Colleges respond to changes in scholarly journal publication
Grok Headline matches for Colleges respond to changes in scholarly journal publication
UC Digital Library Changing Scholarly
Publication
UC Digital Library Changing Scholarly
Publication
05/29/2004 04:49 AMUC Digital Library Changing Scholarly Publicationhttp://www.syllabus
.com/article.asp?id=9357In response to rising -- "out
of control" -- costs of scholarly publications, the University of
California Digital Library's eScholarship Repository (
http://repositories.cdlib.org/
a>) offers faculty a central online location for everything from
technical reports to peer-reviewed journals and edited volumes, says
Catherine Candee, director of scholarly communication and publishing
initiatives at UCDL. It provides university departments, centers and
research units direct control over creation and dissemination of the
full range of scholarly output, from pre-publication materials through
journals and peer-reviewed series, and -- beginning in May 2004 -
posting of legally available UC authors' commercially published
articles. In addition to practical, day-to-day benefits and savings
(in a little less than two years, the repository has seen almost
500,000 downloads of entire papers or articles), serendipitous
benefits have surfaced. For example, the UCDL now boasts an
infrastructure that allows administrators and faculty to focus on
creating systemic change in the way authors and readers work. "We have
technologies that allow broader, freer, more creative uses of text and
data and we can begin to fashion badly needed services for the
classroom, office and lab," says Candee. This will be added to Academic Resources
2004 Internet MiniGuide.
Google Teams Up with 17 Colleges to Test
Searches of Scholarly Materials
Google Teams Up with 17 Colleges to Test
Searches of Scholarly Materials
04/10/2004 05:02 AMGoogle Teams Up with 17 Colleges to Test Searches of Scholarly
Materials By Jeffrey R. Younghttp://chroni
cle.com/free/2004/04/2004040901n.htmGoogle, the
popular search engine, has teamed up with the Massachusetts Institute
of Technology and 16 other universities around the world to provide a
way to search the institutions' collections of scholarly papers,
according to university officials. A pilot test of the project is just
getting under way. If all goes as planned, the search feature could
appear on Google in a few months, said MacKenzie Smith, associate
director of technology for MIT's libraries. She said the search would
probably be an option on Google's
advanced-search
page. This has been added to
Deep Web Research Subject
Tracer™ Information Blog and will be added to
Academic Resources
2004 Internet MiniGuide.
Journal of Webology: An International
Electronic Journal
Journal of Webology: An International
Electronic Journal
08/31/2004 06:26 AMJournal of Webology: An International Electronic
Journalhttp://www.webology.itgo.com/
Webology is a scholarly journal in English devoted to the
various fields of Library and Information Science and serves as a
forum for discussion and experimentation. It serves as a forum for new
research in information dissemination and communication processes in
general, and in the context of the World Wide Web in particular.
Concerns include the production, gathering, recording, processing,
storing, representing, sharing, transmitting, retrieving,
distribution, and dissemination of information, as well as its social
and cultural impacts. There is a strong emphasis on new information
technologies and methodologies. The orientation is toward quantitative
experimental work, but significant qualitative and historical research
is also welcome.
Scholarly Societies Project
Scholarly Societies Project
05/14/2004 06:28 AMScholarly Societies Projecthttp://library.uwaterloo.c
a/society/Facilitating access to information about
scholarly societies across the world since 1994 including data on
3,881 scholarly societies and 3,615 websites. This has been added to
Reference Resources
Subject Tracer™ Information Blog. This will be added to
Academic Resources
2004 Internet MiniGuide.
Version 56 of Scholarly Electronic
Publishing Bibliography Available
Version 56 of Scholarly Electronic
Publishing Bibliography Available
12/17/2004 06:37 PMIt's up to version 56! It's the Scholarly Electronic Publishing
Bibliography and it now contains information on over 2,275 articles,
books, and other sources related to scholarly electronic publishing
efforts...
Thinking about developing scholarly
communication for 2010
Thinking about developing scholarly
communication for 2010
12/06/2003 01:40 AM
"What do we
want our system of scholarly communication to look like in 2010?"
, a paper given this week by the
University of Virginia 's John Unsworth and Pauline Yu of the American
Council of Learned Societies ( ACLS
), has been winning a wide readership through the Web. The paper
recommends planning for leveraging digital media at a deeper level
than at the present, including a further reach of computation in the
disciplines, stable archiving, rapid review and publication, and supporting open access scholarship .
