‘Journo’ Category Archives

1
Apr

greener gadgets winner

by Caroline in Eco, Journo, Tech

I promised to post on the winners of the Greener Gadgets Design Competition, and I completely forgot.

You may like to remind yourself of my tips – I went for Recompute (the recyclable cardboard computer) and the RITI printer, which converted coffee and tea dregs into ink for printouts.

Both of these made it to the top 13, but not to the final shortlist of 4. The final winner was Tweet-a-Watt, pictured below.

Have you ever seen anything less inspiring in your life? The purpose of this nondescript little gadget is to measure the daily power consumption of a household, and then automatically ‘tweet’ it for all to see. I can see that knowing how much you consume, and setting yourself targets to reduce the total is a good idea, but the main point of this gadget is the element that allows the Twitter updates.

Why would you want to do that? If it was supposed to create a culture of shame around over-consumption, I could maybe get behind the idea, but there’s no mention of anything like that. It just seems designed to tap into the morbid curiosity about other people’s dull existences that Twitter engenders already. (I’m not a fan. Can you tell?)

The only aspect of this that impresses me is that they have made the hardward opensource – ie you can download the design, the instructions and the scripts you need to make your own for no charge. Now that’s a good idea. Shame their product is so pointless.

29
Mar

five/myspace blunder

by Caroline in Journo, Web

The UK’s Channel Five has started putting a special daily news round-up on Myspace. While this has been widely attributed to a desire to hook in the younger demographic the site represents, I can’t help feeling this is just one failing institution reaching out to another in a desperate attempt to save itself from further obscurity. This cringe-worthy promo video featuring Natasha Kaplinsky just about says it all, really:

ITV recently joined Bebo’s OpenMedia project, which makes programmes available online to its members, although that isn’t quite the same as what Five have done – at least Bebo are only showing things they think bored teenagers might potentially watch (like Gossip Girl and Keith Lemon).

When will these people learn that putting things online doesn’t make them better and won’t save them from being rubbish? The internet demands quality content, just like everything else.

30
Jan

the future

by Caroline in Journo, Web

I’ve seen the future. Of journalism, that is.

print-is-dead cartoon

A group of journalists in the San Francisco Bay area have set up spot.us – a new model for the way news provision works, which they are calling ‘community funded reporting’. The project is run by the ‘Center for Media Change’, who are a ‘501(c) 3 non-profit organization that enriches our culture… by facilitating the creation, development and use of new Internet-based business models to preserve the economic and professional viability of journalism.’

The idea is that people can post ideas on the site for stories they’d like to read, and then others can pledge money to fund someone to write the article. When the total needed to fund the investigation is reached, the article is written and is licenced under Creative Commons, so that anyone is free to republish it as long as the author is credited.

At the moment, it is tightly integrated with local news provision in the Bay area, but the creators hope to be able to expand its scope in the future. The idea of non-profit news has also been taken up by Paul Steiger, former managing editor of The Wall Street Journal, who set up his own version, ProPublica, in 2007. This one perhaps has slightly more international clout, being located in Manhattan and staffed by high-profile ex-editors, but I have to say I admire the integral optimism of what the San Fran lot are trying to do.

Read the rest of this entry »