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Mapping the Magazine

4 Jul
Porthcawl Seafront

Another reason I'm excited to go to Wales: family heritage. This is the seafront in Porthcawl, in south Wales, where my mother spent every summer as a child.

It may be a holiday in the U.S. today, but I’m busy doing the final edits on the paper I will be presenting at the “Mapping the Magazine 3″ conference this week at Cardiff University in Wales. This conference is going to be incredibly interesting. Check out the paper abstracts, and watch for tweets with the hashtag #mtm3 once we get started on Thursday.

The research I will present is, at last, a fulfillment of my January blog post about my interest in digital activist magazines and how activist publishers are using digital platforms for their work. (I also looked at this topic in a MediaShift story.) It took me a while to complete the project — and the paper itself is still very much a work in progress — but I’m excited about it, and so grateful to the 15 individuals at various publications who agreed to be interviewed. I’ll provide an update on the project as it develops.

After I return from Wales, I’ll be packing, moving to Oregon and getting ready for a new academic year (oh, and also attending the AEJMC conference in St. Louis in August!) so I expect things may be a bit quiet here on the blog until August. Have a great summer!

New Post at MediaShift: Sensors, Mobile Devices, and Digital Magazines

1 Jul

I have a new post up at MediaShift today on the innovations in sensors for mobile devices and what they might mean for the future of digital magazines. I thought “sensor publishing” was a particularly fascinating concept:

Users of sensor-equipped mobile devices could serve as passive authors of projects that gather, analyze and present data from these sensors. Esposito calls this “sensor publishing” to distinguish it from crowdsourcing because it doesn’t require participants’ active involvement.

Digital magazines and other media applications could collect sensor data — such as location, temperature, ambient light or other readings — and find ways to incorporate the data into stories, or to make them stories in themselves.

Check out the rest of the story at MediaShift.

Also, an observation: that’s my ”Health” apps folder from my iPhone in one of the screenshots with the story. It seemed oddly personal to use that, somehow. They’re just apps, after all. But evidently I’m not the only one who feels like the phone is such a personal object, given some of the discussion I’ve seen of how smartphones are perceived as quite intimate objects by many of their users. I guess that does include me after all.

Euston Station

An lovely picture by RTMoynihan on Flickr, taken at Euston Station in London, where I'm headed next week as part of my trip to the Mapping the Magazine conference in Cardiff.

Connections to the Scholarly Past

27 Jun

I realized today that due to my job transition this summer, I will be without access to scholarly publishing databases until I get a login and password to the library resources at my new college. I also realized that I haven’t used a print version of a scholarly article in over three years.

PCL at UT-Austin

The Perry-Castaneda Library (aka PCL) at UT-Austin. I spent many, many, many hours here. Photo by Timothy Vollmer on Flickr.

As a grad student at UT-Austin, I was able to find just about any print journal I needed, including some very old issues from the 1940s and 1950s. I also used the university’s special collections to find old magazines for my research, which was fun. I made a special trip to Texas A&M once to look at some old editions of conservative political magazines for a research project [PDF link to article].

Since joining the faculty at Fresno State in 2008, I’ve used the library stacks a bit, but never to find a print journal article. The Fresno State library’s holdings are of course smaller than UT-Austin’s, understandably. But more significantly, I’m now relying almost entirely on databases like Communication and Mass Media Complete to find references I need, along with my beloved Google Scholar and other digital sources. I’ve used Interlibrary Loan a few times to request articles not available in full text or posted elsewhere online.

I love using the library. I loved going to find Warren Breed’s 1955 article on social control in the newsroom in a dusty old edition of the journal Social Forces. (Now it’s online, naturally.) It was compelling to me to see a half century worth of knowledge on the shelf, there for the exploration.

Of course, I’m also just as big a fan of the iPad and e-reading as anyone else out there. I taught a whole graduate course last fall without printing out a single journal article, keeping everything paperless by reading it all on the iPad.

I am curious, though, about what it means to lose a physical connection to the works of scholars of the past. A university library’s paper editions may be more accessible to community members seeking scholarly articles, so I suppose that’s an argument for retaining them, especially considering academic publishers’ grip on online distribution. (An example of the conflicts here.)

Some, uh, exciting reading. Photo by marlened on Flickr.

Do we researchers gain anything by being able to physically touch and browse scholarly journals? Are databases sufficient for journal articles, but academic books still worthy of print publication? (If so, what’s the difference?)

Maybe there’s simply a sense of connection to a scholarly legacy that is gained by keeping the paper around. When I strolled the stacks at UT-Austin during my Ph.D. program, I felt a growing sense of connection to the centuries of authors whose work surrounded me, as if it were part of my scholarly apprenticeship to simply spend time in the presence of their thoughts.

And perhaps that’s simply a romantic ideal now outdated — just as it now seems silly to think that the tangible feel of a book is irreplaceable, when I happily snuggle in bed with a Kindle book.

New Post at MediaShift: Developers Make Apps, Mobile Presence Possible for Small Publishers

8 Jun

It’s quiet around here lately. I’ve been wrapping up the spring semester and preparing for a big move to a new job at Linfield College in McMinnville, Oregon, next year. But in the meantime, here’s my latest post at MediaShift, focused on how small magazine publishers can outsource their apps to external developers:

Even a small magazine can make a powerful impression with a well-designed mobile presence. In some ways, digital platforms can level the playing field for small publishers wanting to attract readers’ attention with innovative content and presentations.

But getting onto mobile platforms with apps and optimized websites can be a significant challenge for small publishers. While major magazine companies like Condé Nast and Time have resources for research and development and can dedicate employees to digital innovation, small magazines are often run on a shoestring by limited personnel. That’s why some small publishers have turned to external app development companies, hoping that outsourcing their apps will lead to better results at a lower cost…read more.

I’ll be back soon with regularly scheduled posts. In the meantime, happy summer!

New Post at MediaShift: Single-Story Sales

17 Feb

I have a new post up at MediaShift on the various ways magazines and others are experimenting with selling individual stories online:

If magazine publishers can identify stories that provide rich, deep reading experiences, and then add engaging multimedia to develop that experience even further, they may be able to leverage their brands and editorial authority to market individual stories successfully. Other possibilities might include packaging stories on one topic together in one download, or combining stories from different magazines in a collaborative product. Individual stories or packages of stories can be sold through apps, websites, and vendors like Amazon or Barnes & Noble.

Go check it out, and please comment while you’re there!

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