(thanks to
Rebecca Davis )
Version 52 of Scholarly Electronic
Publishing Bibliography
Version 52 of Scholarly Electronic
Publishing Bibliography
12/15/2003 09:24 AM52 ... 52... 52! Version 52 of the Scholarly Electronic Publishing
bibliography is now available. The bibliography has gotten up to over
2,050 articles, books, and other resources related to scholarly
electronic publishing. The HTML version is available at
http://info.lib.uh.edu/sepb/sepb.html...
Version 58 of Scholarly Electronic
Publishing Bibliography Available
Version 58 of Scholarly Electronic
Publishing Bibliography Available
06/17/2005 07:21 PMVersion 58 of the Scholarly Electronic Publishing Bibliography has hit
the scene. This new version contains over 2,400 articles, books, and
other resources related to scholarly electronic publishing on the...
Version 54 of the Scholarly Electronic
Publishing Bibliography
Version 54 of the Scholarly Electronic
Publishing Bibliography
07/16/2004 10:02 PMCharles Bailey has rolled out version 54 of the Scholarly Electronic
Publishing Bibliography, featuring over 2150 articles, books, and
other items related to scholarly electronic publishing online. In
lovely HTML...
The Scholarly Electronic Publishing
Bibliography Hits Version 53
The Scholarly Electronic Publishing
Bibliography Hits Version 53
05/16/2004 05:48 PMThe Scholarly Electronic Publishing Bibliography is up to version 53
and now features over 2100 articles, books, and other resources
related to scholarly electronic publishing on the Internet. The
HTML...
Google Teaming Up With Universities for
Scholarly Papers Search
Google Teaming Up With Universities for
Scholarly Papers Search
04/12/2004 07:22 AMAn article in the Chronicle of Higher Education notes that Google is
teaming up with MIT and over a dozen other institutions to create a
searchable archive of scholarly papers....
Google launches scholarly literature
search service
Google launches scholarly literature
search service
12/17/2004 06:30 PM
Google
released a scholarly search tool,
Google Scholar . This enables searches for content and authors.
Results include articles and books.
Using Data Mining to Discover Web-Based
Scholarly Research Works
Using Data Mining to Discover Web-Based
Scholarly Research Works
12/22/2004 01:18 AMBibliomining for Automated Collection Development in a Digital
Library Setting: Using Data Mining to Discover Web-Based Scholarly
Research Works by Dr. Scott Nicholson
http://dlist.sir
.arizona.edu/archive/00000625/
http://www.BiblioMining.com/
<
br />
Abstract:
This research creates an
intelligent agent for automated collection development in a digital
library setting. It uses a predictive model based on facets of each
Web page to select scholarly works. The criteria came from the
academic library selection literature, and a Delphi study was used to
refine the list to 41 criteria. A Perl program was designed to analyze
a Web page for each criterion and applied to a large collection of
scholarly and non-scholarly Web pages. Bibliomining, or data mining
for libraries, was then used to create different classification
models. Four techniques were used: logistic regression, non-parametric
discriminant analysis, classification trees, and neural networks.
Accuracy and return were used to judge the effectiveness of each model
on test datasets. In addition, a set of problematic pages that were
difficult to classify because of their similarity to scholarly
research was gathered and classified using the models. The resulting
models could be used in the selection process to automatically create
a digital library of Web-based scholarly research works. In addition,
the technique can be extended to create a digital library of any type
of structured electronic information. This has been added to
Data Mining Resources
Subject Tracer™ Information Blog.
Google's new service graduates to a
brainier sort engaged in scholarly
pursuits
Google's new service graduates to a
brainier sort engaged in scholarly
pursuits
12/28/2004 07:40 AMOrlandosentinel.com - Tue Dec 28, 07:21 am GMT
The People Who Respond To Spam
The People Who Respond To Spam
07/27/2004 02:51 PMIt's been pointed out over and over again that if no one ever bought
from spam, there wouldn't be much of a need for it. However, the
people keep buying and everyone else keeps suffering. Back in March,
we wrote about one of the first articles that ever tracked down
someone who would
admit
(happily) to buying from spam, but he obviously wasn't the only
one. Following a recent study suggesting that
an
awful lot of people buy from spam, USA Today has
managed to track down a few of the people who keep spammers
happy and keep the rest of us miserable. The list even includes a
"computer book author," Robert Reinhardt, who says "spam can be
useful," (if you're wondering, he appears to write books on Macromedia
Flash) and a "computer consultant," Michael Breindel, who says he not
only buys from spam, but uses it to promote his own business. From
the look of his website, of course, this "computer consultant" hasn't
yet figured out how to de-moronize his website for non-IE browsers,
since it's full of non-ASCII characters that make the site look, well,
almost like spam.
