Friday, December 31, 2004
Bloggers in Sri Lanka and the Maldives
Sarath Seneviratne, also in Sri Lanka, reports friends dead and missing.
Primary0 is blogging from the Maldives - eyewitness accounts and pictures.
More photos from the Maldives at Vakaruge.
Thursday, December 30, 2004
Smart mob donations
Keep it coming.
Small miracles
Robert Phillips from Bermagui was propelled through the collapsing walls of his hut and swept about a kilometre through a nearby lagoon.
An Australian couple diving off the Maldives in the Indian Ocean were dragged about a kilometre out to sea before being rescued.
A Swedish toddler has been reunited with his father after the boy's picture was posted on the internet.
Anonymous acts of kindness.
A pair of Israeli newlyweds described how a Palestinian couple came to their rescue, paying for them to fly back home after they had lost all their cash.
An Indian teenager was found after clinging to a door in heavy seas for two days.
About 3000 Sri Lankan villagers believed to have died in the island's tsunami disaster were found alive yesterday.
A 20-day-old baby survived, thanks to a floating mattress.
A Canadian survived for 10 hours by clinging to a dead fisherman who was wearing a lifejacket.
Wednesday, December 29, 2004
Death toll continues to rise
Group blogs at tsunamihelp.blogspot.com and tsunamiupdates.blogspot.com are providing continuous news and information about resources, aid, donations and volunteer efforts.
How the shockwaves spread
Papers losing the web war
While readers turn to online for breaking news media organisations are struggling to adapt their business models to the new environment:
Newspapers in the San Francisco Bay area have been hammered by Craigslist.org to the tune of $50m to $65m in job ad losses alone, according to a new report.
Consulting firm Classified Intelligence has issued a 57 page report that tracks how the four major Silicon Valley newspapers were caught off guard by Craigslist and have largely lost the classified advertising wars."(The Bay area) is the first major metro market where, with great certainty, the newspaper industry no longer controls the classified advertising marketplace," Classified Intelligence said in its report.
Australian newspapers will face their own battle with Craigslist.org which opened for business here in mid-2004.
Susan Sontag, 1933-2004
Susan Sontag, 71, the American intellectual who engaged and enraged equally with her insights into high and low culture, died yesterday at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York.
In their own words
Tuesday, December 28, 2004
Covering the destruction
The nature of this story doesn't lend itself to bloggers as newsbreakers. But alert bloggers, like Blair, can aggregate stories and photos and point readers to more remote web sources.
Wikipedia also has comprehensive coverage.
There's some chilling amateur video here.
Not surprisingly, though, there isn't much in the way of live blog reports from the scene. Blogger Dare Obasanjo criticised Robert Scoble for questioning this lack of live blogging when the disaster was unfolding.
But the New York Times sees it differently:
For vivid reporting from the enormous zone of tsunami disaster, it was hard to beat the blogs.For my money the wires and various foreign bureaux led the running. Media organisations have encouraged firsthand reader feedback via email on their websites, but you can expect blogs to kick up a gear when more witnesses get safe and get online access.
The so-called blogosphere, with its personal journals published on the Web, has become best known as a forum for bruising political discussion and media criticism. But the technology proved a ready medium for instant news of the tsunami disaster and for collaboration over ways to help.
[...] Howard Rheingold, the author of "Smart Mobs: The Next Social Revolution," about the use of interactive technologies like text-messaging to build ad hoc coalitions, said that using blogs to muster support for aid was a natural next step. "If you can smartmob a political demonstration, an election or urban performance art, you can smartmob disaster relief," he said.
One veteran of the online medium said he was initially "a little disappointed" in the reports he got from the blogs. Paul Saffo, director of the Institute for the Future in California, said that with the widespread use of digital cameras and high-speed digital access, he was expecting to see more raw video and analysis.
He said that upon reflection he realized that it was difficult to get information out of hard-hit areas and that putting digital video online is still the domain of "deep geeks" with significant resources. "This brought home to me just how far we have to go," he said.
The occasional exceptions are photo blogs. The Age used pics from here on the front page today.
Ocean swells along the flooded coast of Kalutara, Sri Lanka in a satellite image taken shortly after the area was hit. Photo: Reuters
The aftermath
Bodies of victims laid out in the Indonesian city of Banda Aceh
Photo: Reuters / smh.com.au
The wave hits
People fleeing the tsunami at Koh Raya, Thailand. Photo: John Russell / theage.com.au
Monday, December 27, 2004
2004 online review
Bertrand Pecquerie at editorsweblog.org takes issue with Glaser's "self-congratulatory" tone.
Meanwhile, Steve Outing believes mainstream journalists could learn a few things from bloggers, but bloggers can also learn a few things from journalists.
