MediaShift Idea Lab: Journalists Should Join Google+ to Understand What Comes Next

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By David Cohn on MediaShift, Sept. 1 –  This month’s Carnival of Journalism, a site that I’ve organized where bloggers can convene to all write about the same topic, was hosted by Kathy Gill, a social media consultant and senior lecturer at the University of Washington, who seized on the new social network that is Google+.

Still in its infancy, Google+ has been the topic of many-a-tech blog posts. As a former tech writer, I love and hate this stuff. Sometimes I want to slap Mashable right in the “http” and tell them to never do another “Top X Ways [name your industry professionals] Can Use [new social-networking tool].” If you are curious though, here are the top five ways journalists can use Google+, courtesy of Mashable.

Equally, I want to avoid speculation about Google+ vs. Facebook or Twitter, etc. It’s a valid conversation, but there is already plenty of it. If a Facebook executive has a sneeze that sounds like “aww-choogle-phluss,” the tech press is all over it. I personally am not a fan of Facebook and welcome my Google+ overlords. I do have a post in me about privacy, Silicon Valley speculation, etc. — but I don’t want to add my voice to that already loud chorus.

Instead, I want to write about Google+ in terms of everyday average use — both how journalists use the Internet and how everyday average people use the Internet (assuming the latter is slightly different).

Read the full post on MediaShift

Newspaper finds success with its downtown news cafe

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By Tim Currie on Nieman Journalism Lab, Sept. 1 –  Not long ago, the Winnipeg Free Press’s social media editor hosted an online chat from her desk at the paper’s downtown news cafe. She had done it many times in recent months but something unexpected happened.

People had taken up the paper’s social media invitation to “join us” in a chat about Google+ with guests including GigaOM’s Mathew Ingram. But audience members started showing up at the cafe in person saying, “I’m here for the chat!”

“I looked at them and thought, ‘Oh…okay. That’s my mistake there. I didn’t promote this the right way,’ said Lindsey Wiebe. “But that’s also a good sign,” she added. “They’re thinking of this cafe as a hub where our events are held. So, it’s been a challenge for all of us in not just integrating the cafe into what we’re doing, but remembering that people come here expecting stuff.”

Read the full article on Nieman Journalism Lab