IPTVision > Why videoblog? Because we are visual
[Paul Kapustka's Blog] Allow me to join the debate that has blossomed out of Fall 2006 VON on the why or why not to videoblog. Since earlier this summer, I have made a concerted effort to videoblog, and to do so with regularity (our VONosphere show posts weekly on Thursdays, more often when we are at a show like VON).
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Some related posts from Technorati and Google.
[Paulsblog.pulver.com] Paul Kapustka's Blog: May 2006 Archives: Last week saw the debut of the Vonage IPO. It lived down to a lot of observers' expectations, falling below the $17 per share offering.
[Newmediamusings.com] New Media Musings: Citizen media Archives: As a student of citizen journalism, NowPublic represents a great example of the power that social architecture, well-implemented, can put into the hands of everyday people: the power to shape, channel, and make explicit the implicit dialogue that underlies news coverage. As someone tracking the adoption of social architecture, I believe that NowPublic demonstrates the key elements of all future, successful social media, in particular the primacy of emergent, bottom-up characterization by tags and the importance of aggregated social gestures -- in this case "votes".
[Unmediated.org] unmediated: January 2006 Archives: This alliance was formed in April of 2005, and was a concerted effort by Adobe, Dell, HP, Intel, and Microsoft to provide certified and integrated end-to-end solutions for Windows-based HD editing platforms working with HDV, SD, and HD formats. Along with the release of the new Adobe Production Studio, which includes new versions of Adobe After Effects, Premiere, DVD Encore, Audition, the latest versions of Photoshop and Illustrator, Adobe and its allies are looking to create a strong presence for themselves within the postproduction HD editing and production market.
[Ratcliffeblog.com] RatcliffeBlog”Mitch's Open Notebook: Sad conclusion in the Eason Jordan affair, sad day for the freedom of expression in America and sad day again for the future of blogging: the defense of the US army honor seemed more important to some bloggers that the defense of reporters' work! According to the New York Times, "Eason Jordan, a senior executive at CNN who was responsible for coordinating the cable network's Iraq coverage, resigned abruptly Friday 11 February, citing a journalistic tempest he touched off during a panel discussion at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, late last month in which he appeared to suggest that United States troops had deliberately aimed at journalists, killing some.
Reflected tags on Technorati: Blog, Iptv, IPTVision