Friday, December 2, 2011

Trust Me. It's All True



The debate over ethics in the new media has been raging for awhile and doesn’t seem to be slowing down anytime soon.
As the journalistic landscape continues to change from a clearly defined of group of professional journalist to the citizen journalist, how do we define what is ethical and what is not?
Stephen J.A. Ward  in writing for the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Journalism School poses the central question of how do old media’s ethics apply to a media that is always on, running a 24/7 news cycle?
For Mr. Ward the question involves the idea of combining the gate-keeping ability of the old media, the fact-checking, source reliability, and all of the other aspects that went into a story before it was printed and the immediacy required to stay relevant in the digital age.
Mr. Ward believes that we must provide a new set of mixed media ethics, guidelines that apply to both professional and citizen journalists.
So how do we enforce such a code of ethics, when anyone with an internet connection and a screen name can call him or herself a journalist?
The blog or blogger can always have his or site shut down by the site administrator. At the speed that information travels on the internet this more often than not would a classic case of too little too late.
While I agree with a blogger who only identifies himself as “Walter” on his ethics blog that blogging and digital media ethics are “an ideal mode of the behavior we must strive to achieve.” I disagree with him that social stigma has no role in helping to enforce ethical behavior in the blogosphere.

“For me the notion of compelled ethics, even if compelled by the threat of social stigma doesn’t work.”
If there is no threat of a disagreeable outcome for a blogger, professional or citizen, what is to stop someone from posting false, misleading, and potentially life altering information for their own gains?
I believe that most people are good but, I am not naïve enough to believe that everyone is.
If there is no threat of a social stigma,  the reduction of credibility that leads to the reduction in traffic that leads to that loss of income, what is the solution? Is it government monitoring and ultimately censorship?
We are seeing that argument right now with the net-neutrality debate and it is not going well. Government control over the internet threatens the very nature of what makes the internet so intriguing and so disturbing.
It seems the only solution at this point is Caveat Emptor, Let the Buyer Beware.
Whether it is going online to get travel advice:

Or reading the writings of Sean-Paul Kelley who in 2003 admitted plagiarizing his blogs posts on Iraq. Don’t rely on blog posts that have no clear means of citing their sources for your news, opinion maybe, news, and facts never.
In 2010 the FTC did provide a little relief to the reader. In that year the FTC started  requiring that all paid posts or links come with a disclosure, whether  within the post or on a disclosure page.

It probably won’t relieve us of all the websites that promote get rich schemes and too good to true medical breakthroughs but, it’s a start. A start in what promises a long and ongoing question of ethics and the blogosphere.

Monday, November 21, 2011

The future of reading. Well, my reading anyway.

I've had my Nook Tablet now for about three weeks and I just love it!!

The portability, it weighs only about a pound, and the ease with which I can get to my content is fabulous. I think that I have read more in the last few weeks than I have in awhile. That's with the generous lending policy at Barnes and Noble.
So with all the fun that I am having with my device I thought that I would do a little research on how tablets would affect the future of reading. The results were pretty interesting.

First, off at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas in 2010 was all but writing off the e-reader.

“E-readers are great news now, but there might not be e-readers by the end of next year,” said Gilbert Fiorentino, Chief Executive of the Technology Products Group of Systemax Inc., which owns electronics retailers CompUSA and TigerDirect.

I found this to be a little disingenuous considering that CompUSA closed all of their brick and mortar stores about five years ago because they couldn't compete. And Tiger Direct, well they are not on the top-tier of the online e-tailers. So, to predict the death of product when you can't get your own act together just sounds like sour grapes to me.
Over a year later, going into the last quarter of 2011 Barnes and Noble and Amazon had not remove their e-readers from their shelves and online stores they were introducing new models to even greater anticipation. 

In September of 2011 Amazon had, according to PC Magazine, had already taken 95,000 pre-orders for the new Kindle Fire. That number exploded to 500,000 by late October.




The Nook Tablet also pre-sold well, although Barnes and Noble did not released the exact amount of pre-orders in a company press release.



The ironic part is that Gilbert Florentino cited the HP Touchpad as the reason  the e-reader would die. Six months after it's release HP got out of the tablet market and Touchpads were selling for $99 down from their original $400+ asking price.
Second, I found that the e-reader/tablet was also changing the way people read, especially print magazines and news content.

According to James McQuivey 20% of people read a physical magazine less now that they have an tablet.
Other studies have found that readers are not willing to pay additional money for a news app on their tablets when their tablet's browser can provide the same information for free.

The main complaint that I hear all the time about reading on a tablet is that people love to physically hold a book, that they get much more enjoyment out of it. Accroding to Jonah Lerner in The Future of  Reading they may be right.