Microsoft to respond to EC over
licensing
Microsoft to respond to EC over
licensing
04/04/2005 10:44 AMMicrosoft is due to respond this week to the European Commission's
demand that it come up with more acceptable licensing terms for its
workgroup server protocols or face a possible noncompliance fine of $5
million a day.
Cicadas Respond to Their 17-Year Cue
Cicadas Respond to Their 17-Year Cue
05/19/2004 12:16 AMThe return of the 17-year cicadas has begun to be heard, and seen, in
the New York region.
Filesharers respond to France's RIAA
Filesharers respond to France's RIAA
05/06/2004 07:00 PM
Last week, we posted news of a
fuck-you to filesharers from France's equivalent to the RIAA: an
extended middle finger, with the tagline "Free Music Has a Price."
Now, BoingBoing pal Jean-Luc
sends us this "response logo" (shown at left) from a group of online
freedom of speech advocates in France. The tagline? "Culture has no
price / Don't buy any CDs." Weblogs throughout France are displaying
the logo as a gesture of solidarity against the SNEP (Syndicat
National de l'Edition Phonographique) anti-P2P campaign. "You sell us
mediocre music at exorbitant prices," the banner exclaims in French,
"Reduce the price of CDs, and start placing a higher priority on the
quality of artists instead of the quantity of money you're cramming in
your pockets." Sacre blog!
Link
Mozilla Developers Respond to Malware
Mozilla Developers Respond to Malware
07/13/2004 10:13 AMReaders respond to Firefox column
Readers respond to Firefox column
02/06/2005 01:08 AMColumn titled "Business Must Be Cautious With Firefox" generates
reader response.
DDR is not eeeevil! Game enthusiasts
respond
DDR is not eeeevil! Game enthusiasts
respond
05/25/2004 08:07 AMA member of the
Kansas City Dance Dance
Revolution club -- which was profiled in
this rather dark tale of a guy who steals to support his DDR habit
-- responds:
I am the site admin of DDRKC.com. The author of this
article approached us a few months ago claiming to want to write a
positive publicity piece about the Kansas City local area Dance Dance
Revolution scene. They interviewed a number of us, who all spoke
about the comraderie and positive aspects of having a virtual
community based around DDR. If you read the article, you will note
that NONE of this information was used. Instead, they decided to
focus on the personal exploits of a single person who was doing stupid
and illegal activities. What that has to do with DDR, I have no idea.
It's like creating an expose on how bloggers are evil and engaged in
illegal activities just because one of them decided to go shoplift
something. It completely misrepresents for only DDR as a whole, but
DDRKC and the local players as well. Here is a link to the community
reaction to the article.
LinkBeastie Boys Respond to DRM Claims
Beastie Boys Respond to DRM Claims
06/26/2004 03:42 PMTycho and Gabe Respond to Your Questions
Tycho and Gabe Respond to Your Questions
12/19/2004 03:13 PMSyndication is not publication.
Syndication is not publication.
12/03/2002 11:46 AMYeah, what Mark said. I don't only agree with him 100%, but
I'd say you'd be crazy not to. This is somewhere close to what i said
in my last post.
It should be obvious to any rational observer that this will go
nowhere fast. A syndication format that requires valid semantic XHTML
markup? Spare me. 9 out of 10 bloggers can’t even spell
XHTML.
- Mark
Pilgrim
Novell, Mandrake respond to Sun's Red
Hat claims
Novell, Mandrake respond to Sun's Red
Hat claims
01/06/2005 04:22 AMWhen Sun's Scott McNealy told us that Red Hat had the Linux market, we
decided it might be a good idea to find out what Novell and
Mandrakesoft had to say about that. We exchanged email with
Mandrakesoft CEO François Bancilhon and Novell's director of
product management and marketing, Charlie Ungashick, on the subject of
Solaris 10, Red Hat, and how they compete in a consolidating market.
How to respond when clients make things
difficult
How to respond when clients make things
difficult
01/26/2003 01:54 AMCNET Jan 26 2003 1:21AM ET
BT proposals respond to Ofcom strategic
review
BT proposals respond to Ofcom strategic
review
02/07/2005 02:02 AMPublicTechnology.net Feb 7 2005 6:23AM GMT
"refuses to respond to journalists
unless they bust their sources"
"refuses to respond to journalists
unless they bust their sources"
04/17/2005 03:16 PMCustomer Support Emails? We're Supposed
To Respond To Them?
