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12:25 PM ET, March 31, 2010

Mediagazer

 Top News: 
Motoko Rich / New York Times:
In E-Book Era, You Can't Even Judge a Cover  —  Bindu Wiles was on a Q train in Brooklyn this month when she spotted a woman reading a book whose cover had an arresting black silhouette of a girl's head set against a bright orange background.  —  Ms. Wiles noticed that the woman looked about her age …
Oliver Luft / Press Gazette:
Johnston Press halts paywall experiment  —  Johnston Press is to drop the paywalls it implemented on a number of its local newspapers from next week, Press Gazette understands  —  The regional publisher erected barriers on two of its Scottish and four of its English weekly newspaper websites …
RELATED:
Robert Andrews / paidContent:
Johnston's Local Pay Site Trial Has Been ‘A Disaster’  —  We could have told Johnston Press, when it announced the plans back in November, that people won't pay to read local newspapers online.  But you can't begrudge the publisher finding out for sure for itself...
Discussion: Jon Slattery and eMedia Vitals
Felix Salmon:
The economics of non-profit newspapers  —  Alan Mutter is a genuine expert on newspaper economics, which is one reason why his bizarre blog entry today on the economics of non-profit newspapers is so puzzling.  This has to be one of the most innumerate things he's ever written:
Discussion: Kindle Review, The Wire and Romenesko
RELATED:
Newsosaur / Reflections of a Newsosaur:
Non-profits can't possibly save the news  —  An amazing number of smart and sophisticated people continue to harbor the fantasy that philanthropic contributions can take over funding journalism from the media companies that traditionally have supported the press.
Miguel Helft / New York Times:
With Hirings, Yahoo Steps Up News Coverage  —  SAN FRANCISCO — Yahoo has recruited nearly a dozen journalists from traditional and online media outlets and opened a bureau in Washington to push into original content and increase the popularity of its online news site.
Stop / Twitter Blog:
Tweaking the Twitter homepage  —  Twitter's homepage is a work-in-progress.  Today, we're testing a new design that bubbles up more of the information flowing through Twitter.  This builds on a series of changes starting last year when we redesigned the homepage to make search and trending topics …
RELATED:
Brian Caulfield / Velocity:   Twitter's Homepage Gets Newsier, Searchier
Dansabbagh / Beehive City:
Alan Rusbridger's fair analysis of The Times, The Indy and the world  —  A memo from Alan Rusbridger, Editor of the The Guardian, went out to all staff.  It starts with a nicely aggressive analysis of The Times's financials, followed by a good swipe at The Indy and then a lot more stuff …
RELATED:
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
Guardian ads poke fun at new Independent ownership
John Koblin / New York Observer:
Just Asking... Which Financial Daily Is Jumping Into the Gossip Biz?  —  Last week, we reported that The Wall Street Journal's New York section was starting—of all odd things—sports beats, with reporters traveling to home and away games of New York teams.  —  Well, now it appears The Journal's …
Howard Kurtz / Washington Post:
White House swamped with authors looking for the inside story  —  The White House has practically been overrun by journalists pumping top officials for behind-the-scenes details for a growing roster of behind-the-scenes books.  —  The blitz has created complications for presidential aides …
Megan Garber / Nieman Journalism Lab:
A “reader affection” formula: Gawker creates a metric for branded traffic  —  Influence, engagement, impact: For goals that are, in journalism, kind of the whole point, they're notoriously difficult to quantify.  How do you measure, measure a year, and so on.
John Koblin / New York Observer:
Exiled Condé Editors: The Lost Years  —  So what happens to an editrix after Si Newhouse shuts down her magazine?  —  Dominique Browning wrote in The Times Magazine last weekend that her life went into a free fall after House & Garden was shuttered in 2007.
Discussion: Gawker and The Business Insider
TBI Research:
Here Is Why The iPad Won't Save The Magazine Industry  —  Get The Internet Analyst in your inbox every day.  To sign up, please submit your name and email address here.  —  Magazine industry advertising revenue declined an average of 12% the past 2 years (18% in 2009) …
Discussion: eMedia Vitals
Chris Roush / Talking Biz News:
The FT promotes its Twitter feed as alternative to newspaper  —  Hear first and act fast with Twitter feeds.  Get the news you need as it happens, with FT Twitter feeds.  Delivering breaking FT news, features, blogs, and multimedia, they'll alert you to the developments that matter.
Discussion: paidContent and George Dearing
RELATED:
David Carr / Media Decoder:
The Financial Times: A Newspaper With Good Business News — About Itself
Steve Rosenbaum / The Business Insider:
A Wolff In Web Clothing  —  For some, curation grew out of necessity.  —  Michael Wolff is a world-renowned writer and contributing editor to publications like New York Magazine and Vanity Fair.  But even as he wrote bigger and more controversial articles, he began to feel that the future …
Jeff Jarvis / BuzzMachine:
Serendipity is unexpected relevance  —  Serendipity is not randomness.  It is unexpected relevance.  —  I constantly hear the fear that serendipity is among the many things we're supposedly set to lose as news moves out of newsrooms and off print to online.  Serendipity, says The New York Times, is lost in the digital age.
Discussion: Journalism.co.uk
the nytpicker:
How's Times Skimmer Doing?  One Bad Sign — NYT Can't Seem To Find Anyone To Advertise On It.  —  On December 2, 2009, the NYT Media Group's chief advertising officer, Denise Warren, announced the launch of “Times Skimmer,"a new NYT application designed to mirror the experience of reading …
Richard Siklos / New York Observer:
The Price of Free  —  For the past few years, media buffs have been waiting for the elusive answer to a simple question: When is what's on TV going to really start acting more like what's on the Web?  It's a two-part question, really, and the answer isn't nearly as clear as you might think.
Discussion: conky
Anita Chang / Associated Press:
Journalists in China say Yahoo accounts hacked  —  All four affected are professionally focused on China and related issues  —  BEIJING - Yahoo e-mail accounts belonging to foreign journalists appeared to have been hacked and Google's Chinese search engine was intermittently blocked Tuesday …
Farhad Manjoo / Slate:
YouTube's Original Sin  —  The video site danced with the devil to get a massive traffic boost.  Now it might pay the price.  —  Google CEO Eric Schmidt regularly uses about 30 different computers at work.  Although his company has made it easy for people to organize their e-mail across different computers …
Discussion: Gawker
Kevin Marsh / The BBC College of Journalism Blog:
Paying for quality?  —  Of all the arguments in favour of newspaper paywalls, one is utter tosh.  It is that we - the readers - must pay online to preserve what one tabloid editor once called “the best newspapers in the world”.  It's a description that's reared its head again this week.
Discussion: Jon Slattery
Chromium Blog:
Bringing improved support for Adobe Flash Player to Google Chrome  —  Adobe Flash Player is the most widely used web browser plug-in.  It enables a wide range of applications and content on the Internet, from games, to video, to enterprise apps.  —  The traditional browser plug-in model …
Gillian Reagan / The Business Insider:
NBC Poaches AOL's Ad Exec Cate Carley For iVillage (AOL, GE)  —  AOL's regional sales director Cate Carley is leaving for iVillage, NBC Universal announced today.  Carly has been working for AOL since 2005, joining as sales director for their health network.
Dan / College Media Matters:
Exclusive: UWIRE Set to Relaunch After Six-Month Hiatus  —  UWIRE is back.  The predominant, temporarily dormant student press content sharing service will once again be live online- most likely later this week or early next week.  According to Tom Orr, UWIRE overseer and general manager …
 
