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‘Recursive publishing tool’

by henrycopeland
September 27th, 2002


Writing about RSS/RDF wrestling, Anil Dash comments: “Blogger wasn’t named RPT: Recursive Publishing Tool. That’s part of why it caught on with normal people.”

Googlesphere

by henrycopeland
September 26th, 2002


Moxie and Doc went to lunch and thought they coined the Googlesphere. Google said otherwise. Perhaps they can get credit for popularizing it?

Daypop up

by henrycopeland
September 26th, 2002


Daypop is back, just in time to record News.Google’s linkage by 178 blogs. Bots chasing people chasing bots chasing people.

Featurewell

by henrycopeland
September 25th, 2002


Wordsmith and newly syndicated author Ken Layne describes the article syndication Internet service run by Featurewell. “There are some 800 writers – Jimmy Breslin, Eric Alterman, Catherine Dunn, Christopher Hitchens and Andrei Codrescu, to name a few – who use Featurewell to sell their work again and again to the 900 editors signed up with the service. Wallis has a reputation as a fierce defender of free-lancers’ rights, and this combined with his record of actually getting the money from publishers to journalists makes Featurewell a friendly place for an impressive roster of writers.” Correspondent.com, one of Pressflex‘s publishing clients, offers a parallel service focused on Europe. And I know Red Dot provides an Internet-managed photo syndication service from Budapest.

It’s Google, stupid.

by henrycopeland
September 24th, 2002


If you are in the news business, forget how you manage and serve information. Don’t bother going to fancy content management summits. Instead, spend some time thinking about how readers acquire information.

Eager to test-drive the next content management system? Open a web-browser. Type www.google.com. Voila.

Serving over 5 billion searches a month, Google is by far the world’s biggest single information server, the global content management system. For premium, information-hungry readers, Google is, defacto, both the homepage and prefered acquisition tool for most important information.

What does this mean for news publishers? Consider New York, where Google thrashes the city’s paper of record on its own front stoop.

The New York Times portrays itself as The City’s Leading Information Source. And as one discovers by crunching the NYTimes.com’s own audience figures, the paper gets an average of 1.2 million visitors a day or roughly 11 million total users in a month.

These numbers pale when we consider that Google serves 12,195,400 searches a month for the words “New York.” And 68,400 for “World Trade Center.” And 91,200 for “Bloomberg.” And 144,400 for “NYSE.” And 630,700 for “Broadway.” And 752,300 for “Manhattan.” And 22,800 for “Pataki.” And 60,800 for “Empire State Building.”

You get the idea. Here’s the scary thing; the number of Google searches for “New York” has grown 62% since March. When was the last time the New York Times grew its web audience by more than 20% a year? (All Google figures gleaned from its old Adwords program.)

Here are some other Google search tallies for publishers to chew on. Google gets 11,260,800 searches a month for “London.” “Atlanta” gets 2,302,300 a month. “Los Angeles” gets 3,442,100 a month.

Now, Google goes for the news jugular. Google has been running an alpha version of its news scraper for months, putting relevant headlines atop search results. This week, its “news.google” page began serving up whole pages of relevant news scraped from 4,000 sources.

Noting that the NYTimes URLs in News.Google include the word “partner,” Dave Winer suggests some special benefit will accrue to the paper. I don’t know what he’s thinking. Will Google skew its news judgement to send some extra visitors to the Times? My bet is that the partnership simply (and only) jumps visitors past the Times’ registration module.

In fact, News.Google shames the NYTimes.com. On the ten articles highlighted on the current news aggregation for “New York,” only two are from the New York Times. Only one of ten for the “New York City” search is from the Times.

Assuming Google’s content relevance and peer weighting algorithms continue to run the show, News.Google will boost well-networked bloggers as Google’s source of highly referenced sites expands. The key thing to watch — when and how will Google expand the list of 4,000 news providers.

Kuro5hin and Slashdot are already included. (But no Metafilter?) Will Blogcritics or Instapundit or Scripting News be next? Will Drudge, the human headline squeegee, ever make the list?

The bottom of Google’s new says: “This page was generated entirely by computer algorithms without human editors. No humans were harmed or even used in the creation of this page.”

No humans harmed… but more than a few corporations will drown as the river of news floods and erases its old banks.

Want the latest news and views about News.Google? Where better to check than the [url=http://news.google.com/news?hl=en&lr=&ie=ISO-8859-1&q=google&sa=N&tab=wn]source itself.

