Top News:
Alan Rusbridger / Guardian:
The splintering of the fourth estate — Media organisations are trying various routes to the future - the Guardian's is firmly an open and collaborative one — Back in June, I was invited to speak in Amsterdam at a “Royal Symposium”. It turned out I was sharing the platform with a writer …
Discussion:
Journalism.co.uk, Romenesko and ABC News
John Koblin / WWD.COM:
Rupert Murdoch Does Another Daily — NEW YORK — Some of us count sheep, but Rupert Murdoch spends his sleepless nights dreaming up media properties. It was late May, around 2 a.m., and Murdoch was in his New York penthouse on Fifth Avenue having a tough time falling asleep when a vision came to him …
Discussion:
City Room
RELATED:
Joe Pompeo / Yahoo! News:
Rupert Murdoch's tablet tabloid gearing up for launch
Rupert Murdoch's tablet tabloid gearing up for launch
Discussion:
Gawker, BlogPost, mediabistro.com, Romenesko and Reuters
Charles Arthur / Guardian:
Journalists of the future need data skills, says Berners-Lee — Inventor of the world wide web says that the stories of the future won't come from chatting in bars but from poring over rows of data. Do you agree - and is that what students are learning? — Are you ready to be a journalist of the future?
Wayne Friedman / MediaPost:
Comcast-Controlled NBC Names Starting Management Lineup — Just like Fox did the day before, the new Comcast-controlled NBC Universal decided to stay inside when it came to promoting its advertising executives in the newly formed company. — Longtime senior ad sales executive Marianne Gambelli …
Discussion:
AdAge
RELATED:
Andrew Wallenstein / paidContent:
NBC Universal Reorg Gives Bond, Zalaznick New Digital Duties
NBC Universal Reorg Gives Bond, Zalaznick New Digital Duties
Discussion:
Company Town, Media Decoder, mediabistro.com, Mediaite and Broadcasting & Cable
Michael Calderone / Yahoo! News:
Fox News chief apologizes to ADL for ‘Nazi’ remark — Fox News chief Roger Ailes apologized Thursday to Abraham Foxman, national director for the Anti-Defamation League, after calling NPR executives “Nazis” in an interview with The Daily Beast. — Ailes, in a letter, began by following up on …
Discussion:
The Big Picture, Gawker, The Awl and New York Magazine
RELATED:
New York Times:
A Trailblazer With Her Eye on the Bottom Line — She grew up sheltered and privileged, in a middle-class Irish enclave of Chicago at midcentury, attending Catholic schools and riding horses at a country club where blacks and Jews were not allowed. Yet from age 28, she blazed a trail for working women …
Discussion:
City Room, New York Magazine and The Daily Politics
Mathew Ingram / GigaOM:
Twitter and the Power of Giving People a Voice — It didn't get as much attention as his comments about generating revenue and fighting with Facebook, but to me one of the most interesting things that former Twitter CEO and co-founder Evan Williams said during his interview at the Web 2. Summit …
Discussion:
The Wall Blog
Information Architects:
News on iPad, the Obvious Way — November 18, 2010 by Oliver Reichenstein. Average Reading Time: about 6 minutes. — Today our first news project for iPad went online and we are proud like kids. Technically, it's “just” an HTML5 optimization, but it has been a demanding design process …
Discussion:
Poynter Online
Lewis DVorkin / The Copy Box:
A new breed of journalist fits right in at Forbes — I've called myself a journalist for decades. I've worked for the best and learned from the best. I've spent exhilarating nights in the newsroom — at newspapers, magazines, TV and a web portal. I've even been lucky enough to watch and edit Pulitzer prize winners at work.
Ken Doctor / Nieman Journalism Lab:
The Newsonomics of news anywhere — [Each week, our friend Ken Doctor — author of Newsonomics and longtime watcher of the business side of digital news — writes about the economics of the news business for the Lab.] — Facebook isn't trying to replace Gmail or Yahoo Mail …
Discussion:
Computerworld
This Is London:
Fair game or respect: paparazzi are at odds over pursuing Kate Middleton — The photographer who took the first picture of Kate Middleton since her engagement said today it was a “milestone” moment between the royals and the paparazzi in which we “paid respect and she paid respect to us”.
Discussion:
Guardian
Robert Andrews / paidContent:
News Corp's Australian Favours WSJ's Paid Model Over The Times' Approach — Web fees for News Corp (NSDQ: NWS) online newspapers is a direction rather than a template. Down under, The Australian seems unwilling to follow in the furrow ploughed by The Times in the UK.
Discussion:
ABC News
Carl Warner / Adweek:
The Science of the Art of Advertising — Measurement, impact and adland's torrid pace — Spray mount, X-Acto blades and rubber cement picker-uppers were just some of the tools of our trade when I was hired as an art director at The Richards Group. — I suspect there are two generations …
Dan Gillmor / Salon:
Let the tablet wars begin — Samsung's new Galaxy Tab is the first serious competition to Apple's iPad, and it's about time — I just bought my first touch-screen computer that's bigger than a phone. It's the Samsung Galaxy Tab, a device with a seven-inch screen running the Android operating system …
Laurie Sullivan / MediaPost:
Click-Through Ad Rates Level Off — The debate over whether click-through rates capture the full influence of online display advertising continues to remain top-of-mind for ad executives. Most believe this is only a partial measurement of online ad success.
George Winslow / Broadcasting & Cable:
ORMMA Pushes Open Standard for Mobile Ads — Initiative backed by the Weather Channel, Crisp and TringApps — The Open Rich Media Mobile Advertising initiative has unveiled rich media advertising specifications and code that can be used by any publisher looking to serve rich ads across all mobile platforms and devices.
eMedia Vitals:
Fair use: how much is too much? — Fair use: how much is too much? — Reactions: 8 — Page view “journalism” and content aggregation are the cornerstones of the explosive growth of Gawker, Huffington Post and slews of other blogs, but does that growth come at the expense of the publications who conducted the original reporting?