Tag Archives: mediashift

Yummy New Post at PBS MediaShift

1 Dec

Over the hectic Thanksgiving break, I neglected to post here that I have a new story up at PBS MediaShift. This one takes a close look at Recipe.com, a recently developed magazine/website/app from Meredith that has been designed from the ground up to maximize the best features of each medium. I enjoyed learning more about how Meredith planned out this new product (and, well, I enjoyed the recipes, too):

Recipe.com, Hickey said, reflects a “360-degree approach,” better accommodating today’s value-seeking and technologically savvy shopper.

“It’s really kind of desktop, to store, to checkout, to countertop, to table. When we think of recipes, we think, ‘I’ll go find it and print it out.’ But we knew the [meal-planning] process was much more involved,” Hickey said.

As a geek who was once a diligent meal planner – and could never find the right software to make it work – I find new tools like this especially intriguing!

New Post at MediaShift: Once Magazine

5 Oct

I have a new story up today at PBS MediaShift about Once Magazine, an iPad magazine that focuses on visual storytelling, especially photography. It’s great to see experiments like this one that help photographers find new ways to use their work and earn a living from their art.

Read more at MediaShift!

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.

Recent Stuff Roundup: Teaching, City/Regional Magazines, Research

18 Nov

H u s t l e  &  B u s t l e

This has been an exceptionally hectic week, including both my trip to the National Communication Association conference in San Francisco, where I presented, and the usual pre-Thanksgiving shuffle of student assignments and meetings on campus. So, in lieu of an original blog post this week, I’ll give you a roundup of some recent stuff that I haven’t previously posted here.

“Control in the Classroom” at the University of Venus

I recently wrote a guest blog post for the University of Venus blog at Inside Higher Ed. In it, I describe my early teaching failures and how I’ve attempted to grow from them by trying to become a more open, (somewhat) less structured teacher.

Once the adrenaline wore off after about four class sessions, I realized that those sighs coming from the students weren’t due to the enlightenment they felt upon entering into my instructional presence. They were groans of pain as they massaged their hands after trying to take notes on my speed-lecturing. There may have also been groans of boredom.

Check out the full post here.

City and Regional Magazines Go Digital

I’ve been curious about city and regional magazines since grad school, and even did my dissertation on Texas Monthly. I took the opportunity in a recent MediaShift post to explore what these magazines are doing in the digital realm. I especially loved learning more about the history of Honolulu Magazine, which has its roots in the early history of Hawaii and the desire to present the islands as “civilized.” Sounds like a future research study to me!

Read the whole post at MediaShift here.

Make Magazine and Technological Utopianism Research Presentation

At NCA, I presented a paper I’m working on that addresses technological utopianism in Make magazine and at the Maker Faire event. I used a Prezi at a conference for the first time. I don’t know how much is intelligible from the Prezi alone, and would also say that I’m still learning how to make the most of Prezi! But here’s the presentation for your perusal. I hope to publish the paper in a journal very soon and will post here when I do.

MediaShift: On-Demand Magazine Publishing

2 Feb

I have a new post up at MediaShift covering some of the new opportunities in on-demand magazine publishing. Here’s a favorite selection from the piece:

“I don’t think that computers and the Internet make real people’s need for real physical media go away,” said Powazek of MagCloud. “There’s content that deserves to be archived in print and some that doesn’t. For moment to moment updates about news, the web does that really well, but longer-lasting community-based niche content will still have a home in print. I hope that some magazines that have fallen on hard times will find their way to MagCloud and publish their whole back catalog there.”

So which magazines deserve to stay in print? As environmental resources become more precious and distribution channels multiply, we’ll have to determine what content deserves print status.

I also see a lot of potential in these on-demand services for student publications. Though that wasn’t a focus of this piece, it would be hugely convenient for journalism educators to use on-demand publishing to create student magazines or other collections of student work. Students could be provided copies and then order additional copies themselves to distribute to friends and family, while readers elsewhere in the world could even become fans. This seems like a cost-effective and innovative way to create student projects.

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