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New board

I have been writing almost exclusively for websites and producing online content for the past year. Like it or not, this is the direction media are heading.
I welcome a place to discuss ideas of presenting stories and covering events for an online audience. I have discovered it's a little different than writing for newspapers and magazines.
 
I think this will be useful more as a technical forum than an abstract discussion of online journalism.

Many of us have been forced into positions where we need to know HTML, WordPress, a proprietary CMS, find a third-party tool to host an audio slideshow, etc.

I think this could be a place to pose the questions like "someone recommend a good, free, online poll site" or "has anyone installed a Facebook 'like' box on their prep sports site" without cluttering up the JTO board.
 
Great idea for a new board, mods. I also like how everything is broken out on the homepage. Should increase traffic on the workshop, and design boards!
 
Agree with Mustang. I tell the newbie reporters that 30 years ago, one of the perks of being sports editor at my college paper was getting an electric typewriter! Now we've got laptops, iPhones, Facebook, Twitter, live blogging, air cards and who knows what they'll come out with tomorrow (literally!),
 
HanSenSE said:
Agree with Mustang. I tell the newbie reporters that 30 years ago, one of the perks of being sports editor at my college paper was getting an electric typewriter! Now we've got laptops, iPhones, Facebook, Twitter, live blogging, air cards and who knows what they'll come out with tomorrow (literally!),

BYH will be along to tell kids to get off his lawn in no time.
 
Not helpful, from my perspective, to create an "online journalism" forum separate from the strictly observed "journalism topics only" one. Maybe, instead, shift inanities unrelated to journalism, such as agate, how to handle phone calls from angry parents of the prep game you just covered, fax machine repair and operation, website design, and tweet-a-neering for 50-somethings in the one place and keep journalism topics in another. You could argue perhaps that not all journalism is online these days, but there is no debate that any act of journalism, from the whimpers to the bombs, reverberate online, which is sort of my point against the splitting of hairs and/or forums.
 

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