Customer Support Emails? We're Supposed
To Respond To Them?
01/07/2005 12:10 AMWho really needs
customers<
/a> after all? Apparently, plenty of companies online have no problem
ignoring them. A new study has found that 15% of companies do
not respond to customers' e-mails at all. Another 14% only
respond partially, and plenty of others don't respond in a reasonable
amount of time. We've seen
similar stats
before. Of course, what's most interesting is that those other
studies have shown that the very same companies
respo
nd very quickly to sales requests. It certainly seems that some
companies have their priorities out of whack. Your customers are the
ones who you
know are willing to give you money. Shouldn't you
treat them in a way that will make them want to give you money again?
Maybe the problem is just that
there
are no humans left in customer support.
DVD publication taking off for
individuals
DVD publication taking off for
individuals
05/24/2004 12:59 PM
The New York Times reports on the rapid growth in DVD
publication, especially for small groups and individuals.
Independent filmmakers, specialty magazine publishers, artists,
educators - all those with a video to sell, no matter how narrow the
niche - are turning out DVD's and distributing them through the mail.
It's a trend that began in the era of videotape but has accelerated
with DVD's because they are inexpensive to duplicate and ship.
Wi-Fi Problem Solvers for Publication
Wi-Fi Problem Solvers for Publication
02/18/2004 04:08 PMI'm looking for people not in the Wi-Fi industry who have had certain
problems and solved them: For a feature article I've written, I'm
trying to track down a few people in the U.S. who would be willing to
have their photograph taken and be quoted talking about how they
solved any of the following problems: dead zones of Wi-Fi access in
and around their house; Windows XP wireless zero configuration
problems; bridging a network using Wireless Distribution System in
their house; and interference from nearby networks that made their own
Wi-Fi network unusable or lower speed. Please email me directly with
what your problem was and how you solved, and I'll get in touch. The
goal is to take common problems and attach a real person to them. The
article focuses on solving each of those (and some other) difficulties
that often frustrate people in trying to get a working home Wi-Fi
network....
ICT Industry offered new publication
ICT Industry offered new publication
06/23/2004 02:19 PMglobetechnology.com Jun 23 2004 6:31PM GMT
Ruling on Motions for Publication Ban
Ruling on Motions for Publication Ban
04/05/2005 06:13 AMban on publishing testimony .. made his
ruling
gomery.ca/en/rulingonapplicationsforpublicationban
track this
site | 4 links
INDC Journal: INDC Journal Interviews
Michael Berg
INDC Journal: INDC Journal Interviews
Michael Berg
06/08/2004 05:47 AMBill at INDC Journal is at it again, this time, interviewing Mike Berg
.. interview a squirming Michael Berg .. interveiw with Nick Berg's
father .. Checkout this
interview:
indcjournal.com/archives/000485.php
track this
site | 6 links
Futuremark Respond to Driverheavens
Geforce 6800 IQ issues
Futuremark Respond to Driverheavens
Geforce 6800 IQ issues
05/03/2004 06:13 PMThe American people don't approve of
that kind of stuff and will respond
accordingly
The American people don't approve of
that kind of stuff and will respond
accordingly
01/28/2004 07:02 AMThe Washington Post ..
on
washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A50657-2004Jan26.html?nav=hpto
p_tb
track this
site | 5 links
Architects Respond Favorably To Apple's
New Power Mac G5 Lineup
Architects Respond Favorably To Apple's
New Power Mac G5 Lineup
06/11/2004 01:54 AMApple continues to lead and "inspire the industry and enables new
possibilities for architecture and design."
