Post(s) tagged with "nytimes"

This is all that the NY Times is doing to exploit Twitter? T Magazine? A stream of emaciated models wearing thousand dollar clothing?

This is all that the NY Times is doing to exploit Twitter? T Magazine? A stream of emaciated models wearing thousand dollar clothing?

NY Times Plans Redesign

TimCarmody, Inside the New York Times’ web redesign

The first thing you notice when you look at the new article layout is that everything is on one page. For news articles and magazine stories, the HTML5 redesign foregoes the familiar but much-lamented page breaks in favor of a continuous vertical scroll. “We’ve found that the levels of engagement in terms of time spent and depth of reading increase when it’s on a single page,” says Larson. Readers perversely nostalgic for a page turn will find comfort in how the headline and article fonts newspaper and magazine stories now exactly match their print counterparts.

At the top of each article page is a full-width, horizontally scrolling navigation menu that theNYT’sdesign team internally calls “the ribbon.” The ribbon can present related stories within or across sections, or structured lists, like “most e-mailed.” It’s rendered in AJAX, so you can click a story on the ribbon and only the story reloads; your place in the ribbon is preserved. Scroll down slowly and the ribbon vanishes; scroll quickly, whether up or down, and it reappears. Ads, related stories, and comments all move to the right-hand side. Instead of a long stream of comments, the bottom of each article has a structured navigation box suggesting more related stories or sections, tailored to each page; Adelman calls this the “what’s more” section.

I so hate the current default of multiple pages to read a story. It’s hundreds of page clicks a week for me.
Using Varnish So News Doesn't Break Your Server - Jacob Harris ⇢

This is exactly what I meant when I said that all successful media companies of the future will act like software companies.

Why Online Is A Better Place For News

 

The NY Times ran a short post (it’s not an article: they are getting hip to the stream) with a PDF link. The graphic was too big to be displayed otherwise, I guess. Normally they just have a ‘click to see expanded image’ but now they are taking it a step farther.

They ran the same thing last February, but I didn’t notice then.

The Rise Of Web Culture And Its Enemies

Showing a typical lack of depth regarding the trend right before their eyes, the media are mistaking what the newest Comscore numbers about social networks mean:

[from Social Networking Sites Continue to Attract Record Numbers as MySpace.com Surpasses 50 Million U.S. Visitors in May - MarketWatch]

TABLE 1 Selected Social Networking Properties by Unique Visitors

May 2006 

Total U.S. - Home, Work and University Internet Users Source: comScore Media Metrix

Property………………………….. May-06 (000)

Total Internet Population……… 172,120 

MYSPACE.COM………………….. 51,441 
Classmates.com Sites…………. 14,792 
FACEBOOK.COM………………… 14,069 
YOUTUBE.COM………………….. 12,669 
MSN Spaces……………………… 9,566 
XANGA.COM…………………….. 7,146 
FLICKR.COM…………………….. 5,163 
Yahoo! 360 degrees…………… 4,936 
LIVEJOURNAL.COM……………. 3,904 
MYYEARBOOK.COM……………. 3,048

This is just tip of the iceburg of Web culture. People are turning the Web into Ted Oldenburg’s Third Place, or maybe Third Space is better. The place that is not our home or our work, but where we interact in a larger, and more diverse social milieu. Where we are more likely to hear a dirty joke, or experience insights into others’ lives. Where we are more likely to find a source for artistic expression, new ideas, and ultimately, a broader and more open perspective on what makes the world spin around.

This is an implicit rejection of the controlled media depiction of purpose and meaning in our lives, a turning away from centralized organizations telling us what is important or how to live our lives. These social sites are not merely some way for venture capitalists to make money, or for faddish cliques to indulge in marginal lifestyles. This is the start of a new global culture, defining its own principles and mores, hiding in plain sight.

Sure, the news services and talking heads are quick to focus on the emergence of global Web culture when China jails some journalist or dissident who has resorted to the Web as a podium, but when it’s Westerners who are flocking to the pleasures of online society, it is spun as entertainment, leisure time activities, or the gross immorality of the lunatic fringe.

