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“From measuring total audience to hyperlocal news coverage, newspapers are auditioning new business practices in 2008″
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“Some bleak midwinters are bleaker than others: and this year the only fleeting smiles you’ll see around Fleet Street belong to economic correspondents, who rarely get a story anywhere near front pages while the good times roll.”
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“The idea is that Twitter users can share instant reviews of what they’re watching — TV shows, movies, concerts, anything — by twittering (is the verb form tweeting?) to @twitcrit.”
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Feedback on and ideas from the new BBC homepage beta.
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“In cubicles across the country, lunchtime has become the new prime time, as workers click aside their spreadsheets to watch videos on YouTube, news highlights on CNN.com or other Web offerings.”
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“U.S. Internet advertising revenue will exceed US $35 billion by 2011, from US $12.5 billion in 2005, with a continuous two-digit annual growth, according to the research firm MultiMedia Intelligence.”
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“The desire to cover local communities is nothing new to newspapers. However, it is hard for a paper that covers a large area to focus on events that are happening in all neighborhoods in the circulation area”
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“the CMS is as much a control on the kind of content you can produce as it is a way of distributing it.”
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“I suggested using Chris Messina’s #hashtags, as now implemented by the folks at www.hashtags.org.”
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“Send your nanoreviews of a TV show, movie, anything — even as it’s going on — to @twitcrit on Twitter and it will be archived here.”
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“As I read this year’s first crop of posts from the smartest voices on the future of journalism, it’s clear that 2008 is the change or die year for journalism, as symbolized by the uncertain future of the newspaper industry.”
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“There’s not a ton of insight in that chart, but it got me thinking if I could learn anything about the various media categories from watching my teenage children. Here’s what I’ve observed over the past year.”