How Steve Jobs has changed (but not saved) journalism

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By Jeff Sonderman on Poynter.org, Aug. 25 –  Steve Jobs resigned Wednesday as CEO of Apple Inc., but his legacy will be felt in the news industry for years to come.

In the past five years, Jobs’ Apple has simultaneously disrupted, transformed and aided the news industry.

It created or at least defined almost every aspect of mobile consumer technology that is now part of media’s future and its fastest-growing segment. The iPhone and iPad created inescapable trends. They were not just devices but whole new product categories and new content economies.

The iPhone was not the first smartphone. But it was the first to employ a full-face touchscreen, to decide finger taps and swipes were better than buttons, and to unleash the enormous power of third-party apps. Its largest competitors — Android and BlackBerry — have largely followed Apple’s lead in their devices and software.

The iPad was in some ways less new; it borrowed the same operating system and app environment from the iPhone. But in other ways it was entirely different — a whole new category of product between phones and laptops.

The iPad has proven to be an ideal device for long reading sessions, often at home during leisure time. As such, it is competing with print products that had served that purpose, while also offering new long-term hope of a digital transition for publishers.

Read the full article on Poynter

MSU Works with Poynter for Online Journalism Class

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Missouri State University has hired the Poynter Institute to teach an introductory course for its journalism program. Mark Biggs, head of the media, journalism and film department at the school said,

 

We are thrilled to be working with the premier journalism training institute in the country and anticipate that this partnership will result in a fantastic learning experience for our journalism students.

You can read an article about it here.

Newsweek Cover Features Hillary Clinton

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From Poynter.org; Tina Brown’s first issue of Newsweek, which debuts this week, features Hillary Clinton on its cover. Read more.

New Roles for News in the Fabric of Society

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From Poynter.org: by Clay Shirky: The Shock of Inclusion and New Roles for News in the Fabric of Society

If you were in the news business in the 20th century, you worked in a kind of pipeline, where reporters and editors would gather facts and observations and turn them into stories, which were then committed to ink on paper or waves in the air, and finally consumed, at the far end of those various modes of transport, by the audience. Read more.

Studies on Vanishing Jobs Aren’t Enough

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Journalists who are concerned about the loss of jobs at traditional news organizations do not have to look far for company. [Read more...]