A column in Business Week Group M saying web advertising in Britain will outstrip national newspaper advertising this year. Another milestone. He says this is in contrast to the US and goes on, unflatteringly “when the Brits are the early adopters you begin to suspect the US might be really screwed.”
All posts by Jim Muttram
Oh My Tribune
In a further example of old/new media collaboration, The Guardian reports that the International Herald Tribune has stuck a deal with Korean super-site Oh My News to take citizen journalist content for publication.
Newspapers blog
Jeff Jarvis reports on recent efforts by US newspapers to get into blogging or tap them in other ways.
FAQ on Net Neutrality
“Net Neutrality” is an issue that has hardly surfaced in the British media, but which about which a debate is raging in the US. It centres around whether telcos should be allowed to charge variable prices according to the kind of content being carried, thus creating a multi-tiered service. Susan Crawford has written a very good summary of the issue if you are interested.
Second Life, same old lawyers
In another twist in the development of MMORPGs a man who was suspended from Second Life has sued the game’s creators because he wasn’t reimbursed for the real-world value of his online real estate.
Photoshops rools
It took 2000 hours and a lot of knowledge of Photoshop to create this image of the Chicago skyline. While we’re on the subject of Photoshop, a Hall of Fame has been created to honour those whose work pushes the limits of what you can do with the software.
Jarvis on Greenslade on Guardian Unlimited
Jeff Jarvis’ comments about Roy Greenslade’s new blog on Guardian Unlimited are worth a read. The best line: “The best indication of that is that he doesn’t turn this into a long column and he’s not too proud to do what’s really valuable onine: aggregate.”
Nokia turns cellphones into webservers
According to LinuxDevices.com Nokia has ported an Apache webserver to Symbian opening up the possibility of all phones become webservers in the future. Says the site “many mobile phones today have more processing power than early Internet servers.”
“Nokia’s Raccoon project believes mobile phone webservers could have large implications for the Internet. It says, “If every mobile phone or even every smartphone initially is equipped with a webserver, then very quickly most websites will reside on mobile phones.”
An Internet comprised largely of mobile phone-based servers could challenge search engines to keep pace, however, because of the “dynamism” of an Internet where site content can change from minute to minute.”
Nature tries out new kind of peer review
The bit debate in science publishing is the role of the publisher and open source (aka diy) publishing. At the heart of the defence is the peer review process. Now sciene publishing bastion Nature is trying out a new kind of peer review, accodinig to Smart Mobs.
Microsoft v. Apple
Insightful (and funny) video illustrating the difference in approach by Micosoft and Apple.