You will see something cool here if you upgrade your Flash player.
Notes from the classroom and observations about today’s practice of journalism online
I just learned of yet another nifty Google search feature: Timeline view.
The search string I used: blogs journalism view:timeline
By adding “view:timeline,” you get the results in date clusters. (Thanks to Brant Houston for the tip.) The graphic has been edited to fit the space above.
Search all entries in this blog back to December 2005
Choose your language

Visits since July 1, 2007
Teaching Online Journalism is proudly powered by WordPress | Teaching Online Journalism theme adapted from Blank Theme
This
work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 License.
Please attribute this work in the manner specified: with a link back to this blog.
Does your news organization use Twitter? ( surveys) [Link]
Those of you (er, both of you) who have been following this blog since its outset (onset?) in February 2005 will recall that I first got involved with the actual production of online news at the Spartan Daily, the student ... [Link]
It’s Blog Action Day .Here are 88 ways to do something about poverty now. And if you’re in the Midlands, here’s an 89th: go to the Birmingham Social Media Surgery, to support voluntary and community groups in the city. Credit to Nick ... [Link]
On Friday I’ll be presenting at the End of Journalism conference at the University of Bedfordshire. A really interesting range of papers, which I’ll try to Twitter/Qik/blog about. If you’re going to be around too, let me know in the ... [Link]
The second part of the results of my survey of blogging journalists looks at how blogs have affected how journalists generate story ideas and leads. Blogs and news ideas: “The canary in the mine” Blogging's effect on story ideas by ... [Link]
I remember where I was the first time I read about the Knight News Challenge and was inspired enough to blog about it. A tire shop. This one: (Photo yanked from Google Maps Street View.) Seriously, it was late in ... [Link]
Neighborhood-level intelligence isn’t always easy to find, for residents, travelers or resettlers. We have neighborhood boundaries, courtesy of the sociologists and mapmakers at Urban Mapping. But other information can be scant. Now we have another view from the real estate ... [Link]
Back in June I distributed an online survey to find out how journalists with blogs felt their work had been affected by the technology. 200 blogging journalists responded in total, from 30 different countries. The responses paint an interesting picture: ... [Link]
RSS updates every 60 minutes.
Most recent posts are shown.
I am macloo on del.icio.us

Must be a test, I can’t get it to work…
August 11, 2007 at 1:45 pmThat’s pretty cool. I ego surfed with it … found results attributed to dates that pre-date the web (a bio of mine on another site dated 1987, for example). So they need to work on their dating algorithms.
Also spoted for the first time on organic search: “note this.”
August 11, 2007 at 2:49 pmMarko, you have to type — view:timeline — with no spaces in your search string:
marko view:timeline
August 12, 2007 at 8:43 am