Finally trying out Ping.fm...
Debating disabilities...
Palin has a 6-month old with down syndrome. How does she know all about schooling for autistic kids all of a sudden?
The Future of Newspapers?
First of all, the question mark means I am asking, and don’t have the answer.
One day a few months back, a colleague who works down at the Toronto Sun brought a delegation of Chinese up to the Canoe.ca offices to show them how the news gets online. For whatever reason, they ended up at my desk. After taking their last photo, they thanked me for giving them a tutorial and started off.
But then one gentleman stopped and turned to ask: “Do you think the web will replace newspapers?” Wow; talk about a loaded question, regardless of whether one of the editors of the Sun was standing there or not. Well, I danced the question a bit because, the truth is, who knows? I ended my hypothesis not with any words but by holding up my Blackberry and shrugging my shoulders in a “what about mobile?” unspoken gesture. He smiled from ear to ear. Seems he agreed…either that or he has stock in RIM.
But I’m only guessing there too. Frankly, I think we’re a lot closer to the future than we realize. If you’ve ever seen the subway scene in Minority Report, or the Daily Prophet in Harry Potter, you’ve seen the sci fi vision of disposable, and updatable, news in the future, complete with changing headlines and video.
Guess what? Digital paper exists. Wireless transmission of video? Easy. Or maybe you’ve heard of another video site out there too…youhoo, tube something, can’t recall. That one’s ok too. Auto-updating content? Yep. RSS, XML, AJAX…
All the ingredients are there for that fancy digital newspaper device seen in the movies. The fact that it might not be “paper” doesn’t matter. Newspapers will thrive as trusted brands that deliver the news in any device you see fit—maybe even newsprint.
The elimination of channels
Just walking home from the ONA conference and was thinking about their discussion on channels, or sections, and how the traditional newspaper model of segmenting no longer works online. I agree. Someone reading a Paris Hilton story may be the same reader checking out the latest Iraq issues. But I don't agree these silos are going away any time soon. Those sections are tied to revenue streams based on measured and perceived demos. Until dynamic user profiling tech gets way better, we need these channels of navigation.
Manipulating images
OK, I'm not sure if anyone has interest in image manipulation, but this is one of the coolest things I've seen in a long time. Adobe (Photoshop, InDesign, etc.) just hired the guy who developed it. It's amazing to think that the content of images can keep their context while aspect ratios can change so dramatically. There are also ethical concerns any time you're manipulating images. Interesting.
Check it out.
Speaking of spelling
I'm finding it funny that Gmail and gmail are "misspelled" according to Gmail and Digg is a spelling mistake in Digg. Upgrade your word processing software guys!
