Showing posts with label Today. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Today. Show all posts

Monday, 11 October 2010

Watches News orgs’ goal for 2010: Imagine tomorrow’s media world today

News orgs’ goal for 2010 Imagine tomorrow’s media world today

The legacy press — or the traditional media, or whatever we’re calling newspapers these days — has one main challenge for 2010, and it’s not finding a new business model. It has to do with vision. It has to do with being able to imagine a world that does not yet exist.

While the news media’s woes come from lagging ad rates and content that’s scooped up by aggregrators, those are symptoms of the main problem: an inability to imagine what media consumption will look like in one, five, 10 years.

It’s a problem that’s not new or unique to the news business. Two examples illustrate my point.

Personal computers

In the early ’60s, IBM, the king of computers at the time, couldn’t imagine a need for personal computers, according to Robert X. Cringley’s 1992 book, “Accidental Empires.” (The famous quote from IBM chief Thomas Watson — “I think there is a world market for maybe five computers” — appears to be apocryphal, though.) In those days, computers were mainframes that filled a room. Executive didn’t type; they had secretaries for that. Watch an episode of “Mad Men,” and you’ll get the idea.

Cringley writes in his book that top IBM executives were briefed on a plan for video-display terminals in those days, but they didn’t get it. “These were intelligent men, but they had a firmly fixed concept of what computer was supposed to be, and it didn’t include video-display terminals,” he wrote. “To invent a particular type of computer, you have to want to use it, and the leaders of America’s computer companies did not want a computer on their desks.”

Imagine that: a computer company that could not foresee that people might want to harness the power of a mainframe computer, plunk it on their desk or lap, and use it all by themeselves. Today it seems preposterous; my laptop gets turned on as early each morning as my coffee maker.

IBM and others couldn’t imagine a world that didn’t exist then. Of course, others did — including later bosses at IBM — and the personal computer was born. But the inability to imagine delayed the process and changed the computer industry forever. Ask you typical 20-something who rules the computer business, and IBM won’t be on their list.

Microwaves

The first commercial microwave hit the market in 1947, according to Microtech’s history of the microwave. But it wasn’t until the 1970s when they caught on in the home. I remember when my family got our first: We all watched as my mom boiled her first cup of water for tea in this mammoth machine. “I can’t imagine what I’ll do with this,” I remember my mother saying, noting that making tea water in a stovetop kettle seemed easier.

Then think about today. My microwave died on Christmas Day, when not a store was open to replace it. Our family barely made it to Saturday, when I rushed to Target to buy a new one. What we couldn’t imagine a use for 30 years ago, we can’t live without today.

What this means for the news business

My point is news organizations need to imagine how people will consume news in the future — even though it might not make sense to them today. Newspapers owners may want ink on their fingers, and a paper they can feel, but many of their customers don’t now — or won’t in five years. And they may think a newspaper web site should look like a newspaper, but it shouldn’t. (It’s normal to build something new based on something old. That happened in the computer world, too, with the first microcomputers modeled on a mainframe.)

The challenge for the news biz is to look ahead and imagine how people may want their news and information. It’s about format (online, by phone, through social media) and content (aggregated, local, tailored to their needs.) For local news operations, this mean “organizing a community’s information so the community can organize itself,” as Jeff Jarvis puts it.

For all media organizations, it means adding more value to what they offer readers, according to Jay Rosen. What it doesn’t mean is forsaking the journalistic mission in search of the “almighty hit,” as Lehigh University journalism professor Jeremy Littau puts it.
Coppied by http://www.niemanlab.org/2010/01/news-orgs-goal-for-2010-imagine-tomorrows-media-world-today/

Thursday, 7 October 2010

enjoy 2010 Fireball Run Adventurally Kicks Off Today

2010 Fireball Run Adventurally Kicks Off Today


Can you imagine a competition that takes the fun of a cross-country trip and combines it with the thrill of auto racing? The 2010 Fireball Run Adventurally is exactly that, and more.
Today, 75 teams set off on a 3500-mile journey and will face many different challenges as they travel through 18 cities over eight days of exciting competition.
How it works
The teams kicked off at Henderson-Lake in Las Vegas, Nevada marking the starting line of the quest and will conclude with a heroes' welcome on Oct. 2nd in Galena, Illinois. Each day of the competition, each team has an idea of the general route and where they will arrive each night. What remains a mystery: some of the destinations along the journey and the tasks they will have to complete along the way.
The adventure begins as each team is presented with a mission envelope containing clues and puzzles, which they must decipher in order to navigate through the country. If one gets stuck, the answers are just a phone call away, but teams will lose points with every call made. In the end, whichever team accumulates the most points will be crowned the winner of the Fireball Run.
The point’s system works in three ways by accounting for:
1) One’s position in line when they arrive at the final checkpoint of each day,
2) Points accumulated for missions completed successfully, and
3) One’s track time on the racetrack challenges
The competitors
In order to be an entrant, a member of the team must meet the qualifications of being an economic, civil, or celebrity leader within their industry or community. This allows host cities to subsidize around two-thirds of the cost of the competition, and helps spread economic influence and vitality across the country. This year’s theme of American Heroes expands the competition and encourages the brave men and women of law enforcement, military actives and veterans, firefighters, and emergency medical services to participate.
As there are many great people participating this year, the cars among them also vary from A to Z. Going for comfort or going for speed is all up to the members of the teams competing. Some may be thinking that a supercar may be the key to thriving in the racetrack events, and they are probably right. However, they will have to limit themselves on how many drivers and the supplies they will be traveling with.
The rules state that the registered car is the one that must be used for the competition. There will no hauling of people or cars allowed.
Coppied by http://www.sportscarmonitor.com/blog/1049704_2010-fireball-run-adventurally-kicks-off-today