Still paying for expensive software licenses for your multimedia newsroom? Mark Luckie has some free options that might be new to you.
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Still paying for expensive software licenses for your multimedia newsroom? Mark Luckie has some free options that might be new to you.
I desperately need a replacement for the more expensive app I bought a while back for this purpose, which totally borks video since a recent Skype release.
VodBurner Brings High-Quality Video Recording And Editing To Skype
Craig Kanalley files this Poynter story on how to set up and make the most out of Twitter lists, if you’re one of the lucky 25% or so with the feature live so far.
How Journalists Can Use Twitter Lists to Customize, Discover and Curate
Cody Brown builds up and boils down the historical shift from one-way broadcast communication to the current sphere of blogs and microblogs through the lens of The New York Times.
A Public Can Talk To Itself: Why The Future of News is Actually Pretty Clear
Zach Wise outlines the process of creating an After Effects-fueled motion graphics presentation at the New York Times.
A brash public personality running a newspaper: Is this German editor a throwback or a modern rock star?
I’ve been through most of this before, either in blog posts or in person, whenever I get the chance to talk with journalism students, but it’s worth repeating. A few tweets this week seem to have proved that, so I’m putting this updated compendium of my advice together for posterity.
Blog.
That doesn’t mean you have to blog about journalism, or build a rabid political audience, or chronicle every step the Googles and Twitters and Apples of the world take.
It just means that you maintain a Web site where you write on a somewhat regular basis.
And by “maintain,” I mean you have the opportunity to learn as much as you’d like to learn about basic formatting for the Web. HTML, CSS, and if you’re a step more curious or industrious, blog software that mirrors (or exceeds) the functionality you’ll find in the content management systems at most professional news organizations.
That’s how I got started in this business. In fact, to be more precise, I think the first bits of code I touched had to do with making the title of my first Blogspot-hosted blog bigger, and changing its font and colors.
From there I switched to a hosted WordPress blog, learned a lot more about HTML and CSS, then decided I wanted to do more, bought my own domain and hosting (shouldn’t cost more than $10/month) and taught myself much, much more about making WordPress and similar content management systems dance.
But that digital specialty, (I can make your newspaper’s blogs look and act professional, and I can train your reporters to be better bloggers), as valuable as it was in 2006, wasn’t the only thing I learned as a journalism student.
An analog craft. Yes. Not knitting. Which is cool, but not what I mean, exactly.
When I say “analog,” what I mean is a core reporting skill. Those things journalism professors and newspaper editors talk about whenever the conversation about “what j-school students should learn these days, anyway” comes up. It’s very easy for me to say “well, of course you’re going to pick these core skills up along the way, right?”
But let’s get more specific.
I highly recommend that you specialize in an analog journalism craft.
Maybe one of these:
There are others, of course. But this is a short list of things you can pick up in school. I picked up a lot of copy editing, and some practice at what I’m ambitiously calling enterprise reporting, which I later cemented with an internship at a major metro paper.
The point: The Web is awesome, and we’ll get to those digital crafts in a moment, but you want to have more than one tool in the box. So, I recommend two diverse skills. Will Sullivan once called these “Peace Out” skills, because it makes it much easier to move from job to job as necessary, throwing up two fingers as you walk out the door.
A long time ago in Web years, I wrote about a trinity of recommended Web skills for journalism students: multimedia, data, and community management. Learn any one, and you can get a job tomorrow.
That’s still pretty much true, but I’m encouraging you to pair that digital skill with an analog skill.
Great at video editing? Be great at photo editing for print, too.
Great at slinging XML into Flash maps? Be great at enterprise reporting, too.
Great at HTML/CSS? Be great at print page design, too.
Great at community management? Study up on media law so you can know when to cite Section 230 in the corporate lawyer’s office when the moment comes. (And it will.)
And vice versa.
Get the idea? Don’t be one-dimensional. You probably aren’t.
How to cut down on clicks when subscribing to an RSS feed using Google Reader in Firefox. Useful!
If you upgrade your windows to a more energy-efficient version in the next year or so, you can get back 30% of what you spend, up to $1,500, as a federal tax credit.