Saturday, September 24, 2011

Reporting events


NET225S Writing for Electronic Media

Blogging and Reportage


A great number of blogs, maybe most, are reporting blogs. Some are affiliated with established publishing companies, and a great many more are independent.

When reporting an event, you can take a number of approaches. One is the “objective” report - that is, you attempt to report the event as it happened with no particular point of view expressed on your part. This is both difficult to do and largely a fallacy. With all due respect to Fox News (not much) “fair and balanced” is almost exactly NOT what they do. Fox has a clear point of view, and their reportage reflects that point of view.

Not long ago, newspapers openly declared their point of view, and in some cases were even named for political affiliation or philosophy. Did you know there used to be a newspaper in Sidney called the “Shelby County Democrat.” Can you imagine such a paper existing today?

Driven in part by backlash against how the Vietnam War was being reported, the major television networks in the 1970s attempted to instill a “values-free” reportage philosophy. Walter Cronkite’s signature sign-off phrase “And that’s the way it is...” is a declaration of what Bill O’Reilly now laughably calls a “spin-free zone.”

For individuals, it is all but impossible to separate one’s personal point of view from the reportage of events. After all, it is through our own point of view that we witness, process, recall and retell events. Studies show that human perception is incomplete, and memory is flawed, and changes over time.

The only way to be truly “fair” then is to admit up front - to your audience and to yourself - what your point of view is. You don’t have to go into a formal analysis, but if you are pro-Ohio State football, for instance, that should be reflected in the context of your blog. That way, when your audience (who will tend to think like you) reads your report of the trinkets-for-tattoos scandal, they will understand the context in which you present it.

Your assignment is to cover an event, gather information, photos, etc., and then report the event on your blog.

One approach is the “live blog,” where you write short entries and post them immediately as they happen. Another approach is to gather information, process and organize your thoughts, and then post a longer, more crafted blog entry some time after.

What I do NOT want is what Fox often calls reporting, which is repeating what others are saying about the event. That’s just conflict mongering, and is about as useful and interesting as listening to dogs bark.

You can pick your event, but it must be one that you can attend in person. If you are witnessing something via television, then you are already (at least) one filter removed from reality. It can be a sporting event, a meeting, or other event public or private.

In your report, which you will post to your blog, describe the event - date, location, who is there and why. Then establish a point of view for the event - are you an active participant, an interested bystander, a critic?

Decide whether you will live blog or write your report after the fact (you could, I suppose, do both). Use proper spelling and grammar.

If you have difficulty picking an event, let me know and I’ll help you find something.

Have your finished reports posted no later than class time October 5. This week’s class time September 28 will be open lab and optional, if you need my help.

Please email me with any questions.

Thursday, September 22, 2011

list of QR software

Student Barb asks:

Are QR codes a form of a web app? I know what they do, my son showed me last night, I've been seeing them popping up everywhere but didnt know how to use them.

http://www.qrtists.com/s/

Have you ever tried any of the software on this list?


I thought I would answer on the blog, as this could be of interest to a number of you.

I have experimented with two types of scannable tags - the classic QR code (black square pixels) and Microsoft's mobi tags, which are generated using colorful triangles.

Here's an example of an application for mobi tags:

http://smartdoor.weebly.com/

The photo description panels for my iPhone Photography art gallery exhibit have QR codes. Users with smartphones can scan the tags and they take are directed to web pages for more information about the images.

QR codes are not really a form of web app. They are more related to the URL shorteners Bit.ly and others.

The classic QR codes generated by Kaywa (free to use, no account setup necessary) can forward to a URL, display a text message, dial a phone number or send an SMS message.

The Microsoft mobi tag types are URL, app download, free text, vCard and dialer. Microsoft tags are free to create and use, but do require an account setup.

By setting up an account, users can track statistics about how often the tags are scanned and when.

[cid:B5D285F1-D03D-4B03-A922-99220E8BDEA8@edisonohio.edu]

There are three parts to implementing QR tags: Tag creation, tag management, and tag scanning.

