Journalism 2.0
How to survive and thrive in the digital age

This blog is a companion to the book I have written. It will teach current (and future) journalists the skills they need to do better journalism with the help of digital technology. More information about the book.

 

Explaining Web 2.0 to techno-neophyte newsies

Most of us who work in new media for news organizations – or those coaching from the dugout like academics, consultants and vendors – can’t get enough “Web 2.0” in their lives. No matter what you think about the loaded label, I’ll bet you’re a big fan of sites like Technorati, eBay, craigslist, wikipedia, MySpace, Flickr, YouTube, and del.ic.ious. If not in actual usage, then from a distance in awe of the community each has created (in a short time with absolutely no marketing, oh by the way).

But how do you transfer this zeal to the non-initiated without having eyes gloss over from talk of tags, pings, APIs and AJAX?

Naturally, the best approach to take when explaining complicated technological concepts is to break them down into easily digestible parts. The first chapter of my book aims to explain Web 2.0 and why its advent is important to journalism and news companies. I plan to break it down into two main sections: 1) the future is now; and 2) you can do this.

Have you seen (or written) a good column, essay or blog post that will help? {encode="mark.briggs@thenewstribune.com" title="Send me a link"} or post it with a comment to this post.

Posted by MarkBriggs on Sunday, October 15, 2006
(0) TrackbacksPermalink



 


Journalism 2.0 Home

Most Recent Entries

• Update your RSS reader, this blog has moved
• Comments on stories: Be careful what you wish for
• Twitter, FriendFeed and the news
• ‘The death of the American newspaper is the elephant in the room’
• At LATimes.com, the future is now
• What does it take to grow the world’s most popular blog?
• Raising the Ante: The Internet’s Impact on Journalism Education
• Interested in a career in journalism? Then become the mayor of your zip code
• Angry Journalists vs. Wired Journalists
• Mizzou project hopes to revolutionize journalism

Monthly Archives

 • September 2008
 • July 2008
 • June 2008
 • May 2008
 • April 2008
 • March 2008
 • February 2008
 • January 2008
 • December 2007
 • November 2007
 • October 2007
 • September 2007
 • August 2007
 • July 2007
 • June 2007
 • May 2007
 • April 2007
 • March 2007
 • February 2007
 • January 2007
 • December 2006
 • November 2006
 • October 2006
 • September 2006

Posts by Category

•  About the book
•  Live digital journalism training
•  Tools and tricks
•  Why the time is right

Syndicate

 RSS Feed
(what is RSS?)