Wired.co.uk: Where did all the money go?
Saturday, 25 April 2009, 10:56
Peter Kirwan: "Apart from Google, there’s a conspicuous absence of latter-day equivalents to Amazon, eBay and Yahoo! among the lists of VC exits since 2003. … This isn’t the Great Transition that Tim O’Reilly and his cohorts had in mind in 2005. In the face of the huge market failure created by the Big Media’s encounter with the web, venture capital’s response has been abysmally weak."
Headlines and Deadlines: The Lifecycle of a News Story
Tuesday, 2 September 2008, 17:47
In a blog post that should be essential reading, Alison Gow looks at how online journalism techniques have changed from "Web 1.0" practices to what is potentially possible in the "Web 2.0" era, even if this is not always happening in practice.
Tuesday, 27 May 2008, 12:43
0
"Many members of the Web 2.0 generation of internet companies have so far produced little in the way of revenue, despite bringing about some significant changes in online behaviour, according to some of the entrepreneurs and financiers behind the movement
Thursday, 15 November 2007, 12:49
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Contra Keen and David Leigh, "It’s not that web culture contests authority or authoritativeness as such, rather it contests the appeal to, or argument by, authority…"
Sunday, 11 November 2007, 23:55
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Joanna Geary has an interesting back and forth with Donnacha DeLong about "web 2.0". He famously said it’s rubbish; she says it’s something professional journalists "need to find a way to use to our advantage".
Saturday, 10 November 2007, 18:29
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Some examples of video and data use at US newspaper sites, presented by Jim Brady of washingtonpost.com and Jennifer Carroll of Gannett presented at APME.
Monday, 29 October 2007, 11:48
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"It’s up to you, Journalist – only you can change the public perception of journalism and its importance. There is little of what labour unions can do to increase the demand for journalism, but there are myriad opportunities for making journalistic va
Monday, 29 October 2007, 11:39
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Suw Charman and Keving Anderson challenge Donnacha DeLong’s piece "WEB 2.0 IS RUBBISH" in the NUJ magazine The Journalist.
Saturday, 27 October 2007, 15:04
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"[Web 2.0 is] not about journalism. It is about how technology is helping people meet, converse and do commerce, in the widest possible sense of that word."
Thursday, 25 October 2007, 17:52
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Donnacha DeLong republishes the article from The Journalist that has caused a stink in the UK jounro-blogosphere, and contributed to Roy Greenslade quitting the NUJ.
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, 5 September 2007, 06:49
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Simon Waldman: "I think the real shift here is not about blogging versus journalism – but sheer volume of news sources available to us – and therefore the need for new tools to that improve the way that people find and engage with news and information…"
Sunday, 2 September 2007, 18:55
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Mark Potts: "If newspaper Web sites are going to successfully bail out their print counterparts, they’ve got to act like … eb sites. Unfortunately, a recent report indicates that most newspaper Web sites are still stuck firmly in the last century … "
Wednesday, 15 August 2007, 17:22
0
Publish2 is a social network and 2.0 platform for journalists (and independent “news bloggers,” “citizen” journalists, student journalists, i.e. ALL journalists, BROADLY defined), which aims to put journalists at the center of news aggregation on










