But reporters still get harassed by people — a lot, as this site shows.
Category: Journalism
Ziff Davis To Close PC Magazine Print Edition
One of the oldest computer magazines is shutting down its print edition. The magazine arguably created the concept of comparative reivews and benchmarks, and its columnists and Editor’s Choice awards were always great. I’m sad to see it go, but the reality is that tech print publications are slowly dying, and most of the writers are doing more of their writing online. I knew PC Mag would be going away from print soon, as their magazine had just gotten smaller and smaller. I bought a copy a couple years back when I went to Colorado, expecting to have plenty of reading material for the plane ride (as PC Mag was usually full of articles and content), and there was little content — mostly short blurbs that said to read more at their Web site.
It saddens me, too, because back in the day, long before I got married and had kids, I went to college to become a journalist, specifically a technology journalist, and would’ve loved to have written for one of these types of publications. When I got married and had a family to feed (which was before I got out of school), I gave up being a reporter and decided that tech was going to pay my bills and feed my family while being a geek writer probably wouldn’t. I always had a place in my heart for tech magazines, and even did several reports and assignments on a few of them (was the only guy in my classes that did, with most of them focusing on music/culture magazines). I still have a WinMag coffee mug from when I got published on the back page of the magazine back in the day.* But I saw this day coming, like I’m sure most folks did.
* That coffee mug, a couple Intel bunny people dolls, my “Cloned by Ghost” ghost doll (before Symantec bought the program), and my “I’m Feeling Lucky” Google boxers that I won during Google’s original beta period (long before they were re-released) are probably my geekiest historical things that aren’t computer parts. What do you guys have?
The New York Times Comes To Their Senses
They’ve decided to shut down the paywall they had on many of the articles on their Web site. Why? They’re starting to realize that they could be making more money with advertising dollars then they are with subscribers. To quote an email that was forwarded my direction by Barney: “People will pay for what they want. But it’s looking more and more like advertisers will pay more to reach the right audience than the audience will pay to reach the right information.” Indeed.
Now if some folks up on Chandler Drive could realize the revenue that could be made (and the goodwill and good karma points they’d get) if they opened up their paywall, then we could start link to some of their stories now and again. While I love KTVZ and The Source and their stories, The Bulletin has a much larger staff and sometimes can cover stories that the others folks can’t do. The revenue that can be generated by having your stories indexed well in Google, Yahoo, etc… can be quite large, if you have a good ad sales team or Google Adsense-type ads placed right.
More comments at Boing Boing.
Nice Rack
Best use for an old newspaper box. Ever.
Headline/link stolen from NewsDesigner.
Seattle Times Telemarketer Gets Punked
Oh man. Out of all the people that a Seattle Times telemarketer could call and try to sell to, they’d call Chris Pirillo during his call-in show. This is priceless — this lady is so confused by the end of this.
Best quote: “This is better than Google. It’s the complete newspaper.”
Biggest tip for salespeople: Know Thy Product.
Thanks to Barn and Lost Remote for the video.
Katie Couric Should Thank Don Imus
Thanks to all the coverage Imus was getting, everybody forgot about her problem with plagiarism.
How Many Reporters Does It Take To Change A Lightbulb?
If you’re at the BBC, zero, because you’re not allowed to do it.
Men Have An Unhealthy Obsession With Crotches
And now there’s science to prove it (excerpted from a much larger eyetracking study that is a good read for anybody who designs content-rich web sites).
Anybody Else Find It Odd…
…that the Redmond Spokesman (the newspaper in Redmond that’s owned by Bulletin-parent Western Communications) has to post news and commentary on a blogspot.com blog and their actual domain sits “under construction“? Are they just taking matters into their own hands because they don’t know how to change the content at redmondspokesman.com, are they waiting for WesCom to setup their online publishing software like the Bulletin uses, or are we just not even supposed to know about the site (I found it via a google search and have since added it to BendBlogs)?