By Architosh (via MyAppleMenu)
U.S. Blogger Breaches Canadian
Publication Ban
U.S. Blogger Breaches Canadian
Publication Ban
04/04/2005 04:17 PM"why the publication ban by the Gomery
Commission is a farce"
"why the publication ban by the Gomery
Commission is a farce"
04/07/2005 10:29 AMGrok Description matches for Colleges respond to changes in scholarly journal publication
GrokA matches for Colleges respond to changes in scholarly journal publication
Boston.com / Business / Wall Street
Journal staff stages byline strike
Boston.com / Business / Wall Street
Journal staff stages byline strike
06/18/2004 08:08 AM"The only thing advertisers care about is circulation, circulation,
circulation," Atorino said. "You could put Mickey Mouse's byline on
stories, and they wouldn't care." .. Wall Street Journal Staff Stages
Byline Strike .. the Boston
Globe
boston.com/business/articles/2004/06/17/wall_street_journal_st
aff_stages_byline_strike
track this
site | 4 links
International Small Business Journal
International Small Business Journal
01/05/2005 06:40 AMInternational Small Business Journal
http://isb.sagepub.com/
International Small Business Journal provides a forum and focus for
the discussion and dissemination of views and research on the small
business sector thourghout the world. The emphasis is on systematic
studies which help to improve the general understanding of small
business and so contribute to more effective policies for and
management of small business. Articles cover theoretical and
methodological developments, empirical studies, practical applications
and reviews of relevant literature. The journal is intended for
academics and teachers, policymakers at all levels, trade and business
associations, financial institutions, small firms'
representative bodies, and planning and industrial development
authorities. The International Small Business Journal is a truly
global, multi-disciplinary forum for the dissemination and discussion
of research on the small business. The emphasis of the journal is on
high quality, research based studies which contribute to theory,
critical understanding and policy formulation on small firms. This
refereed journal is of relevance to academics, policy makers and
analysts, in government and business, seeking to understand the
sector, trade and business institutions, small business representative
bodies and those in support agencies. This has been added to
Entrepreneurial
Resources Subject Tracer™ Information Blog.
Northern And Southern California
Businesses For Sale Dipped This Past
Week To 324 Business & Franchise Sales.
These Small Businesses Were Sold By
Business Brokers, Small Business Owners,
& Real Estate Agents Throughout
California.
Northern And Southern California
Businesses For Sale Dipped This Past
Week To 324 Business & Franchise Sales.
These Small Businesses Were Sold By
Business Brokers, Small Business Owners,
& Real Estate Agents Throughout
California.
06/23/2004 03:08 AMNorthern And Southern California Businesses For Sale Dipped This Past
Week To 324 Business & Franchise Sales. These Small Businesses Were
Sold By Business Brokers, Small Business Owners, & Real Estate Agents
Throughout California. [PRWEB Jun 23, 2004]
Businesses For Sale in Northern and
Southern California Reached a Record
Number 368 Business & Franchise Sales
This Past Week from Business Brokers,
Small Business Owners, & Real Estate
Agents
Businesses For Sale in Northern and
Southern California Reached a Record
Number 368 Business & Franchise Sales
This Past Week from Business Brokers,
Small Business Owners, & Real Estate
Agents
05/31/2004 01:52 PMBusinesses for sale in Northern and Southern California reached a
record number 368 business & franchise sales this past week from
business brokers, small business owners, & real estate agents for the
week of May 17, 2004 thru May 23, 2004. [PRWEB May 27, 2004]
Why Wall Street wants Google to fail
Why Wall Street wants Google to fail
08/05/2004 11:24 PMMSN MoneyCentral Aug 6 2004 3:11AM GMT
The Wall Street Journal
The Wall Street Journal
03/06/2004 01:53 AMopinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110004777
track this
site | 5 links
"Wall Street Journal"
"Wall Street Journal"
07/26/2004 04:08 AM"there were are in the Wall Street
Journal"
"there were are in the Wall Street
Journal"
04/16/2004 09:02 PMGo Out and Buy the Wall Street Journal
Today
Go Out and Buy the Wall Street Journal
Today
03/11/2003 09:43 AMGo Out and Buy the Wall Street Journal Today
If you work in technology as a vendor or consultant, you should
really, really, really get the journal today. The main front
page store is on how the CIO for Verizon is "squeezing" vendors to cut
their costs. It really is scary. Here's the precis and if you're
a subscriber the link:
Mr. Kheradpir Puts the Squeeze on
Tech
For clues to the
tech sector's failure to revive sagging sales, pay a visit to Shaygan
Kheradpir. Verizon's chief information officer relentlessly pushes his
charges to get more out of less equipment, an attitude that spells
gloom for tech giants.
The article is excellent and a wake up call I suspect for a lot of
us. This is very similar to what I wrote recently about all
vendors getting squeezed in the down economy (and why no link? I
can't $#$# find it since Roogle is current not archival .. Hm...
).
Today's Wall Street Journal
Today's Wall Street Journal
12/27/2003 01:57 AMFORD FUNDING
TERRORISTS
opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110004482
track
this site | 4 links
Wall Street Journal liberals: And then
there were none
Wall Street Journal liberals: And then
there were none
02/05/2005 10:19 PMOver at the New York Times, William Safire has retired, and people are
speculating about whether the paper will replace him with another
conservative, or whether David Brooks constitutes a sufficient
dosage.