I am actually happy that the rise of Web culture can continue to be a surreptitious revolution, happening out in plain sight, because otherwise there would be hearings in Congress, and a hue-and-cry in the press. There is already a smattering of cautionary stories, like in today’s New York Times, warning members of the social networking sites that posting licentious or blatantly sexual materials on your MySpace could lead to “losing that dream job,” because after all, we are supposed to be soulless drones if we want to work for the man:

[ from Online Party Crashers]

All good things must come to an end, including the chance to post lascivious photographs and diary entries on the Internet without repercussions. A generation that has come of age with blogging, Webcams and social networking sites is waking up to the fact that would-be employers are looking over their shoulders — and adjusting their job offers.

So the subtle repressive powers of conservatism inherent in corporate life are being quietly heralded by the inherently conservative media — even a hypothetically left-leaning pub like the NY Times — where it is taken as a given that individuals should jettison any hope for a private life if they wish to work for corporate America. Give up open self-expression, conceal any sexual tendencies that stray from normalcy, and do not be too strident in your protests against idiocy in government, business, or religion. The message is clear: if you want the benefits of a working career, put aside any personal expression.

And the message that is being sent at a deeper level — one that the senders may not even know they are sending — is that they reject the openness, freedom, and self-expression that Web culture is founded on. And, once they realize what is going on, they will try to counter this quiet, bottom-up, and diffused revolution. The repressive regimes use direct controls to silence or jail those who attempt to undo centralized control of media and the state. But the societal controls within theoretically more open societies in the West will come to bear, and it is the gentle coercions — like the mocking, “father-knows-best” tone of the NY Times editorial — that may be the most difficult to blunt.

We have institutionalized the messages of the media, we are the ones who accept the powers that the corporations and media use to hold us in line. Why can’t I protest the war in Iraq on my blog if I work for some multinational? Do I have no forum for political advocacy? Should I be fired if my opinions upset my boss, or some client? If I am living a sexual lifestyle via some social networking site — one that is legal, but unsavory to the conservatives — should we accept the fact that I might be denied a job that I am capable of performing? Should we chuckle along with the editors of the Times, who imply that “of course such indiscretions will nix your career.”

And the last line will be the patronizing, and smarmy tone that they adopt. After all, serious and well-adjusted people don’t spend time on the Internet, except to gather information necessary to do their jobs. It is only the maladjusted fringe or immature that spend time in chat rooms, on MySpace, or blogging away.

I suggest that we need to explicitly expose them when they say these things, and argue the not-so-obvious at every turn:

  1. Web culture is happening: a spontaneous global culture is emerging, and it is based on openness, inclusion, acceptance of diversity, and the desire to make the world a better place to live.
  2. This movement is driven both by the failure of traditional organizations — media, government, and religious — to cope with the modern world, and the stresses we, as individuals, are confronted with.
  3. Web culture is a return to earlier elements of human social life, especially the importance of social relationships and the central importance of self-expression through art, principles that have been devalued for the past few hundred years. This is almost a reversion to tribal norms, although the tribe may be a diffuse network of woodworkers that you submerge into everyday via Yahoo Groups.
  4. Web culture is living at the edge, where people are interacting with others directly, and organizations form organically, as groups seek to legitimize order that has emerged within the group, not impose order on supposed chaos.

So, the Comscore figures hide as much as they reveal, and the smartalecky attitude of the NY Times editorial says less than it means. The revolution is coming and it will be socialized, and the powers whose authority and control are threatened will try very hard indeed to subvert any movements, especially global ones, that reject the current state of affairs.

I know you think that your 20 plus hours a week on the Internet is merely a sideline to a busy life, the curious stretching of your mind to understand the world from a slightly broader perspective. You may have no desire to be a part of some radical restructuring of human society. Or, at least no conscious desire to do so.

But, at least for people like me, the vanguard who live most of their business and personal life online (or at least mediated largely online), we have really already turned that corner. We have seen what’s over the horizon, and we know it’s worth fighting for. And we know who we are fighting against, too.

[Pointer Steve Rubel]

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Web anthropologist, futurist, author. My focus is the future, and the tectonic forces pushing business, media, and society into an unclear and accelerating future. more.

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