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Publishing News: Rebooting online news presentationBen Huh has a fling with news, checking in on the Twitter archive, and readers can now fund authors directly.Here are some of this week's highlights from the publishing world. (Note: These stories were published here on Radar throughout the week.) I can has better news presentation?
In the post he described how news sites are not embracing new technology or exploring new ways to report and present the news:
Because it's easy to find news outlets that are doing it wrong, I reached out to Huh via email for his thoughts on news organizations that are headed in the right direction. Our short interview follows. If one of journalism's problems is digital presentation, who is doing it right? Ben Huh: I love that MSNBC is trying out new ideas and new formats. Not everything works, but it's the trial and error that will help come up with answers. The Huffington Post's Big News pages are interesting, but are still limited to the old blog format. I do love Techmeme, and they do a wonderful job of curation.
Inside the Library of Congress' Twitter archive
That's led to a flood of inquiries to the Library of Congress about how and when researchers will be able to gain access to the Twitter archive. These research requests were perhaps heightened by some of the changes that Twitter has made to its API and firehose access. But creating a Twitter archive is a major undertaking for the Library of Congress, and the process isn't as simple as merely cracking open a file for researchers to peruse. I spoke with Martha Anderson, the head of the library's National Digital Information Infrastructure and Preservation Program (NDIIP), and Leslie Johnston, the manager of the NDIIP's Technical Architecture Initiatives, about the challenges and opportunities of archiving digital data of this kind.
Would you fund your favorite author's next book?
And Unbound didn't launch with unknown self-publishing authors — Terry Jones is on board, as are Tibor Fischer and Gavin Pretor-Pinney. This raises the question: Would you fund your favorite author?
Got news?Suggestions are always welcome, so feel free to send along your news scoops and ideas. Photo: Library of Congress Reading Room 1 by maveric2003, on Flickr Webcast: Digital Bookmaking Tools Roundup — Pete Meyers looks at the growing number of digital book tools: what's best, what's easiest to use, and what's worth putting in your book-building toolkit.Join us on Thursday, June 30, 2011, at 10 am PT Register for this free webcast Related:
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