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 More News: 
Leena Rao / TechCrunch:
Automattic Opens Up VaultPress, A Safe Place To Back Up Your Blog
Ryan Tate / Gawker:
Will Condé Nast Feed the iPad At the Expense of the Web?
Discussion: MediaMemo
MediaShift:
Portability, Participation Rule for New Media Consumer
Michael Calderone / Michael Calderone's Blog:
Time's Tumulty joins WaPo
Discussion: Romenesko and The Wire
Sree Sreenivasan / DNAinfo.com:
Lessons from A Week Without Newspapers
Paul Bradshaw / Online Journalism Blog:
“Follow, Then Filter”: from information stream to delta
Colby Hall / Mediaite:
Page Six Effect: Richard Johnson's Continued Influence On Today's Media
Discussion: Romenesko
Tim Elfrink / Riptide 2.0:
More Gerald Posner Plagiarism in Miami Babylon, From New Times, PBS, and Many Others
Discussion: Gawker
 Earlier Picks: 
Megan Garber / Nieman Journalism Lab:
What does This American Life look like?  A designer visualizes the radio
Mark Sweney / Guardian:
Daily Mail & General Trust reports display ad rise at national papers
Discussion: Press Gazette
Jon Healey / L.A. Times Tech Blog:
Hollywood wins another lawsuit against a search engine
Jim Romenesko / Romenesko:
Indy Star union protests changing reporter's story for use in advertising section
Discussion: Gannett Blog
Barbara Casassus / theBookseller.com:
French publisher Gallimard to sue Google
Mike Reynolds / Multichannel News:
Time Warner Cable Connects On YES's Live Streaming Service
News & Tech:
Chicago Tribune turning old photos into new revenue stream
Foster Kamer / Runnin' Scared:
Blodget and Salmon on Blodget vs. Salmon: The Last Word
Discussion: The Awl and Vanity Fair
 

 
From Techmeme:

Mark Gurman / Bloomberg:
Sources: Apple has renewed discussions with OpenAI about using its technology to power some features in iOS 18; talks with Google on using Gemini remain ongoing

Ryan Vlastelica / Bloomberg:
Alphabet closes above a $2T market cap for the first time, reaching a valuation of $2.15T after rising 10% on April 26, its biggest one-day jump since July 2015

Andy Edser / PC Gamer:
Microsoft partners with IBM to release the MS-DOS 4.0 source code under the MIT license on GitHub

 
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