaks. To accelerate the adoption of the platform, the U.K.-based site will host "journalism data camps" in 12 U.S. states.

Project: Tiziano 360

Winner: The Tiziano Project, Los Angeles, Calif.

Award: $200,000

Project Lead: Jon Vidar

Web: http://360.tizianoproject.org

Twitter: @tizianoproject

Using visually dynamic, multimedia storytelling, the Tiziano Project provides communities with the equipment, training and web platform needed to report on stories that affect their residents' lives. Tiziano will build an improved platform based on the award-winning projecthttp://360.tizianoproject.org/kurdistan/. Using HTML5, the platform will display the work of professional and community journalists and will enable news organizations, community groups and individuals to easily manage digital content for mobile and tablet devices. The project will also build an interactive map to serve as a hub for projects developing similar sites in their communities and enable direct communication between these communities and their audiences.

Project: OpenBlock Rural

Winner: University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.C.

Award: $275,000

Project Lead: Ryan Thornburg

Web: http://jomc.unc.edu

Twitter: @rtburg

Rural news organizations often struggle to move into the digital age because they lack the staff to make public data digestible. OpenBlock Rural will work with local governments and community newspapers in North Carolina to collect, aggregate and publish government data, including crime and real estate reports, restaurant inspections and school ratings. In addition, the project aims to improve small local papers' technical expertise and provide a new way to generate revenue.

Project: SwiftRiver

Winner: Ushahidi, Orlando, Fla.

Award: $250,000

Project Lead: David Kobia

Web: www.ushahidi.com

Twitter: @ushahidi

As news events unfold, mobile phones and the Internet are flooded with information. Through the SwiftRiver  platform, Ushahidi will attempt to verify this information by parsing it and evaluating sources. Working across email, Twitter, web feeds and text messages, the platform will use a combination of techniques to identify trends and evaluate the information based on the creator's reputation. The project builds on Ushahidi's past efforts to verify the crowdsourced information collected in global crisis scenarios like the Kenyan election crisis in 2008 and the earthquakes in Haiti and Japan.


Rabu, 22 Juni 2011

My Alerts: Yuli Akhmada (1 article)

The New York Times
My Alerts: Yuli Akhmada
June 22, 2011 1:07 AM
--------------------------------------

Business Day / Global Business: Airbus Beats Forecast for Revamped A320 Orders
By NICOLA CLARK
The momentum at the Paris Air Show will likely increase
pressure on Boeing to decide how it will respond to growing
demand for more fuel-efficient planes.

Full Story:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/22/business/global/22iht-airshow22.html?emc=tnt&tntemail0=y


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Minggu, 19 Juni 2011

My Alerts: Yuli Akhmada (1 article)

The New York Times
My Alerts: Yuli Akhmada
June 19, 2011 1:23 AM
--------------------------------------

Fashion & Style / Weddings/Celebrations: Amanda Potters, Steven Schumacher: Weddings
The bride is an executive director for communications at
Time Inc.; the bridegroom is a managing director for
business management at Credit Suisse.

Full Story:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/19/fashion/weddings/amanda-potters-steven-schumacher-weddings.html?emc=tnt&tntemail0=y


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Jumat, 17 Juni 2011

My Alerts: Yuli Akhmada (1 article)

The New York Times
My Alerts: Yuli Akhmada
June 17, 2011 1:09 AM
--------------------------------------

World / Asia Pacific: Indonesia Sentences Radical Cleric, Bashir, to 15 Years
By NORIMITSU ONISHI
The United States had pressed Indonesia to prosecute Abu
Bakar Bashir, who was convicted on Thursday of supporting a
jihadi training camp.

Full Story:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/17/world/asia/17indonesia.html?emc=tnt&tntemail0=y


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Kamis, 16 Juni 2011

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Google News now has “expandable stories”

Posted: 15 Jun 2011 07:31 AM PDT

Google News recently introduced ”expandable stories.” Each story box is collapsed down to one headline, except for the top story. When a headline grabs your attention, click to expand and view related videos and photos as well as related articles marked according to genre, like “Opinion” or “In Depth.”


Rabu, 15 Juni 2011

My Alerts: Yuli Akhmada (1 article)

The New York Times
My Alerts: Yuli Akhmada
June 15, 2011 1:07 AM
--------------------------------------

Business Day / Energy & Environment: A Green Solution, or the Dark Side to Cleaner Coal?
By KEITH BRADSHER
China says that it can lessen air pollution by blending
cleaner-burning imported coal with domestic supplies, but
environmentalists say this will delay renewable energy
efforts.

