Martin Stabe

A UK-centric look at new media and online journalism

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Category Archives: web2.0

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currybetdotnet : Newspapers 2.0: How Web 2.0 are British newspaper web sites?

Posted on 8 May, 2007 by Martin Stabe
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Martin Belham wraps up his series of newspaper web site reviews with a summary post: "There is a lot of evidence around the newspaper sites that they are beginning to really "get" some new media and Web 2.0 concepts."
Posted in Journalism, Newspapers, Online, web2.0 | Leave a reply

Forbes.com: Mixed Media

Posted on 5 May, 2007 by Martin Stabe
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Rupert Murdoch: "Old media can survive--and thrive--in this new environment, but they must adapt. We must learn how younger generations of consumers prefer to receive their news and entertainment, and we must meet those expectations."
Posted in Rupert Murdoch, Social Media, socialnetworks, web2.0 | Leave a reply

currybetdotnet: Newspapers 2.0: How Web 2.0 is The Guardian?

Posted on 3 May, 2007 by Martin Stabe
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Martin Belham continues his series of newspaper site reviews. He likes the blogs but is surprised the regular stories don't allow commenting.
Posted in Blogs, cif, Comment is Free, comments, Guardian, Newspapers, Online, web2.0 | Leave a reply

currybetdotnet: Newspapers 2.0: How Web 2.0 is The Sun?

Posted on 3 May, 2007 by Martin Stabe
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Martin Belham looks at Sun Online. He's impressed with their use of Feedzilla, with MySun. The blogs, though, are of "variable quality".
Posted in mysun, Newspapers, Online, RSS, the_sun, web2.0 | Leave a reply

Financial Times Tech Blog: Digg: Won’t someone think of the investors?

Posted on 3 May, 2007 by Martin Stabe
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"Kevin Rose, Digg's founder, has taken millions of dollars in investment from backers including Pierre Omidyar, Marc Andreesen and Graylock Partners. By Mr Rose's own admission, that investment may now go up in smoke"
Posted in Digg, web2.0 | Leave a reply

currybetdotnet: How Web 2.0 is The Daily Mail?

Posted on 30 April, 2007 by Martin Stabe
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Martin Belham continues his series of newspaper web site reviews. He is very impressed with the Daily Mail site -- although the blogs may need some work.
Posted in Daily Mail, dailymail, Journalism, Newspapers, Online, web2.0 | Leave a reply

currybetdotnet: Newspapers 2.0: How Web 2.0 is The Mirror online?

Posted on 25 April, 2007 by Martin Stabe
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Martin Belam continues his online newspaper reviews with a look at the recently-relaunched Mirror.co.uk.
Posted in mirror, Newspapers, Online, web2.0 | Leave a reply

currybetdotnet : Newspapers 2.0: How Web 2.0 is The Times?

Posted on 25 April, 2007 by Martin Stabe
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Martin Belam reviews the new Times Online for its 2.0iness. Summary: "No standard RSS and social bookmarking icons: bad. The rest: quite good." The Mirror is in his sights next.
Posted in Blogs, comments, Newspapers, Online, RSS, The Times, web2.0 | Leave a reply

gapingvoid: "cartoons drawn on the back of business cards": history of my blog

Posted on 25 April, 2007 by Martin Stabe
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I'm guilty of this as well...
Posted in Blogs, Twitter, web2.0 | Leave a reply

Center for Citizen Media: Blog: The Not-Yet-Former Audience?

Posted on 23 April, 2007 by Martin Stabe
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Dan Gillmor: "[The] statistics about Web 2.0 participation have implications for citizen media, too. Are we truly erasing the barriers between citizen and media, or are we just replacing one set of gatekeepers with another?"
Posted in community, gatekeeping, Journalism, participation, Social Media, web2.0 | Leave a reply

InformationWeek: Web 2.0 Expo: Media Companies Confront Mortality

Posted on 18 April, 2007 by Martin Stabe
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"Maybe mass media was just a temporary phenomenon," mused Rich Skrenta, co-founder and CEO of news aggregator Topix, noting that mass media arose as a consequence of controlled distribution and captive consumer attention.
Posted in media, topix, web2.0 | Leave a reply

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About this site

Martin StabeMartin Stabe is a journalist based in London. He is an interactive producer at the Financial Times, primarily working on developing the databases underlying FT.com’s interactive graphics and the FT data blog. This is a personal site, and nothing here reflects the views of the FT.

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