Author Archives: Laura Oliver

The Star: Veteran sports journalist Peter Cooper dies

Veteran sports journalist Peter Cooper has died, aged 77.

Cooper, who began his journalism career at the Morning Telegraph in 1949, spent more than 25 years at the Daily Mirror as a sports reporter, says the Star. The Mirror has posted its own report and tribute to Cooper at this link.

Full story on The Star at this link…

Viber is a popular messaging and voice over internet protocol (VoIP) app that allows users to communicate with friends and family from all over the world. Unfortunately, some people still use the outdated operating system of Windows XP, which is no longer supported by many modern apps. However, the good news is that Viber version 6.0.1.5 is compatible with Windows XP, meaning that users of this operating system can still enjoy all the features that Viber has to offer.

#tjcardiff: Follow Cardiff University’s Tomorrow’s Journalists conference

The Association of Online Publishers’ summit isn’t the only conference happening today: Cardiff University’s journalism school is hosting Tomorrow’s Journalists.

The line-up includes: Peter Barron, formerly of Newsnight now with Google; Sky News’ Simon Bucks; and Guardian Cardiff’s Hannah Waldram.

There’s some footage of the day’s event via the university’s website, but you can follow tweets from the day in the liveblog at this link.

#aopsummit: Follow the Association of Online Publishers annual conference

Journalism.co.uk reporter Rachel McAthy is on the ground at the AOP’s annual summit. A full programme for the event can be found at this link, but you can follow all the tweeted action in the liveblog courtesy of the #aopsummit hashtag.

Tweets from Journalism.co.uk can be found on @journalism_live.

Speakers include: James Bromley from Mail Online; Matt Brittin from Google; Mark Wood from Future; and Tim Brooks from Guardian News & Media.

Greater Manchester Police tweeting a day’s crime

Greater Manchester Police is using Twitter to update followers on all the incidents reported to them within a 24-hour period. Speaking to the BBC today, GMP chief constable Peter Fahy said the experiment, which is being conducted on a series of accounts including @gmp24_4, was in part a response to the media’s coverage of police work.

“The media doesn’t understand the nature of day-to-day policing,” he told a BBC News report.

Speaking on Radio 4, Fahy also talked about local media:

[W]e find it more difficult to get out information particularly with the decline in local newspapers, so it’s very much about public information. But it’s also to give a better picture to the public of the reality of police work. Crime is obviously an important part of what we do, but it’s only one part and so we’re trying to show the variety of police work but also the way that so many of our incidents are realted to wider social problems.

Making data work for you: one week till media140’s dataconomy event

There’s just one week to go before media140’s event on data and how journalists and media can make better use of it. Featuring the Guardian’s news editor for data Simon Rogers and Information is Beautiful author David McCandless, the event will discuss the commercial, ethical and technological issues of making data work for you.

Rufus Pollock, director of the Open Knowledge Foundation, and Andrew Lyons, commercial director of UltraKnowledge will also be speaking. Full details are available at this link.

Journalism.co.uk is proud to be a media partner for media140 dataconomy. Readers of Journalism.co.uk can sign-up for tickets to the event at this link using the promotional code “journalist”. Tickets are currently available for £25, which includes drinks.

The event on Thursday 21 October will be held at the HUB, King’s Cross, from 6:30-9:30pm.

TechCrunch: Amazon opens e-reading to short form with Kindle Singles

Amazon will open up its Kindle e-reading platform to shorter pieces of work with the launch of Kindle Singles. Writes TechCrunch:

It sounds like anyone can submit a story or piece to be included as a Kindle Single, and Amazon is using the announcement as a “call to serious writers, thinkers, scientists, business leaders, historians, politicians and publishers” to submit writings.

Full story on TechCrunch at this link…

Creative Commons releases new mark for public domain content

Creative Commons has released a new label for works that are free of known copyright restrictions. The Public Domain mark will make it easier for internet users to find copyright-free material and CC says it will increase the value of the public domain.

The Public Domain Mark is a further step on the path towards making the promise of a digital public domain a reality … Marking and tagging works with information about their copyright status is essential. Computers must be able to parse the public domain status of works to communicate its usefulness to the public. The metadata standard underpinning the Public Domain Mark and all of CC’s licensing and legal tools are what makes this possible.

Full post on Creative Commons at this link…

Media Release: BBC axes deputy director general post and Mark Byford

The BBC has announced it will cut the role of deputy director general, making current incumbent Mark Byford redundant. Byford took up the post in 2004 and has been at the BBC for 32 years.

Speaking in a release, BBC director general Mark Thompson says:

We have concluded – and Mark fully accepts – that the work he has done to develop our journalism and editorial standards across the BBC has achieved the goals we set to such an extent that the role of deputy director-general can now end, that the post should close at the end of the current financial year, and that Mark himself should be made redundant.

Byford will step down from the corporation’s executive board at the end of March and depart from the BBC in early summer. Helen Boaden. director, BBC News, will join the executive board to represent BBC Journalism in April.

Full BBC press release at this link…

Al Jazeera English: Two arrested in Iran after inteviewing stoning woman’s son

Al Jazeera English reports on threats to foreign press freedom in Iran: two suspected German nationals have been arrested after entering on tourist visas and allegedly interviewing the son of a woman sentenced to execution by stoning; meanwhile an El Pais reporter has had her press accreditation denied.

Full story on Al Jazeera English at this link…

Talk About Local: Personal v professional, the hyperlocal balancing act

Nicky Getgood, who runs hyperlocal site Digbeth is Good, discusses the balancing act between personal passion behind a site and readers’ expectations of a professional service:

[W]hen a person creates a community resource through a personal passion, which then becomes something many people rely upon and have expectations of but is still down to one person to sustain voluntarily. What happens if that person finds they can no longer maintain the website?

Discussions about this at the recent HyperLocal GovCamp West Midlands raised the idea for hyperlocal sites to charge local businesses who want notices or listings put up more quickly or to a deadline – part of a premium model for hyperlocal websites?

Full post on Talk About Local at this link…