Full Story:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/15/business/energy-environment/15iht-sreCHINA15.html?emc=tnt&tntemail0=y


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What the next New York Times editor learned about the Web

Posted: 14 Jun 2011 07:48 AM PDT

Incoming New York Times Executive Editor Jill Abramson spent six months recently focusing on the online operations. During that time, she tells AdAge, she learned a number of things — such as the Web staff was not as integrated as it should be, the online competitive landscape is greater than she realized, and The Times needs to be more competitive online in the early mornings.

She said:

One thing I tried during the six months was to only read online. As I read more and more early in the morning I felt like everyone else was playing to win the morning, and we weren’t enough. Many sites, whether Politico or Bloomberg or another site, by like 6:30 in the morning were full of fresh stories. If breaking news had happened overnight, we covered it, but basically early in the morning we were an echo on the web of the six stories that were on the front of the print paper.

I think that in order to have an integrated newsroom, all the people who work on the news report have to feel that they have a real career track here. I think for our digital employees, especially web producers and some of the web editors, they felt like they loved their work but where were they going to go? They’d never covered cops for metro, that sort of thing. In the end my plan for the newsroom was that we dispersed the web producers and web editors and put them on the desks, so web producers that were working on business news now work for Larry Ingrassia, the business editor, after they had worked for a web editor.

Part of what I did was I went and visited a lot. Bill Keller came up with a great word — neo-competitors. That’s what he thinks sites like Politico and Huffington Post are. I went and spent a day at some of those. I guess it shouldn’t have been surprising but the largeness of the competitive field came to surprise me.

Our night note, the competition report which has been put out forever, would only mention what was on the front page of the Washington Post, maybe something from the Journal’s website, but never any mention of a Politico or a HuffPost or a Bloomberg. That has changed.

 


Selasa, 14 Juni 2011

My Alerts: Yuli Akhmada (1 article)

The New York Times
My Alerts: Yuli Akhmada
June 14, 2011 1:07 AM
--------------------------------------

Arts: Asian Collectors Showcase Works
By SONIA KOLESNIKOV-JESSOP
More wealthy buyers in Asia are opening their private
museums to the public.

Full Story:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/14/arts/14iht-rartjessop14.html?emc=tnt&tntemail0=y


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What if real life were like Facebook and Twitter?

Posted: 13 Jun 2011 09:38 AM PDT

Imagine what it would be like if people asked to be your “Friend” on the street, asked you if they could “Poke” you, and followed you around? English National Opera has produced a hysterical look at what the world would be like if your social media activities occurred in real life. Check it out….



What @MayorEmanuel teaches us about real-time information flow

Posted: 13 Jun 2011 07:32 AM PDT

Information can at times move so quickly these days that it can be almost impossible to control the narrative that it creates — even one of your own creation. Dan Sinker, who created the @MayorEmanuel parody Twitter feed when Rahm Emanuel began running for mayor of Chicago, gave a fascinating look at how information flows across the real-time web at the Personal Democracy Forum, telling the story of how his feed evolved and how impossible it can be to control the narrative. “As our communications grow more and more complex, the speed that they travel and faster and faster, the voices within more volumnous, the implications of the chorus harder and harder to control.”


 


Facebook developing new real-time feature

Posted: 13 Jun 2011 07:28 AM PDT

Facebook is testing a new Twitter-like real-time feature called “Happening Now” on certain users news feeds, according to The Next Web. The feature displays at-a-glance a list of what their friends are sharing, who they are adding as friends and displaying check-in notifications.

Facebook says:

"We are currently testing a feature within News Feed that gives people the ability to see what their friends are commenting on and "liking", as these actions are being taken on Facebook.

This test includes a small percentage of Facebook users,  just a fraction of a percent. In the coming weeks, as we learn more from this test, we'll keep making improvements and may expand it to more people."


Applying the Slow Food movement to news

Posted: 13 Jun 2011 06:25 AM PDT

In his recent talk to the Personal Democracy Forum, author Dan Gillmor argues for applying the Slow Food movement to news. By that he means, take a breadth. “The sooner something is on Twitter after a major event, the more skeptical… or at least the more you should reserve judgement about it…. The things that are the most amazing, I put in the category of interesting if true. And that feels right to me.”