Poynter Online Poynter Online
New UserLogin
Al Tompkins, Poynter faculty member


Join Al Tompkins on the road and live online

Like Al's ideas? Hear more in our broadcast and online seminars.

Get Al's Morning Meeting updates as an RSS feed:
Copy this link and add it to your feed reader.

Sign up to receive Al's Morning Meeting by e-mail, sent Monday-Friday at 7 a.m.

YouTube video about how Al produces his video blogs



A dozen sites
I'm diggin'


1. Some have called Seesmic "YouTube meets Facebook." It's a social networking site with mega video capability. What if news sites allowed people to post comments via video rather than just text?

2. Blogger.com is better than ever now that you can post vertical photos. And Google Docs has upgraded its feature that enables you to embed a presentation in your blog.

3. As ABC's John Stossel explained, "Intrade is set up like a commodities market where buying and selling goes on 24 hours a day. Instead of betting on the price of copper or oil, you can bet on politics, economics, the weather, pop culture, etc."

4. Msnbc.com's NewsWare site includes games, widgets and tons of other stuff.

5. iCue is a new NBC News site that uses archived news and political video in educational ways.

6. See how much the airlines will ding you for an extra bag or overweight luggage.

7. I have been a big fan of Snapz Pro X as a screen and video capture device, but I may be falling in love with ScreenFlow.

8. My 300 or so favorite online resources and news ideas for journalists.

9. Virtual Gumshoe offers investigative links to help you find people, search criminal records and more.

10. RetailMeNot delivers more than 13,000 discount coupons to online sites. Do not buy ANYTHING online without checking this site first to see if you can get a discount.

11. Finally, a way to get those camera lights off your video cameras so you are not blasting the subject with light. The Xtender looks xcellent.

12. A Final Cut editing tutorial.

We are always looking for your great ideas. Send Al a few sentences and links.



Editor's Note: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium of ideas, edited story excerpts and other materials from a variety of Web sites, as well as original concepts and analysis. When the information comes directly from another source, it will be attributed and a link will be provided whenever possible. The column is fact-checked, but depends on the accuracy and integrity of the original sources cited. Errors and inaccuracies found will be corrected.





Al's Morning Meeting
Story ideas that you can localize and enterprise. Posted by 7:30 a.m. Mon-Fri.

Add/View All Al's Morning Meeting Feedback
More Al's Morning Meeting

Friday Edition: Sunshine Week Coming Up
RELATED RESOURCES
Like Al's ideas? Hear more in our broadcast and online seminars.

Sign up to receive Al's Morning Meeting by e-mail:
* Click here (sent Monday-Friday at 7 a.m.)

Buy Al's book, "Aim for the Heart" (Poynter receives a small cut as an Amazon affiliate).
Lots of newspapers, TV stations and radio stations will be publishing and airing advertisements promoting Sunshine Week soon -- this year, it's March 12-18. Sunshine Week is a push to encourage open records and open meetings. Listen to a downloadable radio ad.  

The Sunshine Week Web site says

Sunshine Week is not about journalists, it's about the public and the importance of protecting and promoting open government. Sunshine Week is not about protecting journalists' rights, it's about the right of all citizens to know what their government is doing -- and why.

Please send me links to your best 2006 Sunshine Week stories and projects, and I will post some of them on Morning Meeting the week after.

 

The site provides a toolbox to help newsrooms produce material for Sunshine Week. Here are the links:

Ideas for 2006 [PDF]

News & Features [PDF]
Local News; People & FOIA; FOI Guides; Audits; Used in News; Other Sections; Special Sections; Legislative Issues; Other

Editorials & Commentary [PDF]
Editorial; Opinion; Cartoons; Editors' Notes; Reader Forums

Graphics & Presentation [PDF]
Illustration; Charts & Informational Graphics; Creative Formats; Use of Sunshine Week Logo; Creative Page Layouts; Promotion; Advertising

Online Presentation [PDF]
Special Web Pages

Community Involvement [PDF]
Forums & Workshops; Reader Views; Motivation; Proclamations

Broadcast [PDF]
Television; Radio

Other Resources [PDF]
News and Wire Services; Sunshine Week Toolkit Materials


The Death of DVD


The Dallas Morning News
said March will be the month that the DVD began to die -- to be replaced by HD-DVD. The new Blu-ray-based hi-definition discs will contain tons more data than current DVDs -- and the discs will require a different kind of player to read them.

 

The paper reported:

Movie players and disks built around the HD-DVD standard will hit stores in late March. Devices and disks built around the competing Blu-ray format will arrive a few months later.
 

In many ways, the releases seem premature, given the lack of a single format and the fact there are still fairly few people who own high-definition TVs.
 

But movie studios and electronics makers are eager to reinvigorate the slowing DVD revenue machine.
 

Consumers will benefit, too, as they finally get access to features that are either illegal or technically impossible with current DVDs.
 

Only about a quarter of U.S. televisions are expected to be capable of displaying HD video this year, and those are the only sets that will be able to take full advantage of the razor-sharp images on HD-DVD and Blu-ray disks.
 