In his article for Wired Magazine he states that there are primarily two routes in the brain for making sense of words. the Ventral route and the Dorsail stream.
The Ventral route makes it easy for us to recognize routine passages by relying on a part of the cortex known as the visual word form area (VWFA) making reading effortless and easy.

The Dorsail stream however, it activated when we have to work hard to understand a passage. This can happen when the writer's handwriting is bad or the pages are weathered. Any imperfection in the text will activate the Dorsail stream.

This what bothers Mr. Lerner about reading on a tablet. That with the perfect font sizes and clarity of text this part of our brain that is activated by reading will not get the workout it deserves while reading and the reader will that sense of satisfaction that comes from mastering a difficult piece of text.

I was one of those that held off and romanticized the reading of the book. While I still respect and love the physical book, I can now see that having a portable device to be able to read and obtain knowledge when you want and where you want is a good thing.

As technology advances the ability of anyone to have the world at their fingertips is becoming more and more of a reality. Just as the movable type brought about the Renaissance, I think the ultraportable tablet will bring about a new Renaissance in the future of reading.













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Use less No change Use more Don't use/not applicableJames McQuivey, Ph.d
James McQuivey, Ph.

Monday, November 14, 2011

Blocked

I was having trouble trying to figure out what post about this week. I have been fighting a cold and work has been a bear, so needless to say the motivation factor has been at a low.

The whole writer's block thing has been front and center. I know that there are hundreds, if not thousands of writing sites out there with advice on curing the block. I just didn't feel like meditating or using a prompt, etc...

The thing that finally gave me an idea came from one of the readings for this week's assignment, "Understanding Web design" by Jeffery Zeldman.

I found this to be a beautifully written piece on web design, designed verbally pleasing if you will. Two passages stood out from the rest that I want to share.

The first  was "Those who understand the least make the most noise". Man, no truer words have been spoken and not just in the area of web design. How many times have we seen someone being boorish, loud, and just plain rude when they are losing an argument and simply have no good retort to the other person's point or position on a subject? And it is not just in politics, it is in everyday life, the "I'm the loudest, so I'm right" seems to be a stable of modern debate.

The second was "...obliged by commercial reasons to suppress some of what they know, emphasizing Barnumesque over brilliant."

I'll take this in two parts:

Who hasn't been to a manager's or staff meeting where something was discussed that was just for people seated in the room? I have.  It changes your perspective on how you see things in a company. When you aren't in those meetings you can sometimes form an opinion on the information you have and you may disagree with management-loudly. (see passage #1) So in some respects the people in those meetings are "obliged to suppress some of what they know." to keep things running smoothly.

The second part, well it was just one of those phrases that just makes me love the English language One of those phrases I hope to put in my writing everyday.

"Barnumesque over brilliant." Love it more each time I hear it.




Monday, November 7, 2011

Decisions. Decisions.

I have been thinking of jumping into the world of tablets. I sometimes think that I need one to be a real blogger so I can write anywhere the Muse strikes. I know that is not true but, the little kid in me wants a new toy. The thing is that a tablet is a pretty big expense for a toy and with all the options out there it is hard to make a cut and dried decision.

I have to admit I made a rash decision before my trip to New York. I bought a cheap knock off on Amazon and I ended up returning it when I got back. I was swayed by the reviews online that  later turned out to be bogus. You live and learn right?

So this time around I am trying to be more prudent and do my research. Still it is not an easy decision.

Do I want a 10" screen for a better viewing experience or would a 7" screen be more versatile?
The tablet I sent back had a nice 8" screen kind it was really a good compromise. Big enough to watch video content and compact enough to carry in a small messenger bag.
Does a camera, GPS, bluetooth, and all the other bells and whistles really matter in the long run if you have pay another $50, $100 or more. Then add a data plan to boot?

I guess the one thing I have found in my research is that you have buy something that fits your needs not the needs of the nerdy tech guy in the office or " I haven't had human contact in three weeks, but I'm up to level 57 on Dungeons and Warcraft" teenager. That is where the hard part comes in.
So after a few weeks of research I have it down to two models.

One another full blown tablet from a decent, but not well known company called LePan.  It has the bells and whistles (bluetooth, GPS, webcam) and I have had a chance to play with it at a local retailer. It's reasonbly priced. ($250) Large 9.7" screen and a nice picture.The tech specs are kind of on the low end. (2Gb of Ram and 556 Mhz processor) Plus, the reviews on Amazon look real this time. The other is new Nook tablet that Barnes and Noble announced today.
It has the power (1Ghz processor) and the specs (16G of ram) of a really good tablet and the picture is really good for a 7" tablet. The price is comparable to the other LePan ($250) Plus, I can get Netflix and some other good stuff on it  compared to the older model of the Nook. It has no camera, GPS, or bluetooth but, I'm not sure those are deal breakers. I have also been able to play with a loaner Nook Color from work and growing attached to it. It is also getting a lot of buzz here, here, and here.
So, I put my trepidations aside and took the plunge and pre-ordered a Nook tablet today. I guess I shouldn't worry too much about making the right decision, it will probably be obsolete by Christmas.