Sunday, December 26, 2004
Paper wars
[...] the outcome of the ferocious war over the Sydney residential property market will play a huge role in determining the future of newspapers such as The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age in Melbourne, the Brisbane Courier Mail, the Adelaide Advertiser, The West Australian and, in time, similar titles in Tasmania.At CJR Phillip Meyer offers his own advice on how to weather the storm:
[...] Is Akhurst right that papers such as The Australian, the SMH and The Age have had their day? In my view there is little doubt that high-margin, large-volume conventional non-display classified advertisements now have a limited lifespan.
The great strength of the traditional newspapers is that they are capturing high-spending consumers better than any other medium, and if they can retain them with attractive editorial they will gain substantial advertising revenue.
We need to keep genuine journalism alive long enough for the successful media entrepreneurs of the future to find a way to capture and sell the influence that traditional media are abandoning through their cost-cutting strategies. Those who understand the influence model and apply it to the new, more specialized marketplaces could start to look very much like journalism's philosopher-kings of the twentieth century.Michael Miner at the Chicago Reader has a different approach:
What the newspapers of tomorrow need to tap is the full potential of alternate reality. Facts alone get us nowhere. True insight demands a healthy dose of make-believe.The single biggest question, though, revolves around the type of journalism that readers are attracted to. How can newspapers be better in all possible ways - producing better reported, better edited and better designed papers?
Gottliebsen hints at the answer:
To continue to prosper, the papers will need to swing hard to other types of classifieds and display advertising, where there is a rapidly growing market, and perhaps rely more on the attraction of their journalism.Meyer's solution follows a similar, quality-driven path. Is it just wishful thinking?
Saturday, December 25, 2004
Ho ho ho ...
Santa has 31 hours of Christmas to work with, thanks to the different time zones and the rotation of the earth, assuming he travels east to west (which seems logical). This works out to 822.6 visits per second. This is to say that for each Christian household with good children, Santa has 1/1000th of a second to park, hop out of the sleigh, jump down the chimney, fill the stockings, distribute the remaining presents under the tree, eat whatever snacks have been left, get back up the chimney, get back into the sleigh and move on to the next house.
Thursday, December 23, 2004
Free to speak your mind ... or not
That may be so, but old-fashioned despots are still in vogue in North Korea, Turkmenistan and Togo, and still busily repressing the media. The same issue of The Economist investigates these remaining personality cults and asks: Why do they survive, how long will they last, and why do those who build them always have such vile personalities?
Iraq, the press and the US election
With President Bush preparing for a second term, what can we expect from the press in Iraq? The initial signs, from Falluja, are not encouraging. Even allowing for the constraints imposed by embedding, much of the press seemed unduly accepting of US claims, uncritically repeating commanders' assertions about the huge numbers of insurgents killed while underplaying the devastation in the city. And little attention was paid to the estimated 200,000 residents said to have fled Falluja in anticipation of the fighting. Amid US claims that the city had been "liberated," these refugees seemed invisible. But, in light of the coverage in recent months, this should have come as no surprise.
Should scientific articles be available free online?
"How should we harness the enormous possibilities of the digital world while trying to reckon with vested interests that stand to lose in the transition? Ultimately, the potential benefits of open access, for both scientists and the public, are too significant not to pursue aggressively. At a time when technical material is accumulating more quickly than ever before, extensive online databases can help scientists do the most informed work possible. At a time, too, when patients are asked to participate much more actively in health care decision-making, better access to information is crucial."Part of the argument goes that the public would benefit directly from greater access. For patients who have rare diseases or are considering controversial therapies, access to cutting-edge medical research may be vital—especially since new work is developing so quickly that even the most assiduous general practitioners may have a hard time keeping abreast of it all.
Don't ask me, I just work here
But President Bush has dispensed with this old trick. Having invited reporters to ask him questions on live television, Bush repeatedly told them that their questions would be better directed at someone else.
Q: How long will U.S. troops be in Iraq?
GWB: Ask Generals Abizaid and Casey.
Q: What's the broad framework for Social Security reform?
GWB: Ask Congress.
Q: Has the Iraq war improved the prospects for peace in the Middle East?
GWB: Go ask the Palestinians.
Every time he was confronted with a difficult question, Bush answered, Go ask someone else.
Wednesday, December 22, 2004
Goodbye Bill
Slate's editor, Jacob Weisberg, said in a message to readers,
"Although the move creates exciting opportunities for us, especially on the business side, neither the new publisher nor the old editor (who is also staying) envisions drastic editorial changes."
