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Posts Tagged ‘blog’

{Cup Of Tea Anyone?!}

May 27th, 2010

I used to think my little owl tea cosy was cool and kind of different……Until a friend of mine saw an exhibition at the Powerhouse Museum in Sydney.

Loani also has a blog Grand Purl Baa, where she also provides a free pattern for the below tea cosy.

The ‘Portraits of a Tea Cosy’ exhibition is on at the Powerhouse Museum until 30th May. Go and check it out!! And don’t forget to visit Loani’s blog to see lots of other amazing cosies.

Makes mine look so dull and boring right?! Now I wish I could crochet.

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GNCC ATV Race Reports | ATVMagBlog

May 11th, 2010

If you’re new here, you may want to subscribe to the ATV Mag Blog daily RSS feed

rear Suspension Unitsshocks ,

A plastic heart pumps no real blood.

April 27th, 2010

So this blog is called “JAMDEK Daily“. I’m determined to make it that way again.

While I could post the actual audio file, it’s different than the video. I feel that the video is SO much better than the song on Timothy Seth Avett as Darling’s album Killing the Headlamps

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Christmas stamps 2009 on Flickr – Photo Sharing!

April 16th, 2010

Comments HowardLake    says:

Interesting. I bought both books of stampsjust over a week ago in Colchester. Maybe theRoyal Mail is cutting costs on design andproduction and recycling the same stamps fromlast year.

I do think these are the new designs for2009, according to:

lastpostingdates.co.uk/christmas-stamps-2009.html

You can see the 2008 designs at:

coolcards.co.uk/blog/2008/11/royal-mail-christmas-sta… Posted 5 months ago. ( permalink )

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buy hermle clocks

March 28th, 2010

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This blog does contain content which might present a conflict of interest. This content may not always be identified.

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Bill Gates Has Started a New Company

March 25th, 2010

The three well-known tech and venture capital writers posted the story to launch their new tech blog TechFlash. It’s a sweet scoop by a group of former mainstream reporters bravely striking out into the blogosphere.

TechFlash says that “whatever the ultimate role of the company, the circumstances surrounding its creation provide a behind-the-scenes glimpse into the new era of Gates’ life.” The company has a federal trademark as a think-tank and is classified under broad terms that include “scientific and technological services,” “industrial analysis and research,” and “design and development of computer hardware and software.”

Sources told Bishop that the small office near Gates’ home is filled with high-tech Microsoft paraphernalia, including one of the touch-screen tables used as a guest book.

We’re excited to see what Gates does with the company and we’ll be watching these top-notch reporters’ coverage as it unfolds on their new site.

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MTV smacks YouTube, posts almost every music video ever

March 3rd, 2010

Do you sometimes find yourself wishing that there was a place you could go to just watch music videos? back in the 80s, MTV served that purpose. these days, MTV and its sibling MTV2 are hardly channels anyone would watch in order to get a music video fix. MTV is looking to redeem itself in the music video department, however, by launching a new site Tuesday called MTV Music that opens up the company’s massive video archive and puts it on the web for free.

MTV Music expands upon the music video offerings already posted to MTV.com by offering an entire back catalogue of videos that go all the way to when music videos were born. The library includes more than 16,000 videos, sprinkled with “exclusive” MTV concert footage and MTV “Unplugged” performances that used to be all the rage. And that’s just the beginning. According to a blog post on MTV’s Splash Page, more videos are being added by the day, so even if your favorite Paula Abdul selections haven’t been posted yet, they probably will make it up eventually.

In addition to the consumer-facing side of MTV Music, the company has also launched an API that allows developers to build applications that make use of MTV Networks Content. The examples provided include creating a video gallery, a MySpace or Facebook app to send music video dedications to friends, the “music application of your dreams” made up of your favorite videos, or a blog plug-in to pull in various videos.

MTV Music may not seem like a big deal to some, but it’s pretty major when you consider what’s going on behind the scenes. YouTube originally stated in 2006 that its goal was to host “every single music video ever created”—an ambitious goal that the company hoped to accomplish within 6 to 18 months. that obviously hasn’t happened, quite yet, and now MTV Music is way ahead of YouTube in the music video department. Ice burn.

Why hasn’t YouTube caught up, even with a two-plus year head start? MTV is owned by Viacom, the company that filed a $1 billion lawsuit against YouTube for “brazen” copyright infringement in 2007 (the suit is still pending). among other things, Viacom wanted to have full control over any of its content that gets posted—something that YouTube could not provide.

