Wikimapia is a mashup which allows users to annotate Google maps. I can image great things which could be done with it, especially in vertical contexts.
All posts by Jim Muttram
Om Malik to go it alone
Steve Rubel blogs on the rumoured decision by Om Malik to leave Business 2 and turn free agent. He draws some parallels with other big personal media brands. Om’s Gigom blog is apparently the 85th largest in the world.
TagFetch
TagFetch is a great new site which aggregates tags from the major sites which have them. Steve Rubel has only two complaints: it doesn’t have an RSS feed generator and it doesn’t allow other sites to be added. Still, maybe these features will be in v2. A great resource for journalists to keep on top of key subject areas.
Netscape site relaunches
A newly relaunched Netscape.com includes Digg-like story voting and other community features. Meanwhile Digg announced it is to add more categories to broaden its appeal beyond technology.
Social Networking Sites audience numbers released
Unique visitor numbers for the biggest social networking sites have been released by comScore Media Metrix. The numbers are truly staggering: out of a total internet audience in the US of 172m, Myspace has 51.4m visitors, Classmates and Facebook 14m each and video site Youtube 13m.
CNET on blogging policies
Tech site CNET writes about how companies should respond to employees blogging and using camera phones and iTunes at work. They provide some ideas on how guidelines could be developed.
Picasa takes on Flickr
Picasa Web Albums releases on limited test. This is Google’s Flickr-killer, although there’s a way to go; Flickr broke the 100 million images barrier a while ago.
Rusbridger on bloggers
Is it all over for bloggers? asks Alan Rusbridger, editor of the Guardian, in his Lubbock Lecture at the Said Business School in Oxford on June 8th. It’s well worth a read. The Guardian is probably doing more than any other major newspaper in the worth to embrace the “new media” so its interesting to get Rusbridger’s perspective, which I think is slightly more old school than you might have expected. Jeff Jarvis critiques bits of it here.
SimCity takes over
A blog doesn’t need a clever name has a piece on the increasing influence of the popular urban environment game SimCity’s role in educating tomorrow’s town planners. “Because of the widespread use of SimCity in schools and homes, it is easy to make a case, as Paul Starr of The American Prospect has, that SimCity provides a more influential introduction to city planning than any book on the subject,” it says.
Guardian to “offer news online first”
There’s been a lot of comment about the Guardian’s decision to publish its stories first on the web. MediaGuardian.co.uk New media Guardian to offer news online first shouted Guardian Unlimited, which went on: “The Guardian will become the first British national newspaper to offer a ‘web first’ service that will see major news by foreign correspondents and business journalists put online before it appears in the paper.
The shift in strategy marks a significant departure from the established routine of newspaper publishing where stories are held for ‘once-a-day’ publishing.
The move aims to strengthen and complement the strong track record that has been built up through Guardian Unlimited’s own breaking news content.
By putting the main elements of the Guardian’s news online first, the paper aims to widen and deepen coverage online to benefit the Guardian’s expanding global readership.
However, copy from agency and news wires services will continue to be re-purposed or run as normal.
The system will give reporters and writers on the paper the opportunity to produce more copy of greater scope outside of the limitations of the daily paper.
Some exclusive stories will continue to be held back for the newspaper to maintain the quality levels of the print version. The object is to not remain beholden to a 24-hour printing cycle and be beaten to important news by print and new media rivals.”
Jeff Jarvis makes a lot of the announcement.
But as Kieran Daly, Group Editor of Flight, points out in an email to me:
From our perspective, this is the key bit:
Rusbridger said: “Nearly all City information is now available on the day, and it seems to me a bit old-fashioned waiting for an artificial print deadline in order to put up City stories.”
According to Rusbridger, the intention is for 95 per cent of stories to go straight up on the internet. He said: “If we had a world exclusive interview with George Bush that everyone was going to follow up, we might hold that back for the print edition.”
The Guardian gets next to no city or foreign exclusives, so this is a logical move. But as Rusbridger acknowledges, if your material is exclusive then the situation is different.
And that, strangely enough, is the view taken by The Telegraph. According, again, to Jeff Jarvis, despite rumours to the contrary, Telegraph journalists are free to publish whatever they like of the web as and when they like in order, just as the Guardian has said, not to be scooped by online rivals.