Free at last
Friday, December 03, 2004
Walkley Awards 2004
Hugh Martin, Matthew Absalom-Wong, Simon Johanson and John Silvester, theage.com.au, Gangland
In 2004, Melbourne was spellbound by the continuing saga of underworld killings and police corruption. Gangland was a 13-part package of audio slideshow accompanying a web archive that told the story of a series of related murders in Melbourne between 1998 and 2004. Broken into chapters, the interactive site looked at the families, the victims, the major hits, the locations and the ongoing investigation.
Judges’ comments
Age reporter John Silvester takes the audience on a tour of “murderous Melbourne”. This is an amazing work that delivers on the powerful potential of internet journalism. The mixture of Silvester’s untrained, but so real, crime-reporter voice with great music, photographs and a seemingly endless supply of background information delivers a thoroughly engaging news presentation. Key to the success of this piece is its clear, easy navigation and the perfect mix of design, music, content and very human reporting.
SBS coverage of the 49th Walkley Awards
Thursday, December 02, 2004
How do you get your news?
1. One of the most interesting new developments is Wikipedia's move into news. Members of the open-source community who write and edit Wikipedia's encyclopedia entries can test their skills as journalists at Wikinews. The news site follows a similar set of rules as the encyclopedia, which allows anyone to edit and post corrections to entries, as long as each change is recorded.
2. How long before mainstream media begins buying up blogs?
"... established media brands will have no choice but to adopt blog strategies -- and acquisitions will be a part of it."Blogmeister, Nick Denton, is the man to watch.
3. OhmyNews isn't exactly new but has gathered a good deal of attention recently. Democratic journalism is the new buzzword.
4. Will newspaper websites begin charging for access? OK, some already have begun charging for selected content, but where is this trend heading?
Scotsman's archives online
As part of its 150th anniversary The Age recently published a similar, albeit less ambitious, site. The Age has digitised a selection of its archival material going back to 1854.
The attractions are obvious, as is the educational potential. But for anyone with even a passing interest in history these archives are a great tool.
Wednesday, December 01, 2004
Live from Laughland
John Laughland, whose piece ran in The Age yesterday, has had his credibility demolished in The Guardian for being an apologist for some of Europe's nastiest regimes.
What population problem?
His first point is "population ageing is good news for everyone who prefers living to dying."
Umm, right. Difficult to disagree (I suppose), but it doesn't really add much to what we already know.
But wait:
"The second most important reason for ageing is the marked decline in 'fertility' (births per woman) since the early 1960s. I happen to think this is the worst part of the news. But I'm perfectly capable of giving it a positive spin.
For one thing, having fewer children to support at least makes it easier for the community to support an increased number of old people."
Read that last sentence again, carefully. According to Gittins, fewer children mean the oldies can have all the attention they want. Really? Well perhaps for a short time. Generations following won't have that luxury. No kids = no working adults = no support for oldies.
"For another, it's possible fertility may be stabilising. It hasn't got any lower for five years.
Even if that's true, however, reduced fertility is good news for all those people who hate children and think there ought to be fewer of 'em."
At this point we assume the curmudgeonly old Gittins has his tongue firmly planted in his cheek.
And he continues. It turns out a shrinking workforce is really a good thing:
"... the balance of bargaining power is going to shift from bosses back to workers. Unemployment will be much less of an issue, redundancies will be rare, older workers will be valued and their needs accommodated, and bosses will be trying a lot harder to keep their workers happy."
Power to the people, man! Bring on the grey revolution!
But here comes the bad bit:
"The Productivity Commission estimates that, by the mid-2020s, the rate of growth in real income per person will have almost halved to 1.25 per cent a year."
According to Ross, though, it won't really be that bad because we can take solace in the fact that money doesn't make us happy.
"Studies show that in the rich countries, rising incomes don't lead to greater 'subjective wellbeing'."
Phew, that's a relief.
"... because a higher proportion of the population will be retired, the population will be enjoying a lot more leisure. GDP ignores leisure, but people enjoy and often choose to retire voluntarily."
I'm getting a bit confused now. OK, people will continue to live longer, which I agree is a good thing. People will stay healthy longer, which I also agree is a good thing. But because of the reduced fertility rate we're not replacing our working population sufficiently so we have a shrinking workforce, which Gittins argues is not really a bad thing.
OK, I sort of follow him up to that point.
But if a higher proportion of the population is retired (and it makes sense that they would be), then where's the economic trade-off? It's difficult to believe that volunteer work will make up the difference:
"... thanks to the increase in retirees, the value of volunteer labour will increase over the next 40 years from 1.8 per cent of GDP to 2.2 per cent."
Do we really need more lamington drives and lollipop ladies? (At least we know the lollipop ladies will be redundant.)
