In print-land, there's a really high percentage of people who have no desire whatsoever to do reporting. There are the girls who come out and say "I just want to design pages," a flock of former creative writing types (myself included), aspiring columnists, and photographers who have a borderline sexual relationship with their $2000 SLR's.
And sitting in the newsroom, "look, I'm not going to be a reporter," is sort of a mid-level secret. Something you'd tell someone you met ten minutes ago, but you wouldn't want it announced in the middle of the newsroom.
Or on a blog, come to think of it.
That's why I spent the summer meeting reporter after reporter who'd check to see if anyone was looking, and then add, "just to be clear, I don't really want to be a reporter."
And so, when I meet someone who really likes the rough, dirty part of journalism, chasing sources and pursuing stories, my reflexive response is, "Good for you."
It takes a certain personality to really love doing that.
Speaking of certain personalities, it takes a certain personality to do this technical stuff. I've been called everything from "brilliant" (not true) to "psychotic" (that's okay). Which brings me to Wednesday night: most normal people don't find themselves thinking about how ACM is better at confusing people than managing content.
Here's what's going on: Prior to now, the Dot Com group rewrote all the news stories for web. Now the reporters do it. And that's a great idea, except it's very new, and the Dot Com people were never quite sure which stories are written up.
Meanwhile, there's no dashboard in the system that we can look and see what stories need what components. And in an open php based CMS, it'd be pretty easy to make an admin page for that.
Here's where we cross the line from "just thinking" to "OCD": there is a white board that is supposed to have all that on it. But... why shouldn't it be automated?
I stayed 20-30 minutes late to help a reporter export and copy her package to a harddrive, she was telling me that she just wanted to go out and be a general assignment reporter. I said "good for you," per usual, and started thinking...
Are all these back end people... the designers and the copy editors and the technocrats... are they really journalists? Yes, yes, they're all essential to journalism, since (until recently) you can't really deliver the content to an audience without some of these people. And because of the environment they work in and the people they collaborate with, the training and background is certainly a valuable asset to their professions. But is what they do journalism?
But then again, it's really just a pointless, hypothetical semantic rambling.
Thursday, January 29, 2009
Monday, January 26, 2009
KOMU, attempt 1
Bad news first: I almost got killed on the way over, courtesy of directions from Google Maps that were flat out wrong.
Everything else is, well, interesting.
I have no broadcast experience, with the exception of shooting one story for J2100. But I've been using Avid Media Composer since August, and... it all converts. All Avid editing products seem to be alike. All Content Management Systems are alike. In all honestly I wasn't expecting to catch on so easily.
Something interesting: I got into a conversation with Stephanie about the Avid Content Management System. Apparently it's filled to capacity at a less-than-staggering 100 stories. KOMU.com is running an old version of the software, and being Avid, an update is expensive.
That's odd. Because Avid's editing software gets away with being pricey because it's not easy to put a good Non-linear Video Editor together. (Premiere is first becoming usable.) Content Management Systems, on the other hand, are available in abundance. They're open source, they're flexible, and they're free.
Am I missing something? Is there some critical feature that makes Avid's CMS somehow better than django, Drupal, or even a heavily modified WordPress? Especially in the age of H.264 streaming, when Adobe Flash is all you need to post video online.
Everything else is, well, interesting.
I have no broadcast experience, with the exception of shooting one story for J2100. But I've been using Avid Media Composer since August, and... it all converts. All Avid editing products seem to be alike. All Content Management Systems are alike. In all honestly I wasn't expecting to catch on so easily.
Something interesting: I got into a conversation with Stephanie about the Avid Content Management System. Apparently it's filled to capacity at a less-than-staggering 100 stories. KOMU.com is running an old version of the software, and being Avid, an update is expensive.
That's odd. Because Avid's editing software gets away with being pricey because it's not easy to put a good Non-linear Video Editor together. (Premiere is first becoming usable.) Content Management Systems, on the other hand, are available in abundance. They're open source, they're flexible, and they're free.
Am I missing something? Is there some critical feature that makes Avid's CMS somehow better than django, Drupal, or even a heavily modified WordPress? Especially in the age of H.264 streaming, when Adobe Flash is all you need to post video online.
Hello world
I've officially lost count of the number of blogs I've tried to start. I think the record lands at about 2 weeks, mostly because I didn't have much content.
This will not be another failed attempt, since it will have focus, and... well, I'm obligated.
Some explanation. JasonG01 is a new handle I'm establishing, because my actual name is too common and I can't even reserve a decent domain name.
A lot of people don't "get" blogging. A lot of people can't understand social networking. And to be entirely honest, I still don't get Twitter. But when radio first came around, people thought it had no future outside of hobbyists. It was a toy. A waste of time. I believe the quote is that "nobody wants a talking piece of furniture in their living room."
Oops.
Next question: why is this relevant to my professional development.
Short answer: because whatever I want to do with my life, it lies at the intersection of media and technology. As far as I'm concerned, the two are inseparable, and always have been. See also: moveable type, telegraph, broadcasting, cable, and portable camcorders... yeah, they change things.
Speaking of which, someone at KBIA is looking to make a third readaptation of jplayer, an online radio-story interface I made last Fall.
Apparently people like it.
This will not be another failed attempt, since it will have focus, and... well, I'm obligated.
Some explanation. JasonG01 is a new handle I'm establishing, because my actual name is too common and I can't even reserve a decent domain name.
A lot of people don't "get" blogging. A lot of people can't understand social networking. And to be entirely honest, I still don't get Twitter. But when radio first came around, people thought it had no future outside of hobbyists. It was a toy. A waste of time. I believe the quote is that "nobody wants a talking piece of furniture in their living room."
Oops.
Next question: why is this relevant to my professional development.
Short answer: because whatever I want to do with my life, it lies at the intersection of media and technology. As far as I'm concerned, the two are inseparable, and always have been. See also: moveable type, telegraph, broadcasting, cable, and portable camcorders... yeah, they change things.
Speaking of which, someone at KBIA is looking to make a third readaptation of jplayer, an online radio-story interface I made last Fall.
Apparently people like it.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)