Uncategorized

Just a couple years ago in college, I took a new class called "Online Journalism." The class was long overdue to enter the curriculum. We primarily talked about how print articles needed to be written so that they could easily be transferred to a publication's Web version. I took "Ethics" that quarter as well, taught by infamous professor John Harris. There we debated about whether or not bloggers could be considered journalists, or if we should categorize them as something new entirely.

Fast forward. Days before the iPhone announcement, major daily papers shaped their news stories around blogger speculation. Times are a'changin', and now journalists at this nation's biggest newspapers are jumping ship to a mostly-online publication focusing only on national politics, The Politico.

The New York Times reports "The Politico is finding younger journalists and some veterans — including John F. Harris [not my professor] and Jim VandeHei from The Washington Post, Mike Allen from Time magazine and Roger Simon from Bloomberg News — who are willing to leave the once-secure confines of traditional print to join a start-up."

While this may seem risky, most newspapers nationwide are facing budget constraints, declining circulation and are cutting employees. The Politico is hiring.

“It seems riskier to stay in print than to go to something new,” said Ben Smith, 30, a reporter for The Daily News in New York, who will be writing a blog for The Politico about the 2008 presidential campaign.

It's not all goodwill. Prominent journalists will only leave their posts for the right price, and Allbritton Communications is writing the checks. According to the Times, "[The Politico] publisher, Robert L. Allbritton, 37, scion of the banking and media family that once owned the defunct Washington Star, said in an interview that he would finance The Politico for 'the foreseeable future' and has committed to paying for expensive campaign travel. He has hired a staff of about 50 people, almost half of them journalists."

The Politico will appear in limited print circulation and occasional broadcast, but the primarily online publication will be free in all forms, and Allbritton believes it will turn profits in fewer than five years.

We'll see. Thanks to Wes for flagging this article to me.

Dear friends,

I checked the blog today and found that it's reached the 20,000 hits milestone. Thanks for your support and enthusiasm. I keep this caged monster alive for two reasons:

  1. To write and explore my own thoughts
  2. To learn what you think about social, political and cultural events of the day and my personal stories

We'll agree and disagree at times, but we all benefit from feedback that elevates or even changes our ideas.

- Paolo

Wow. I'm reading live feeds of Steve Job's keynote speech at Macworld. He's announced the new iPhone for Cingular. The features are unreal. Data and photos are courtesy of Engadget.

It's an 8 gig Video iPod. Only one "home" button. No stylus. All touch-screen. It's got a 3.5-inch screen, and the highest resolution screen Mac's ever shipped, 160ppi. It's the thinnest smartphone by far, at 11.6mm and includes a 2-megapixel camera.

It's a smartphone that runs on Mac OS X and updates on iTunes.

The iPhone somehow runs OS X with support for Widgets, Google Maps, and Safari, iTunes (of course) and Yahoo push email. Infact, both Google and Yahoo CEOs came out to speak back-to-back about their partnerships with Apple for this phone. You can browse Web pages like you would on a PC and touch the screen to zoom.

Add html email support to the features list.

And conference text messaging.
And selective voicemail.

Job's was so cocky with the iPhone that he checked Apple's stock price on stage to show that the stock had jumped $2.50 during his presentation. Compare that to the 29 cent increase in Microsoft's stock during its partnership announcement with Ford yesterday.

The 4GB iPhone will go out the door in the US as a Cingular exclusive for $499 on a two-year contract, 8GB for $599. Ships Stateside in June, Europe in fourth quarter, Asia in 2008.

While it's out of a lot of people's price range now, this phone will change the game. BTW, Apple's stock rose 8 percent or $7.10 today. I hope everyone bought stock at the right time.

I don't normally write anything about sports, but that Seahawks-Cowboys game produced one of the most dramatic fourth-quarters I have ever seen. Here's a breakdown of what happened:

  • Matt Hasselbeck opened the quarter with an interception. Nice.
  • The Cowboys completed a field goal.
  • The Seahawks blew a first and goal from the 1.
  • At their own 2, Tony Romo threw a pass to Terry Glenn and rookie cornerback Kelly Jennings stripped the ball. The ball bounced back into the end zone and Lofa Tatupu tipped it up before it went out of bounds. Michael Boulware landed on the ball for an apparent touchdown.
  • A review showed that Tatupu had his foot just out of bounds when he tipped it, so it went down as a safety and the Cowboys punted.
  • Hasselbeck hit Jerramy Stevens streaking down the middle for a 37-yard touchdown. The two-point conversion failed, but the Seahawks led 21-20.
  • The Cowboys moved up field and appeared to be primed for a game-winning 19-yard field goal.
  • Romo fumbled a good snap. He jumped up to run with it, but Jordan Babineaux stopped him at the 2. The Seahawks win. Everyone makes fun of Romo.