PressThink: More Undercurrent: Action in Greensboro on Open Source Journalism

Link: PressThink: More Undercurrent: Action in Greensboro on Open Source Journalism.

This article from Pressthink is about the evolving blogging scene in Greensboro, NC which is part of the Piedmont Triad along with Winston-Salem and High Point.

Seems that what the editors at the Greensboro News & Record are trying to do is unique in the newspaper business.  As the article says:

With the local blogging scene rapidy coalescing
on its own, the local newspaper, led by a blogging boss, decides to
act. He wants to remake the site as "an online community or public
square."

And later they cite an email from the paper’s Lex Alexander:

…in many ways we’ve waited 10 years to do this and aren’t going to
wait any longer. My report is due next Friday, and we intend to begin
changing things on Jan. 3. And my editor has made it clear that even
though this effort will have to come out of existing resources, he’s
willing to divert to make this happen. He’s not looking for marginal,
incremental change, but transformative, revolutionary change.

It’s going to be very interesting to see how this local experiment affects the rest of the newspaper universe.

Continue reading

Eyetools Measures How People Read Web Pages

Link: Welcome to Eyetools.

Found this company in a MarketingSherpa case study.  They bring people into their lab and ask them to look at
web pages while an eye tracking camera maps how they look at various
web pages. 

While it is hard to generalize what they have found, there are some general rules of thumb for designers:

  • While it’s generally true that people read from the top left,
    how they read from there varies depending on the page’s graphic
    elements.  They used the analogy of a feather in the wind, if the
    feather were to always start at the top left.  The feather moves
    depending on the wind and the eye follows; on a web page the "wind" is
    the graphic layout.
  • White space is good for the eyes, and makes it easy to
    organize what they are seeing, but if you have a white "line" across
    the entire screen (in other words you can read from the left edge all
    the way to the right and not be interrupted) then you have what they
    call a "scroll inhibitor."  Basically the eye thinks the page is "over"
    and you won’t scroll down below it.
  • If you have a list of things to display more of the list
    will be seen if you put it in a single column.  If you break it into
    two or three columns users will generally "see" less.
  • Images like small graphics or icons will draw the eye to the
    information next to it.  This is a great way to make sure someone reads
    what you want them to.  Pictures of peoples’ faces also work well, but
    they tend to hog the attention so the information next to them might
    not be seen.

Pretty useful stuff.

Continue reading

Dulles is a “Third World Hell Hole”

Link: FT.com / Comment & analysis / Columnists – Jurek Martin: Letter to America.

This opinion piece from a Financial Times columnist Jurek Martin hits the Dulles nail squarely on  the head.

The only reason I fly in there is because it’s the cheapest flight I
can get from home, and I have to do it about twice a month.  It’s
god-awful, and only getting worse.

Continue reading

Who Knew What Rubbers Could Do?

Link: Reason: Artifact.

I love this little item
from Reason magazine’s website.  Seems that some folks in India have
discovered some novel uses for the condom’s that have been distributed
for free for population control and AIDS prevention.

Particularly fitting is the Indian military using them to protect tank barrels from dust.  Anyone told Rumsfeld about this?

Continue reading

Activists Dominate Content Complaints

Link: Activists Dominate Content Complaints.

The main point of this article, Activists Dominate Content Complaints,
is that 99.8% of all the complaints received by the FCC were generated
by one advocacy group.  My favorite part, however, is that the FCC
commissioners claim that the number of complaints received has no
impact on their decision making.  Really it’s a matter of law. 

Right.

That’s why Michael Powell highlights the dramatic year-to-year
increase in number of complaints, from 14,000 in 2002 to 240,000 in
2003 when testifying before the Senate.  (There were fewer than 350 in
2001 or 2000).  But really the number of complaints is irrelevant.

How can it have an impact when they only use the complaints to
decide what to investigate. After all if the FCC monitored the airwaves
for violations on their own then they might be accused of censorship.
But, really, it’s not the volume it’s the quality of the complaint that matters.

BTW, this article is a follow up that MediaWeek did after Jeff Jarvis revealed this little beauty.

Continue reading

New Legal Ruling on Email

I was reading my favorite tech resource, Langa List, when I came across these paragraphs in a response to a question about email security:

Email almost never goes directly from sender to recipient. Instead, it’s usually stored, albeit briefly, on at least two mail servers along the way, and maybe more; and will also pass through a large number (10-30 is common) of other computers, routers, and similar hardware along the way. US courts have recently ruled that email stored on a mail server (and that includes email passing through one mail server on its way to
another, "stored" on the intermediate server for only a fraction of a second) is not protected by wiretap laws originally designed with telephone conversations in mind. This is a brand-new ruling (about a month ago), so the ripple effects are still being sorted out, but in essence, it looks as though an email communication may be legally about the same as a conversation you have on a busy street corner: You can have
no reasonable expectation of privacy, so anyone who overhears the conversation— or reads the email— isn’t breaking any law.

The original intent of this legal change was for law enforcement: Along with the provisions of the Patriot Act, the idea was to make it easier for police and government bureaucrats to look freely in places that used to require a warrant.

Regardless of how you feel about that, the unintended consequence of this may be enormous. One example: If your email no longer has any legal privacy protection, what’s to prevent an ISP from, say, selling his mail server’s backup tapes to a spammer, who could then mine the addresses *and content* for likely spam targets and topics? If your email is now no more legally protected than a conversation on a public sidewalk, I don’t know what recourse you’d have at all."

Realistically I’m less worried about the "expectation of privacy" and much more worried about "selling mail server’s backup tapes to a spammer."  Someone with a mail server looking to make some quick cash selling lists to a spammer seems much more likely, and just one more straw ready to break the back of one of the great communication tools of the modern communication tools.

Battle Weary Congress Takes on Baseball Wimps

John McCain was at the Army-Navy game and during the course of an interview said that if Major League Baseball doesn’t institute mandatory drug testing, then Congress will legislate it.

Good grief. 

How about this:  Congress get’s rid of the idiotic antitrust exemption from normal regulation (i.e. monopoly status) that MLB has enjoyed for several generations and begins to concentrate on a few "small" issues:
Medicare Reform
Social Security Reform
Iraq
Figuring out the real impact of the Patriot Act
And I can go on…

Link: My Way News.