Scanning tags

Users download an app, usually to a smartphone, to be able to scan and interpret the codes. Some readers are generic, able to read several formats, while others are specific to a single format. This may be a temporary barrier - a number of technologies are in the works to both make tag scanning an integrated function of the smartphone camera so no additional app is necessary, and to extend the concept to real-world images, not just generated tags.

Creating tags

When a company, organization or individual wants to implement scannable tags, there are a number of questions to answer. First, of course, is who is your audience? If you are implementing tags for an internal audience, then specialized or even proprietary systems may be appropriate.

However, if you intend to use codes in a public forum, then you need to take into consideration what your audience knows about scannable codes and how they will be placed. For instance, I chose the Microsoft mobi tags for the Smartdoor project because it is part of an art exhibit and the colorful tags were more appropriate to the venue, even though I knew few people had the Microsoft tag reader app installed before seeing the sculpture.

However, for the art gallery exhibit, I decided to use the more generic QR tags from Kaywa because more readers are capable of interpreting the codes, the exhibit would be in place for just one month, and black and white worked well with the display's aesthetics.

Tag creation software can be free or paid, depending on the level of customization and management needed.

Managing tags

If you do not want user statistics and the tags are "one use" then a free service like Kaywa may be enough. Microsoft is climbing uphill against the larger QR community, so they are making their service available for free to build market share, but they offer a pretty decent set of tag management and analytics tools.

For the Smartdoor, one advantage to using the mobi tags is that when the exhibit closes I can redirect the tag URLs and repurpose the Smartdoor for other events.

Conclusion

This is definitely something to explore, and thanks for the questions, Barb. Scannable tags and related technologies are strategies for integrating the real world with the online environment, and those who understand and can apply theses technologies will have a competitive advantage.

On Sep 22, 2011, at 7:07 AM, Schwarz, Barbara wrote:

Microsoft_tag_report

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Huge spider web!

Must be close to Halloween!

Photo1

--Brad

Zuckerberg To Give Teachers $10k Each In Two Year Grant Program

Here's an idea I can get behind!

Zuckerberg To Give Teachers $10k Each In Two Year Grant Program
READWRITEWEB | SEPTEMBER 21, 2011
http://pulse.me/s/1MZSw


Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg will be giving $10,000 grants to Newark teachers who come up with innovative programs as a ... Read more

g.reedonly@gmail.com sent you a link to content of interest

g.reedonly@gmail.com sent you a link to the following content:

With Version 2.0, Instagram Focuses On Re-engineering The Camera
http://techcrunch.com/2011/09/20/instagram-version-2/

The sender also included this note:

Instagram - a social media tool for images - has just launched a major upgrade!

Monday, September 19, 2011

NET225S - Getting Started

NOTE: I'm reposting this so that everyone catches it. Please read the post, then post responses to your own blog.

OK, we're all set up with our blogs and social media accounts. We'll start looking at ways that writing for electronic media differs from "traditional" media. We've already talked about some - location awareness, atemporality (time factors), chunkiness, non-linearity....
Here's the first question, though. What are you reading? What do you read online? How is that different from what you read in print? Is your process of reading different online than it is offline?
One of my favorite things to read online is a blog written by Dr. Steven Novella called Neurologica. The blog focuses on critical thinking, skepticism, and investigating incredible claims in science and medicine. (I also regularly listen to Novella's weekly podcast, The Skeptics' Guide to the Universe.)
One of the things I like are how over time the blog entries have been linked together, so that Novella only has to provide a brief sentence or two of background on a topic covered before. This allows him to focus his readers' attention on the new claims or new data being examined.
In the last two years, my online reading has perhaps quadrupled, while my offline reading is about a quarter of what it was. I am reading more, and more broadly, now.
How about you? Post to your blog.

Friday, September 9, 2011

Photographer turns to iPhone to break from the pack

A photographer covering the Tour de France tries to break free from the pack of photographers covering the event by using his iPhone as his camera and taking the "outsider's" view of the race.

Challenge seeks mobile photos or videos

What urgent problem or need do you foresee becoming especially important in 2012?  Submit a compelling photo or video taken on a mobile device that reflects the World in 2012.