Wednesday, 4 June 2008, 12:54
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Commenter rips into Gavin O’Reilly’s view about the health of newspapers: "It’s fine for aul Gavin, investing in rising markets in India and Africa, but I don’t work there and I don’t invest there."
Wednesday, 30 April 2008, 09:23
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"Sketch Pad is a cool New York Times column that asks architects or designers to create a vision of what an apartment, house, loft or shack now for sale might look like in order to ‘help real estate shoppers learn to see past ugly paint, too-small kitchen
Thursday, 21 February 2008, 07:37
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"The scrum for control of the Washington Post’s future … shuffles back and forth across the Potomac River. Priest, Hull, and hundreds of other Post editorial types work downtown. Their dot-com associates, meanwhile, do their biz in … Arlington…"
Monday, 31 December 2007, 09:00
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FT.com’s Cynthia O’Murchu explains how they produce multimedia feature packages: "Readers online don’t want to be forced to follow stories in a linear way".
Online media is greener than print — but only for some time
Friday, 28 December 2007, 11:00
Chris Anderson today argues that “dead-tree” magazines have a smaller net carbon footprint than web media.
I’ve looked at this question a number of times this year, and I think Anderson makes an extremely important point. The very term “dead tree edition”, long used jokingly by new media types, implies a assumption that digital media is inherently more environmentally-friendly than print. That assumption is deeply flawed and needs to be challenged.
Anderson’s post is a great Gedankenexperiment, but he could have also drawn on a growing body of evidence on this subject, including supply chain audits by a number of newspaper publishers and one excellent comparative study between print and online carbon emissions published last month by the Royal Institute of Technology in Sweden. (That study’s footnotes point to even bigger pile of evidence.)
It’s easy to quibble with Anderson excluding the impact of his magazine’s distribution network as “carbon neutral” — it isn’t, even if the US Postal Service “runs the same routes whether they’re carrying our magazines or not”. There is some marginal cost to delivering thousands of magazines — paper is heavy and increases the size of lorries needed by the postal service.
But the key environmental issue in the print supply chain is not distribution, but the energy used in paper production, which Anderson also suggests (very wrongly) to be “carbon neutral”.
A study conducted by the Carbon Trust and newspaper group Trinity Mirror in late 2006 found that each copy of the Mirror produces 174 grams of CO2.
The study found that that about 70 per cent carbon that goes into the supply chain of printed publications arises in the paper-production process, and that the key source of emissions at that stage was the source of electricity used by the paper plants. It concluded that sourcing more newsprint from Scandanavian countries with cleaner electricity generation would cut back a British newspaper’s carbon footprint.
Similar results were found in audits conducted by the Guardian and the Gazette of Montreal this year. In mid-2006, the Heinz Center published a report that studied impact of producing the paper used by Time magazine. It found 61 per cent of Time magazine’s emission’s came from paper production.
For online media, meanwhile, the most important factor is the (actually quite enormous) energy consumption of 24/7 web servers and the air-conditioning they require. In addition, there is the the energy used by users’ PCs and some tiny fraction of the entire process of manufacturing and later disposing of all of these electronics.
Unlike printed products, which result in the same one-of bundle of emissions no matter how many people read them and for how long, online media’s environmental impact depends on how long consumers use their PCs.
The recent life-cycle analysis from Sweden showed just how big the impact of all this is. Reading the web version of a newspaper produced less carbon emissions that its printed equivalent — but only if you read it online for less than 20 minutes per day. Moving to an e-reader device with a passive e-ink display increases the length of time before digital media has the same impact as print by another 10 minutes.
Once again, the key variable was the source of energy used by the digital devices. Move to a country with lots of sustainable energy sources, and you can use the web longer before reaching the same level of emissions as buying a newspaper.
The Swedish study says it did not include “Internet infrastructure” in its analysis. This presumably means all of the routers and servers between the publisher’s datacentre and the end users’ machines. If I understood this correctly, this will cut back the 20 minute mark even further.
All the evidence I’m aware of concerns the production of newsprint products at daily newspapers. As a monthly magazine, so the volume of paper Wired uses is much smaller. On the other hand, the Trinity Mirror study noted in passing that producing glossy magazine paper requires more energy than newsprint.
The real question seems to be “how long is online greener?” How long spend do you spend consuming the Wired brand every month? If it’s more than around 30 or 40 minutes, buying the magazine is probably the greener choice. Otherwise, stick to the web site.
Thursday, 6 December 2007, 23:53
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Neil McIntosh: The report of the NUJ multimedia commission "shows a level of understanding completely absent from much of what the union has had to say about the web to date, and is a signficant step forward."
Sunday, 2 December 2007, 10:40
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On integration done on the cheap: "it turns reporters into residual processors, it also carves the heart of our trade. Reprocessing didn’t bring us last week’s Mail on Sunday scoop about Labour funding. Reprocessing can’t cover wars or dive into foxholes.
Monday, 19 November 2007, 09:45
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"And here is one key pillar of Mecom’s European strategy: the notion that all journalists have to be able to work across different media. … This idea may be old hat to Brits but it is a big step in Germany, where two of the biggest newspapers … still
Thursday, 8 November 2007, 14:35
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Suggest some additions to Paul Bradshaw’s list!
Saturday, 3 November 2007, 20:31
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"Former multimedia war correspondent and Yahoo! newsman Kevin Sites talks about how online media pick up where traditional media leaves off."
Tuesday, 23 October 2007, 13:21
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"I was stunned by the scaremongering spread looking forward to next month’s report by the union’s Commission on Multi-Media Working. Particularly shocking was the reactionary, badly-argued piece headlined ‘Web 2.0 is rubbish’."
Wednesday, 17 October 2007, 21:04
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Some impressive slideshows from the Midland Daily News in Michigan.
Tuesday, 16 October 2007, 17:24
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A handy guide to (US) online journalism job titles and approximate pay. Much of this also applies in the UK. (Job title conventions do not apply at the BBC, of course.)
Seymour Hersh on online journalism
Tuesday, 25 September 2007, 10:15
When Seymour Hersh was in London in July, his appearance at City University was, with the exception of the odd quote afterwards, entirely off the record.
But this week the investigative journalist has gone on the record in a rare interview with the Jewish Journal in Los Angeles.
The Q&A piece contains an interesting exchange revealing Hersh’s [...]

A UK-centric look at new media and online journalism.








