Top News:
Wired:
The Web Is Dead. Long Live the Internet — Sources: Cisco estimates based on CAIDA publications, Andrew Odlyzko — Two decades after its birth, the World Wide Web is in decline, as simpler, sleeker services — think apps — are less about the searching and more about the getting.
RELATED:
Alexis Madrigal / The Atlantic Online:
What's Wrong With “X Is Dead” — Technologies die violent deaths less often than we think. — This is the basic problem with the Chris Anderson-anchored Wired cover story, “The Web is Dead.” If you think about technology as a series of waves, each displacing the last …
Ryan Tate / Gawker:
Wired Says ‘The Web is Dead’ — On Its Increasingly Profitable Website — Chris Anderson will generate plenty of chatter with his “The Web is Dead” Wired cover, foretold here previously. Fair enough; that's what a smart magazine editor does. But all the more reason to note the rich ironies in his eulogy.
Discussion:
Wired and New York Observer
Philip B. Corbett / Times Topics:
Everything Old Is Hip Again — Notes from the newsroom on grammar, usage and style. (Some frequently asked questions are here.) — We try hard to shed our old image as stodgy and out of it. Perhaps too hard, sometimes. — How else to explain our constant invocation of the old/new slang “hipster”?
Discussion:
CJR, Gawker, The Wrap, Silicon Alley Insider and New York Observer
RELATED:
Joseph Tartakoff / paidContent:
AOL's Patch Aims To Quintuple In Size By Year-End — Patch, which has already established itself as the biggest network of neighborhood blogs in the country since being acquired by AOL last summer, plans to accelerate its growth dramatically. Patch President Warren Webster tells us the company …
Discussion:
Crain's New York Business, Silicon Alley Insider, Media Week, Seeking Alpha, Morristown Patch, Tarrytown-Sleepy Hollow Patch, Springfield Patch, Merrick Patch, Wellesley Patch, Chatham Patch, Fairfield Patch, Port Washington Patch, Garden City Patch, NYConvergence and NetNewsCheck Latest
RELATED:
Ken Doctor / Newsonomics:
Nine Questions on Patch's New Push: National Hyperlocal?, SEO Sauces, and the Case of the Besieged Florist — It's Patch day in the news news world, as AOL formally announces the expansion of its network of local sites. It's really a ratification of what we've been hearing …
Discussion:
Romenesko, MarketWatch, New Jersey Online, NPR and Lost Remote
Edmund Lee / AdAge:
Patch and Pro-Am Media by the Numbers — AOL Patch Launches 100th Local News Site, but Is it a Boon for Journalists? — NEW YORK (AdAge.com) — AOL's hyper-local news division Patch launched its 100th news site today, underscoring just how quickly AOL is advancing its bid for original content through journalism.
Sarah Rabil / Bloomberg:
AOL CEO Armstrong Aims for 500 News Websites in Local-Ad Bet
AOL CEO Armstrong Aims for 500 News Websites in Local-Ad Bet
Discussion:
TechCrunch, Forbes, Associated Press, MediaMemo and Reuters
Elizabeth Dwoskin / CJR:
Watching My Story Go Viral in Twenty-Four Hours — How Debrahlee Lorenzana became the banker heard 'round the world — Earlier this summer, I was afforded an experience that is a dream for many journalists: a story I wrote went viral. Within the span of twenty-four hours …
Discussion:
BusinessJournalism.org … and Romenesko
Jason Fell / Folio:
Survey: Publishers Could See as Much as $3 Billion from Interactive Periodicals Subs — Digital consortium Next Issue Media conducts survey with global consulting firm. — Digital publishing consortium Next Issue Media recently enlisted international management consulting firm Oliver Wyman …
Discussion:
Nieman Journalism Lab, Canadian Magazines, Media Buyer Planner, MinOnline, Nxtblog, MediaPost, MediaMemo and New York Observer
Reuters:
Nielsen plans to raise $2 billion in IPO: filing — (Reuters) - Private equity-owned Nielsen plans to raise up to $2.01 billion through an initial public offering, more than the $1.75 billion it was originally aiming for, it said in a U.S. regulatory filing on Monday.
Discussion:
Gawker and DailyFinance
MG Siegler / TechCrunch:
NewsBasis Wants To Unload 75% Of My Inbox By Changing The PR Game — Every morning I wake up and find 50 to 100 new emails in my inbox. Am I really that popular? Sadly, no. About 75 percent of it is unsolicited PR pitches. Delete. Delete. Delete. — As fun as that morning ritual is …
Nate Anderson / Ars Technica:
Radio, RIAA: mandatory FM radio in cell phones is the future — Music labels and radio broadcasters can't agree on much, including whether radio should be forced to turn over hundreds of millions of dollars a year to pay for the music it plays. But the two sides can agree on this …
Anthony Ha / VentureBeat:
Video site Vimeo uses HTML5 to get more iPhone friendly — Video sharing site Vimeo says it's going to be the latest video company using the new HTML5 format as its path onto mobile devices. The site plans to release a “Universal Player” later today that will detect your smartphone browser …
Joe Pompeo / The Wire:
Fortune.com Is No Longer A “Second Class Citizen” — Fortune scored big with its announcement Monday that it had poached Dan Primack from Reuters' peHUB as an online senior editor. — Primack, who created and grew peHUB's daily morning newsletter from about 300 readers in 2002 to roughly 60,000 today …
Discussion:
Romenesko, New York Observer, PE Hub Blog and Talking Biz News
Sam Gustin / DailyFinance:
News Corp., the Saudi Prince and the ‘Ground Zero Mosque’ — Amid the howls of outrage over the proposed Islamic community center and mosque near Ground Zero, some political pundits on Fox News, which is owned by Rupert Murdoch's media conglomerate News Corp. (NWS), have been particularly vocal in their opposition to the project.
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Michael Calderone / Yahoo! News:
News outlets split in describing mosque
News outlets split in describing mosque
Discussion:
New York Times, Salon, Washington Post, The Fix, Runnin' Scared, The Awl, The Huffington Post, PostPartisan, The Daily Caller, FishbowlNY, The Wrap, Vast Wasteland, Mediaite and mediabistro.com
Stephanie Clifford / New York Times:
Aisle by Aisle, an App That Pushes Bargains — It's like the most persistent sales clerk you've ever encountered. — Major retailers are working with a new smartphone application that tracks and offers promotions to shoppers as they move from outside the store, to counters, to cash registers …
Discussion:
Silicon Alley Insider, Media Buyer Planner, Gizmodo, WalletPop Blog, ReadWriteWeb, Poynter Online and AdPulp, more at Techmeme »