I'll keep you posted.

Monday, October 31, 2011

Voldemort: Twitter more evil than Deatheaters


You must use complete sentences when speaking to me, Harry Potter!

In London last week, Ralph Fiennes best known for playing Lord Voldemort in the Harry Potter series, blamed social media sites like Twitter for the deterioration of the English language.

While accepting an award from The British Film Institute, Fiennes had this to say about the state of language today:

"[Language] is being eroded---it's changing. Our expressivenes and our ease with some words is being diluted so that the sentence with more that one clause is a problem for us, and the word of more than two syllables is a problem for us."

Needless to say, Fiennes' statements did not go over to well with some in the tech community. Alex Knapp a tech and social media writer for Forbes online, however sympathized with Fiennes. He writes that he too was skeptical of Twitter, like so many things in life, until he got to know it.

Knapp says the humorous hashtags and intriging conversation that can happen in 140 words and the "nuanced jokes that I think would be difficult to pull off otherwise." as reasons for his eroding his skepticism. Finally, accepting Twitter for the virtual coffee shop that it is.

Knapp cites Mark Leibman a Professor of Linguistics to prove Fiennes wrong. Professor Liebman  studied the amount of characters in words in Hamlet and from student tweets to the Daily Pennsylvanian at the University of Pennsylvania. He found that the words in tweets actually more more characters than those in Hamlet.

Me, I guess I'm still kind of on the fence.

As an English major, I sure don't want to see the great works of literature transformed to 140 characters.

#Hamlet: Dad dead, Mom re-married to Uncle, lies, deceit, gave big speech, lots of killing.

Not quite the same, on the other hand, I can see the worth of short, concise bursts of information. I hate long boring meetings at work. Just give me the bullet points and let me get back to work.

So, that part of me can embrace the concept of Twitter, but another part doesn't care what you had for lunch and it's envitable aftermath.

That is informatuon that I can do without.

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Three Blocks Away, Worlds Apart.

I had the pleasure of spending last week in New York City. Despite what you may have heard the people were pleasant, helpful, and the city itself was pretty clean. Having lived in Los Angeles, I think New York has taken pretty good care of itself for an "old girl".

Now, with so much to see and do you can have a hard time deciding where to go first. There were a few "must-sees" on my list and things that if I got to them, I would go see them.

One of my "must sees" was Ellis Island. Due to the events of September 11th, the wait just get to the security checkpoint to board the ferry to Ellis Island was over an hour, ( the same ferry took visitors to the Statue of Liberty as well.) so I decided to not to wait and started out exploring the Financial District and surrounding areas. It was there that I treated to two very different world views.

The first was the "Occupy Wall Street" movement at Zuccotti Park. Well, they may have been occupying Zuccotti Park but, Wall Street was  going about its business and was not disrupted by the protest one bit. The size of the protest was a lot smaller than I was led to believe and the bulk of the crowd was lookie-loos and  the media with a very small amount of protesters. Most of whom were very focused on what they wanted and felt they were entitled to. As Terrasa Monore Hamilton said, "It’s [was the] ‘I deserve it!‘ culture run amok".

I left the "protest" underwhelmed and continued on. I few blocks later I stumbled upon St. Paul's Chapel, at first glance it seemed like just another old church in New York City. I soon found out how wrong I was.

St. Paul's is the oldest church on Manhattan, dating back to 1776. It is about four blocks from Ground Zero and survived the collapse of the Twin Towers intact.

What caught my eye at first was a timeline of the year that the chapel served as an aid and comfort station for the first responders of 9/11. That day the first responders changed into their gear at the chapel and left their clothes and boots hanging on the wrought-iron fence outside. At the end of the day if the boots were still on the fence the first responder had most likely perished in the collapse in the Towers.

Inside the chapel  a memorial and tributes to the fallen now line this historic old church. A more moving sight I didn't encounter the rest of the trip.

In one corner was a shrine dedicated to the men and women who lost their lives in the attacks and in another a small alter where visitors could, to this day, leave a little note or prayer.

To sum up the vast differences of the two sites:

This is what was left behind at Zuccotti Park:



This what was left behind at St. Paul's:



I got the sense that it boils down to this:

For the Occupy Wall Street crowd it was "We are victims, what can you do to help us."

For the men and women of 9/11 it was "We have victims, what can we do to help them."

So close, yet worlds apart.