LINKS | Down With the AP?

There’s been a growing feeling that the AP is not our friend in the media industry, but this week, that feeling seemed to bubble over. We’ve got some rough numbers to show that they’re not helping us, and with the rise of ESPN local sites, the AP is rapidly loosing it’s marketplace. I don’t know if I’m ready to sign their death sentence yet, they do seem to have some smart people working for ‘em (I look to the New Model for News study and their iPhone app). Yet, it’s painfully obvious (after the youtube fiasco) that the AP is a classic case of the right hand not knowing what the left is doing.

Published April 18, 2009

Related topics

17175v1-max-450x450 tumblr post, , , , , , , , , , , View Comments

Last updated Thu, 15 Jul 2010 14:58:43 +0000

Written by

Photography introduced me to the 'new media' evolution. I currently do community management at Meraki in San Francisco, but this blog is about journalism, some UX design, and the occasional rant. more →

| joey@byjoeybaker.com

Sharing

Image representing Associated Press as depicte...
Image via CrunchBase

There’s been a growing feeling that the AP is not our friend in the media industry, but this week, that feeling seemed to bubble over. We’ve got some rough numbers to show that they’re not helping us, and with the rise of ESPN local sites, the AP is rapidly loosing it’s marketplace. I don’t know if I’m ready to sign their death sentence yet, they do seem to have some smart people working for ‘em (I look to the New Model for News study and their iPhone app). Yet, it’s painfully obvious (after the youtube fiasco) that the AP is a classic case of the right hand not knowing what the left is doing. These are my links for April 14th through April 18th:

The AP is outdated and increasingly irrelevant; so are Printies

AP thinking of future:http://www.ap.org/newmodel.pdf – Interesting ‘atomization of news’ but still top-down publishing model. –@GregElin on March 23

Numbers

Engagement is high, now we just need to harness it.

[caption id="" align="alignright" width="158" caption="Apparently, there's more demand for opinionated news than unbiased news."][/caption]

Lest there be any doubt, the internet is used by all age groups.

For Photogs

UX Design

  • “I realize the extent to which the media economy is moving towards people who give a shit over people who are willing to tolerate something. You know, it’s no longer something that’s just good enough so people don’t change the channel — now it’s something that people pick.”- Jesse Thorn on gathering your online audience in the real world » Nieman Journalism Lab
  • Typeface Inspired by Comic Books Has Become a Font of Ill Will – WSJ.com: Kinda nifty, a profile on the guy who created Comic Sans, “It is a punch line: ‘Comic Sans walks into a bar, bartender says, ‘We don’t serve your type.””
  • Jonathan Mendez’s Blog: New York Times Landing Pages: All the Irrelevance That Fits the Pixels: Great look at how much of newspaper site design doesn’t center around content, but around the excess.
  • stevenf has a great post on the future of UI and HMI on computers. The following are excerpts from the text meant to summarize the post.
    Every geek I know shares, to some degree, the notion that the “desktop” metaphor for computers is outdated. What nobody seems to have a solid opinion on is what would take its place. Every once in a while, there is an attempt to obsolete the concept of the hierarchical file system. The Newton had a very unique object storage system — essentially a system-wide “soup” of data objects, such as your calendar events, address book contacts, and so on. Any app could dip into this database and pull out objects, even those put there by other applications. Applications could then look at them, maybe even modify or extend them, without needing the original application to intervene at all. The result was an unprecedented interconnectedness of data among Newton applications, both first and third party, unmatched by any desktop environment that I know of.
  • “…a huge portion of iPhone usability training is done via the TV ads, pre-sale. They’re both marketing and instruction.”- stevenf.com – WARNING: A long, rambly exploration of the state…

Good News!


blog comments powered by Disqus