News

31 July 2005

Embracing the future

America is wired. Sixty-three percent of U.S. adults use the Internet daily, 78 percent of 18-to-29-year-olds are online, and approximately 60 million people now have broadband service in their homes. "In the future, wireless connectivity will increase through laptops, cell phones and personal digital devices such as PalmPilots and BlackBerries," says a 2005 report by Lee Raine, project director...

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31 July 2005

Manmohan calls for professionalisation of press freedom

New Delhi: Urging the country’s media houses to professionalise and institutionalise the concept of press freedom, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh on Saturday said that visibility and multiplicity of publications did not automatically guarantee credibility, and that there was a need to project the Fourth Estate in a more transparent manner. Daily News and Analysis (DNA) newspaper here this morning...

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30 July 2005

Journalists injured in Kashmir gun battle

New York, July 29, 2005–As many as eight journalists were injured today in Srinagar, the major city of Indian Kashmir, after a grenade attack triggered gunfire between militants and security forces in the area, according to international news reports and local reporters. At least one journalist, Muzzafar Ahmad Bhat, a cameraman for the Indian news channel Sahara TV, was critically injured and...

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30 July 2005

Dainik Jagran to launch Jammu edition on August 1

NEW DELHI, July 30: Dainik Jagran, the largest read publication in India with 2.12 crore readers, is set to launch its Jammu edition next Monday, August 1. This marks the 27th edition for the newspaper behemoth. Sanjay Gupta, CEO, Dainik Jagran, said the Jammu edition will be the first national Hindi daily to be published from Jammu. "The Amar Ujala or Punjab Kesari editions are not national...

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29 July 2005

Bloggers Sometimes Do Journalism, But Are They Journalists?

During the early days of the military conflict in Iraq, Americans discovered a new Internet phenomenon called "blogging." U.S. soldiers stationed in the Middle East created online Web pages, or "Web logs," to share their experiences and feelings with readers. This brought attention to blogging as a form of communication, and people worldwide began Web logs of their own. Last year, the "blogosphere...

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29 July 2005

Rediff.com registers 53 per cent revenue growth in Q1

Rediff.com India Ltd, one of the leading online providers of news, information, communication, entertainment and shopping services for Indians, has recorded 53 per cent growth in its revenues in the first quarter this year. Intensification in online advertising and mobile services resulted in increased revenues for the company, with revenues from India online increasing by 114 per cent to $2...

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29 July 2005

Electronic Graffiti Walls or Online News Sources?

We must let journalism rust. As air and sunlight turns old cars and tools an earthy red, oxidization turns tabloids and broadsheets a stale shade of yellow. This hue, "vintage newspaper," is not the prettiest color in the spectrum. But we should not forget what it looks like. I am not affecting nostalgia here. I am concerned that the computers we so desperately rely on don’t know everything...

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29 July 2005

Sites Honored for Interactive Storytelling, Rethinking Journalism

Five finalists have been named for the 2005 Batten Awards for Innovations in Journalism, which gives cash prizes up to $10,000 for "setting new standards for interactive journalism, advancing creativity in digital storytelling and recalibrating the role that news organizations play in their communities." Here's a look at what the judges said about the five finalists, plus links to other notable...

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29 July 2005

How Media Split Under Pressure in the Leak Probe

In May, 500 members of the media elite rose to their feet to applaud a First Amendment award the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press gave to lawyer Floyd Abrams. Jointly presenting the award at a gala dinner in Manhattan were Matthew Cooper of Time magazine and Judith Miller of the New York Times. For a year, Mr. Abrams had worked to fend off a special prosecutor seeking testimony about...

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29 July 2005

The Human Cost of 24-Hour News

It's opinion. It's conjecture. It's a tidbit from the newest poll or another alarming image -- delivered with rising drumbeats -- from the day's top story. It's today's 24-hour news. But as Americans bathe in constant reports from CNN or Fox, the Internet, satellite radio, newspapers and magazines, is there a price to pay for living in a world where the news never stops? Increasingly, analysts say...

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