Die N.Y Times und Blogs - Interviews anlässlich der BlogerCon 2003
Christopher Lydon hat anlässlich der BolggerCon 2003 Interviews mit dem Chef der New York Times.com, Len Apcar, mit Jeff Jarvis, mit Jay Rosen und mit Adam Curry geführt:
Listen to Len Apcar and make your own guess how long it will be before the New York Times (the online edition) certifies the sea change in media with its own Times-style blog about opera, or art, or more likely, about the 2004 presidential campaign. Editor in chief of The New York Times on the Web, Len Apcar brought Times majesty to BloggerCon this weekend, and a certain blog envy, too.
Hier das Interview mit Len Apcar als mp3.
Jeff Jarvis:
Jeff Jarvis put it this way: "I'm not sure what's more important--for the big institutions (whether that's a newspaper or a presidential candidate) to blog... or to read blogs... The Internet gives a chance to make the audience shine, make the audience the star. The first job is to point to them." The real opportunity for newspapers, he suggested, could be to enable, coach and sponsor bloggers. "It's an entirely new relationship with your readers. The readers are your writers now, and that's a great new thing."
Hier das Interview mit Jeff Jarvis.
Jay Rosen (Weblog: PressThink):
Blogs are undoing the system for generating authority and therefore credibility of news providers that's been accumulating for well over 100 years. And the reason is that the mass audience is slowly, slowly disappearing. And the one-to-many broadcasting model of communications--where I have the news and I send it out to everybody out there who's just waiting to get it--doesn't describe the world anymore. And so people who have a better description of the world are picking up the tools of journalism and doing it. It's small. Its significance is not clear. But it's a potentially transforming development... I like [it] when things get shaken up, and when people don't know what journalism is and they have to rediscover it. So in that sense I'm very optimistic."
Hier das Interview mit Jay Rosen.
Adam Curry:
Adam Curry comes now to the summit of blogging from The Netherlands and show business, with a head full of ideas about practical technology to liberate expressive international artists.
Hier das Interview von Christopher Lydon mit Adam Curry.
[Quelle: Christopher Lydon Interviews ]
Listen to Len Apcar and make your own guess how long it will be before the New York Times (the online edition) certifies the sea change in media with its own Times-style blog about opera, or art, or more likely, about the 2004 presidential campaign. Editor in chief of The New York Times on the Web, Len Apcar brought Times majesty to BloggerCon this weekend, and a certain blog envy, too.
Hier das Interview mit Len Apcar als mp3.
Jeff Jarvis:
Jeff Jarvis put it this way: "I'm not sure what's more important--for the big institutions (whether that's a newspaper or a presidential candidate) to blog... or to read blogs... The Internet gives a chance to make the audience shine, make the audience the star. The first job is to point to them." The real opportunity for newspapers, he suggested, could be to enable, coach and sponsor bloggers. "It's an entirely new relationship with your readers. The readers are your writers now, and that's a great new thing."
Hier das Interview mit Jeff Jarvis.
Jay Rosen (Weblog: PressThink):
Blogs are undoing the system for generating authority and therefore credibility of news providers that's been accumulating for well over 100 years. And the reason is that the mass audience is slowly, slowly disappearing. And the one-to-many broadcasting model of communications--where I have the news and I send it out to everybody out there who's just waiting to get it--doesn't describe the world anymore. And so people who have a better description of the world are picking up the tools of journalism and doing it. It's small. Its significance is not clear. But it's a potentially transforming development... I like [it] when things get shaken up, and when people don't know what journalism is and they have to rediscover it. So in that sense I'm very optimistic."
Hier das Interview mit Jay Rosen.
Adam Curry:
Adam Curry comes now to the summit of blogging from The Netherlands and show business, with a head full of ideas about practical technology to liberate expressive international artists.
Hier das Interview von Christopher Lydon mit Adam Curry.
[Quelle: Christopher Lydon Interviews ]
Cyberwriter - 7. Okt, 11:36 - BloggerCon 03
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