MTV Music is also differentiating itself from YouTube by being light on the ads. All 16,000+ videos lack any form of advertising except for banner ads at the top of the page, while Google is currently testing video ads on some of its videos in order to monetize the massive (and otherwise un-monetizable) amount of content on the site.

Like YouTube, MTV Music allows users to not only watch videos on the site, but to also leave comment, give ratings, and embed the videos on their blogs or personal websites. Here’s a favorite of Ars Editor in Chief Ken Fisher… enjoy!

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Is Sports Journalism Becoming Lazy?

March 2nd, 2010

This article is written by an amateur expressing his opinions, nobody commissioned it or pays for it. take that as a warning and read on if you accept this caveat.

Lazy Journalism

This football season I’ve had occasion to read more sports journalism than every before, and more blogs. I’m finding that blogs are becoming much more informed, informative, insightful and accurate. Whilst traditional sports journalism is becoming less informed, less well researched, less insightful and in many cases almost completely inaccurate.

Is this a common trend? Can we identify a cause?

Passion

Journalists work for money, fine, no problem with that. I’m sure most do it because they also want to be journalists – probably they enjoy the act of writing, and maybe enjoy the activity they’re writing about; football for example. Blog writers tend to write almost exclusively motivated by passion. Passion for the sport or club they’re writing about.

Passion is often assumed to create views that are biased and one-sided, views that are littered by mistakes and irrelevant points. and some of the fly-by-night blogs can be full of defences of the supported team, and attacks of the opposition teams (and sometimes awful abuse too). But most of the respected, regularly updated blogs do contain not only some great writing, but some great insights, often backed up by thorough research.

Research

I’ll use as an example of poor research the comment “Shawcross isn’t that type of player” that Tony Pulis uttered on Saturday after he broke Aaron Ramsey’s leg. Tony Pulis also said that self-same comment in 2007 after Shawcross broke Francis Jeffers’ ankle. There are other incidents (one only has to go to youtube to find videos) that give the lie to Pulis’ comments, with but a moments simple research. yet respected journalists and sports writers completely ignored (or didn’t bother looking to find) that background. (It’s not my intention to hound Shawcross, but this is a classic example of the kind of lazy “I’ll just repeat what I’ve heard, putting no thought into it” type of journalism I’m talking about).

I guess it ill-behoves a professional journalist to overtly accuse a sportsman of being unsportsmanlike, but with a moments research someone could at least provide evidence which casts doubt. They didn’t and they don’t. why?Lazy

Is it because they’re lazy and simply can’t be bothered to do any research? is it because they don’t care about their writing or about the content of it? is it because they feel they can get away with any old rubbish? That last accusation may bear some merit.

Sports journalism is becoming increasingly opinion, rather than fact. Traditional journalists may express opinions too of course, and if those opinions are insights into a particular facet of their sport or team, then great, because that’s exactly what they should do. But when facts and research are absent, or when opinions or hearsay from elsewhere are treated as fact, that’s when we should question. We should complain to either the press complaints commission (pcc.org.uk/) if we feel we have enough justification, or at least complain to the media company in question (be they a newspaper or on-line publisher).

Feedback

Often the feedback is by way of article comments, typically short and opinionated, or there is no feedback at all. Sometimes angry outbursts at the perpetrator simply generate more traffic to the media page website, leading to the journalist in question being praised for raising the media company’s web presence. There is no independent body looking at what is published and applying critical reasoning to it. Editors want to raise profile and readership, why should they care – unless a formal complaint is made.

The thin ice is when legitimate media companies provide content written by ‘journalists’ they pay, but whose content is provided as ‘opinion’. In other words, it’s no more or less valuable than any other blog. yet it is given higher worth in the minds of the general public exactly because it is published by a ‘legitimate’ media company.

Reaction

There are a number of actions you can take when you read or hear media articles that are factually incorrect, or are displaying misinformed opinion. you can switch off – simply don’t watch, listen or read that media channel anymore (whether it be radio, tv, a newspaper, or an on-line source). you can complain – either informally to the publisher/producer, or formally to the PCC. Or you can continue to put up with lazy, inadequate reporting. and if you put up with it, you have only yourself to blame for having to put up with it.

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