And then there's this:
"Finally, there's good news for the young. Though they may be paying a bit more tax to support their oldies, their lifetime real incomes will be substantially higher - maybe 90 per cent higher - than their parents' lifetime incomes."
90 per cent higher? Even though "real income per person will have almost halved to 1.25 per cent a year" by the 2020s?
Check the report out for yourself, and see what other submissions to the Productivity Commission have had to say.
Thursday, November 25, 2004
Articles
Melbourne 2006
Australian fades at the mountainGirls all but clean up
Men save their best for last
Mixed bag at the velodrome
Action Jackson closer to gold
Pitt into semi Fight Club
Rudic proves himself a heavyweight
Women prove the stronger sex
Veteran lifter hangs up shoes
Bayley wins, Kersten disqualified
Bates dominant in defence
Melbourne's night of nights
Athens 2004
Athens Olympics blog
Rogge closes Athens Olympics
Anti-Americanism erupts in Iraq face-off
Croatia to meet Russia in final
Trenton out of the medals
Massamino out in quarters
Aussies miss out on beach volleyball medals
Brazil beat Spain for men's gold
Injured Cook goes down fighting
Australia to play off for bronze
Prosser, Williams still in medal hunt
Softballers to play for gold
Aussie pair through to women's semis
Aussie men through to semis
Australia needs to win playoff for gold
Prosser and Williams into quarters
All over for Thorpe and 4x100m team
Hackett and Stevens through to 1500m final
De Bruijn leads the way in 50m freestyle
Henry swims for gold tonight
Australia, US vie for top spots in pool
Thorpe cruises into 100m semi final
Wind hampers heat times
Thorpe and Hackett progress in 200m free
No-hitter win for Australia over Japan
Outside the stadium, Athens remains laidback
Lean decision could mean gold for Trenton
The calm before the storm
Stronger, faster Aussies pitching for medals
Focus on performance, not medals or records
Oped
The names, not the website, are Crikey gold
How citizen reporters get the news out first
Athens 2004, 2012, 2016 ...
Mr Ruddock, we need a proper population plan now
Gen X: The new political mood
Debunking the great Generation X myth
hacktivism: the new protest movement?
Wag the Watchdog: The Internet and the Kosovo Campaign
Online features
Gangland
Talking pictures
Laughter lines
Salt fever
D-Day remembered
Last man standing
Gallipoli in their own words
Story of a tree
Other news articles
Public convinced of AWB illegal payments
I am blogger, hear me roar
Dr Stephen Livesey, stem cell scientist
Australians rank in global road rage study
Primary class sizes lowest ever
Sounding off against MS
Blues shine through the rain
Blues festival returns to its roots
And the web site is...
Peer reviewed articles
Into the Millennium
Bringing Governments Down: The 1999 Victorian Election Campaign and the Net
Thursday, November 11, 2004
Blog on ...
I'd been tinkering with blogs for about a year before starting this - including writing what I believe was the first Australian news blog on location from Athens while I was with The Age.
I've been working in the online area since the mid 90s and though I've done time in the print side of the business I don't really feel as though I've ever left the online world behind. I consider myself lucky to have been involved with this new medium from early on.
It struck me back then that online is perfect for journalism. That's taken a while to filter through to the industry. The challenges for traditional print businesses are very clear: papers are undergoing a massive cultural and economic shift, and online is critical to their future. It's incumbent on newspaper editors and executives to be across all of the relevant online issues and develop strategies to stay abreast of new reader trends and technological developments.
Amongst other things I've taught journalism at La Trobe University and RMIT in Melbourne, and at UTS in Sydney. I was instrumental in helping establish Blue Ear during 1998 and 1999; Ethan Casey and I tried a whole range of strategies that pre-dated Ohmynews in what was possibly the first example of distributed journalism on the web. It was exhilarating and exhausting and it didn't pay a cent. Given the same circumstances I'd do it all over again.
After freelancing, teaching and spending most of my twenties as a semi-professional musician I moved into academia, and from there to the world of business journalism. I spent a few years as the online editor of a number of finance and business web sites for Fairfax Business Media before moving to The Age.
From 2001 to 2005 I worked at The Age in Melbourne where I was variously editor of theage.com.au and deputy editor of sections at the newspaper. From there I moved to Sydney as editor-in-chief of NEWS.com.au, and then on to Brisbane as General Manager of APN Online.
I used to live a few minutes walk from the beach, and play the Fender Jazz with "one of the best kept secrets in Australian country music" . If you're ever in Melbourne I do recommend you check out The T-Bones.
These days I play keyboards and guitar with The Long Stand, amongst other Melbourne outfits.