But the adoption rate for HD-capable TV sets is expected to zoom past 50 percent by 2008.


For the movie studios, it's a simple financial calculation.
 

Roughly 80 percent of homes in the U.S. now have a DVD player, according to a report from the DVD Forum, an industry group.
 

Americans now spend twice as much buying and renting DVDs as they do going to the movies.  

Howstuffworks.com explains Blu-ray technology.
 

If that is not enough, here is a white paper [PDF] with way more information than the average person would want on this.




The Struggle to Fill Smaller Arenas

 

I got this note from Al's Morning Meeting reader Andrew Barksdale, a reporter for The Fayetteville (N.C.) Observer: 

We just finished a two-day exhaustive look at our public coliseum, which is a ($3.6-million-a-year) drain on county taxpayers. The coliseum is almost a decade old and has not lived up to expectations. This series shows the challenges of that smaller markets like Fayetteville, N.C., have in attracting concerts and selling out shows. This series could give reporters in similar-sized markets (MSA is 305,000) some ideas about their public arenas.

 

Here is the Sunday link, which is free and does not require registration so long as you view it before next Sunday. 

Here is the second day of the series. The main story shows how folks here and at other coliseums in the Southeast attract shows and overcome other obstacles. The story explains how the concert industry has changed.  

The story includes some insights worth considering for your local audience: 

There are more indoor coliseums than ever before -- 10 others in the Carolinas alone for the Crown to compete against -- and the performers who do tour don't stay on the road as long as they used to. This causes an out-of-whack supply and demand. 

And this:

Things were good in the '70s and '80s, but then summer concerts moved outdoors, thanks to the amphitheater concept. Nearly every major city in the Carolinas decided to build its own arena with dreams of sports teams and increased economic visibility. 

In January 2005, the Brookings Institution reported that there was a large and growing national glut of unused convention and arena space. But despite the fact that attendance at the biggest conferences each year has stagnated at its 1993 levels, the report found that cities around the country are building or planning to build even more meeting and entertainment space.

 

Related (2005) stories:

"Convention Centers Grow, Fewer Go" (USA Today)

"Convention Biz Dims" (Boston Herald)
"Convention Hall Use Stagnant Since '90s" (The Enquirer, Cincinnati, Ohio)
"Study Finds Convention Center Forecasts Overly Rosy" (Anchorage Daily News, Alaska)



Tucked in the Car Seat

Al's Morning Meeting reader Ross Alexander at WQOW-TV in Eau Claire, Wis. said the people who recondition used cars for sale find pretty surprising stuff tucked in the forgotten places of the vehicles.



Congress Gives New Energy to Online Schools

 

It may have escaped your attention as it did mine, but when Congress passed the federal budget, it changed a small but important item pertaining to who could qualify for federal student loans. The old law said at least 50 percent of a school's courses must be offered on a campus. The new law changed that -- and it means that 100-percent-online colleges can now accept student loans. The New York Times has a story.

This ruling almost certainly will increase enrollment in online courses. The New York Times reported:

How fast the college landscape will change is uncertain. Sean Gallagher, a senior analyst at Eduventures, a Boston research firm, predicted that the proportion of students taking all their classes online could rise over the next 10 years or so to 25 percent from the current 7 percent.


To test online learning, Congress established a demonstration program in 1998 that allowed a few dozen colleges with online programs to request waivers from the 50 percent rule. The Department of Education reported last year that enrollment at eight of the colleges shot up 700 percent over six years.



We are always looking for your great ideas. Send Al a few sentences and hot links.



Editor's Note: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium of ideas, edited story excerpts and other materials from a variety of Web sites, as well as original concepts and analysis. When the information comes directly from another source, it will be attributed and a link will be provided whenever possible. The column is fact-checked, but depends upon the accuracy and integrity of the original sources cited. Errors and inaccuracies found will be corrected.
Posted at 7:49:41 PM

E-mail this item | Add Your Comments | QuickLink this item: A97754


Al's Morning Meeting Archive
View items published between:   and   
(MM/DD/YYYY) (MM/DD/YYYY)

MAIN | Back to Top



Search Poynter Online
Search Poynter Online

My Boss Likes Me, He Likes Me Not
My Boss Likes Me, He Likes Me Not
New On Poynter
Whither Bush's Blog?
By Alan Abbey

Olympian Ruling
Al's Friday Meeting

Tech-Savvy Cities
Al's Friday Meeting

Taking a Grammar Vote
By Roy Peter Clark

Covering Disabilities
By Susan LoTempio

News from Israel
Page One Today

Video Comments
By Paul Bradshaw

Papers Not Relevant?
By Ernst Poulsen

Digital Diversity
By Sally Lehrman


  Site Map | Advertise | Search | Contact | FAQ | Our Guidelines QuickLink  
  Copyright © 1995-2008 The Poynter Institute
  801 Third Street South | St. Petersburg, FL 33701 | Phone (888) 769-6837
  Site developed & hosted by DataGlyphics, Inc.



Poynter Career Center
Friday: Can New Media Save My Career?
Giving Credit Costs Little