1 / 15

Basics of Online Journalism

Basics of Online Journalism. August 30, 2010. Advantages of Online Journalism. Advantages. Significance. Audience Control Nonlinearity Storage, Retrieval, & Unlimited Space Immediacy Multimedia Capacity Interactivity & UGC. Stories need to be even more engaging

cachez
Télécharger la présentation

Basics of Online Journalism

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Basics of Online Journalism August 30, 2010

  2. Advantages of Online Journalism Advantages Significance • Audience Control • Nonlinearity • Storage, Retrieval, & Unlimited Space • Immediacy • Multimedia Capacity • Interactivity & UGC • Stories need to be even more engaging • Stories need to be organized in chunks • You need to triple-check facts • You need to know print, web, audio, video, & photography!

  3. Approaches to Online Journalism • Freestanding Journalism (e.g., Slate.com) • Already-associated Journalism (e.g., CNN.com) • Convergence Sites (e.g., TBO.com) • News Aggregators (e.g., Digg.com, Google News) • Hyperlocal Sites (e.g., NewWest.net) • Backpack Journalists or Mojos (i.e., YOU!) • Legacy Media (e.g., LaramieBoomerang.com) • Shovelware + multimedia, links, UGC, or Web extras

  4. Evaluating the Quality of Online Journalism • Who is the author? • What is the content? • Is the information accurate? • When was it updated? • What does it look like?

  5. Online Journalism Terminology

  6. Understanding the Web • ARPANET and “packets” • Internet vs. Web (see “The Web is Dead”) • Web browsers use the URL (address) to find the requested information. • The URL looks like http://www.klandreville.com • What does http stand for? • The website contains the html files that visually/graphically present the page to you. • What does html stand for? • Pull vs. push technology between clients and servers • RSS stands for what?

  7. Understanding Digital Media • Why go digital? Analog vs. digital • Types of digital media from smallest to largest file size. File size affects bandwidth usage. • Text = ASCII • Graphics = GIF, BMP, TIFF, EPS, JPEG, PNG • PDFs preserve original formatting that may include both text and graphics • Sound = WAV and AIFF are larger than MP3 • Video = MPEG, QuickTime, Flash Video, and AVI • Rich Content = Java, Flash, AJAX, XML

  8. Understanding the Hardware & Software • Connection Terms • Bandwidth • FTP • Modems and cable modems • ISP • Wi-fi • Storage Terms • Hard drive • CD-ROM • DVD • USB • Performance Terms • Processor • Video card • Resolution • Software Terms • Authoring software • Blogging software • Feed readers (Web, stand-alone, browser-based) • Content mgmt systems • Editing software

  9. Online Journalism 2.0 • Web 2.0 • Platforms allow users to easily post and share content • User-generated content • Community and connecting • “The news is a conversation, not a lecture.” • Bloggers, CNN’s iReport • YouTube, MySpace, Facebook, Flickr, Twitter • Digg, Newsvine, Reddit, and Slashdot • Mobile 2.0 • Cell phones, iPods, and variations of each now connect to the Internet • Implications for journalism? • Be even more aware of the participant (i.e., the audience) • Use RSS feeds to keep tabs on stories all over the Web • Need content available for these users in “podcasts” and “vodcasts”

  10. Basics of Blogging

  11. Blogging and Online Journalism • Most major newspapers have journalist-authored blogs • Blogging can contribute to journalistic discourse by… • Providing commentary for users • Filtering and editing information for users • Fact checking for users • Providing grassroots, eyewitness, or firsthand accounts to users • Providing additional reporting on a current story • Allowing a dialogue of story suggestions, critique, and review by others

  12. Good Blogs • Good blogs • Update frequently • Write in conversation-style that shows your personality • Provide specific headlines • Provide links elsewhere to helpful information • Allow readers to comment and comment back to readers • Are facilitated by you • Are ongoing conversations among members of a community • Can be your professional notebook, journal, or brainstorming session • Embed photos, video, audio, Flash presentations, and other multimedia features

  13. Examples • Commentary Blog • http://masteringmultimedia.wordpress.com/ • Major Newspaper Blog • http://lens.blogs.nytimes.com/ • Professional/Career-Building Blog • http://harrylocke4.wordpress.com/ • http://daniellehartman.wordpress.com/ • Entertainment Blog • http://blogs.chron.com/memo

  14. Blog Terminology • Post • Permalink • Trackback • Blogroll • Linkblog • Vlog • Moblog

  15. For Next Time… • Next time we’ll develop our blogs • Before you come to class, go to an online tutorial on WordPress, please see: http://www.jtoolkit.com/blogging/wp_tips.html

More Related