(9/26/02 Nick Denton, former CEO of headline aggregating Moreover.com, examines a Google fumble in presenting news. And Leslie Walker writes: “the former editor in me feels humbled at how a computer is able to assemble on the fly an adequate version of what it takes a dozen or two humans to do at most major Web news sites.”)

Chasing ads, dailies think ‘adult’

by henrycopeland
September 23rd, 2002


On a day when Glenn gives a bodaciously illustrated link to topless UK hunting enthusiasts, I’m inspired to dredge up this article from a couple months back.

E&P: “It’s a newspaper advertising category that for decades has been owned lock, stock, and fur-lined handcuffs by alternative papers. But now increasing numbers of daily newspapers are coyly succumbing to the many seductions of sex ads.”

“‘I worry about the slippery slope of pursuing these ads,’ Hartford (Conn.) Advocate Advertising Manager Greg Shimer said. ‘I want our people to go after auto, hospitals, fashion — the ads alternatives don’t traditionally get.'” Nevertheless, in July “the Advocate began a two-month experiment of slightly relaxed standards — including bigger ad sizes and photographs (although only head shots are allowed) — to attract more business to its small adult-advertising section.”

Ego disintermediation

by henrycopeland
September 23rd, 2002


In today’s NYTimes, Mickey Kaus worries that blogging journalists will save their best stuff for their blogs and bypass editors. Good point. Most writers are in it as much for mojo than money. Ego disintermediation is a big driver for blogging journalists. The article is written by journalist David Gallagher, who says (on his own blog) that he blogs “because self-publishing is the best thing about the Web.” (Via Hylton Jolliffe.)

Reading the same article, Amy Langfield asks: “should journalists blog?” And she answers, “As a former copy editor and desk editor, I want to say

IMterviews

by henrycopeland
September 23rd, 2002


Tony Pierce has mastered IM fiction chatting with people like Lenny Kravitz and Anna Kournikova.

Now, Dawn Olsen perfects the straight IMterview with writer Neal Pollack. He likens bloggers to “a prison full of lunatics shouting to see the warden.” He notes later that “you probably have as many loyal readers as the average midlist fiction writer.”

E-mail interviews often secrete preachy, overboiled prose; good IMterviews spurt globules of memorable text and, for those who care, record context and spelling.

I’d love to read articles woven from IMterviews. The writer would build her case, but the source documents would be linked for anyone’s perusal.

Blog CV: my life as a blog

by henrycopeland
September 20th, 2002


Jason Kottke writes: “Anyone who meets me online — including possible friends, fellow Web design enthusiaists, or potential employers — has access to 4+ years of my thoughts before they even have to strike up a conversation. That’s damn powerful stuff.” Yep, so much so that I currently feel it would be tough to hire someone who is not a blogger. It would feel like they were hiding something.

A couple weeks ago, Krzysztof Kowalczyk argued that the best resume is a blog. “My opinion is that it’s impossible to tell anything from a typical resume. So a guy says he knows PHP. Does it mean that he’s a PHP guru who has written 100k lines of PHP code or that he’s just finished ‘Learn PHP in 15 minutes’? No way to tell. My idea: blog your resume. In addition to a standard resume keep a log of all the stuff you’re learning and doing. E.g. if today you wrote a 5k lines perl script that spiders the web and extracts interesting info, you would to your log a dated entry: Finished 5k line Perl script to spider the web. Used LWP::Simple module…

Curriculum Vitae means “a summary of one’s education, professional history, and job qualifications, as for a prospective employer.” CVs inevitably distort and elide. History is written by the victors; likewise CVs are overwritten by our winning ideas. Our missteps, mistakes and stupidities get forgotten.

A blog captures our professional and personal accretions in real-time, records the quality of our interactions and snap-shoots our judgements. Other important factors get recorded: do we play well with the other children in our class? do we share credit? do we collaborate? listen? articulate? admit mistakes? grow?

This transparency may be a crucial selling point for Weblogs4hire. Don’t hire a blogger to blog for you. Hire her because you understand her skills and personality. Because you trust her. Because she’ll fit better with your team, last longer, and (not least) communicate better.

Tribune classifieds boom online, slump offline

by henrycopeland
September 20th, 2002


Tribune Company, owner of the LATimes and the Chicago Tribune, says that online revenues in August grew 29% to $6.4 million, up from $4.9 million in August 2001. The growth is attributed to the company’s CareerBuilder web site, says this article.

Meanwhile print classified sales declined 1%, with the biggest decline coming in the “help wanted” category, which was down 17 percent.

Cannibalization? Nawww.


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