Meanwhile, the Wall Street Journal op-ed roster recently lost its
one token liberal voice when Al Hunt decided to leave the paper. Hunt
was never a terribly exciting writer, but at least he exposed the
Journal's readership to a glimmer of light from outside its own
serenely hermetic universe. Would the Journal keep any room on its
opinion pages -- otherwise filled with the usual motley gang of social
neanderthals, rad-lib[ertarians] and Bush sycophants -- for a
dissenting voice?
Apparently not. Today the paper told its readers that Hunt's old
Thursday slot was going to be filled by a rotating gang of commentary
writers presenting outside-the-Beltway perspectives.
Look, I'm all for getting out of the Beltway. But getting out of
your own partisan wagon-circle is also healthy. Doesn't the Journal
have room for a single dissenter? Or is that whole concept just so,
like, pre-9/11 that the Journal doesn't even think it's worth
addressing?
First Signs Of Trouble At The Wall
Street Journal?
First Signs Of Trouble At The Wall
Street Journal?
04/15/2005 12:47 PMThe Wall Street Journal's own strategy over the past few years has
been baffling for some. They seem to be betting on the fact that
there simply could never be any competition to match the WSJ.
However, with a string of moves that suggest they're completely
unaware of how the internet works, plenty of people have been
point
ing out that the
Wall
Street Journal is losing its relevance. Of course, this brings
out cries about how much better the content is in the WSJ -- but if
people don't find it valuable relative to the competition, then it
doesn't matter how good the content is, the Journal will have trouble
competing. It appears that the Journal's own advertisers are figuring
this out, and have bailed on the paper,
leading the paper to
report troubled earnings and worries about the strategy of the
paper going forward. So far, the strategy seems to be to
convi
nce other newspapers to make the same mistakes the WSJ did. This
is the "if everyone screws up as badly as we did, then we won't look
so bad" strategy that tends not to work so well in the real world.
The article notes, by the way, that the Journal's online division
out-performed the paper division -- but that's probably a red herring,
since it's difficult to split the costs of each. Are stories that
show up on both considered an expense for the paper, the online part,
or both? No matter what, this shows that advertisers are recognizing
that the WSJ hasn't been able to adjust with the times, and there are
better places to put their money when it comes to advertising to the
financial crowd. For a paper that's supposed to be on the Wall Street
beat, you'd figure they'd have a better sense as to when their own
market shifted out from under them.
"Natan Sharansky in the Wall Street
Journal"
"Natan Sharansky in the Wall Street
Journal"
11/18/2003 03:32 AM"he has a brilliant piece in the Wall
Street Journal doing exactly that"
"he has a brilliant piece in the Wall
Street Journal doing exactly that"
05/15/2004 08:41 AMNatan Sharansky in the Wall Street
Journal
Natan Sharansky in the Wall Street
Journal
11/17/2003 07:48 PMThis long essay by Natan Sharansky .. today's Opinion Journal .. piece
on anti-Semitism .. A must-read piece .. OpinionJournal ..
synagogues,
opinionjournal.com/extra/?id=110004310
track this
site | 8 links
"
Wall Street Journal. Mark Helprin: No
Way to Run a War"
"
Wall Street Journal. Mark Helprin: No
Way to Run a War"
05/18/2004 02:44 AM"Wall
Street Journal lead editorial "
"Wall
Street Journal lead editorial "
07/13/2004 08:44 PMWall Street Journal: Online more
profitable than print
Wall Street Journal: Online more
profitable than print
04/15/2005 12:49 PMThe New York Post is reporting that the Wall Street Journal earned
more money with its online Web site than its print publication.
Predictably, though, the Post spins it all wrong: instead of talking
about the success of the online arm, it talks about the failure of the
print side and about how WSJ publisher Peter Kann, could be
“sweating over his job again”….
Direct and Related
Links for 'Wall Street Journal: Online more profitable than
print'
Torture showdown, Wall Street
Journal-style
Torture showdown, Wall Street
Journal-style
01/06/2005 08:11 PMUnder the banner of "'Torture' Showdown," the Wall Street Journal's
masthead
editorial on the Alberto Gonzales confirmation
hearings in Washington today is a real piece of work. It's got more
holes in it than the chain link fences and razor wire at Guantanamo.
That's more than we have time to count, but here are a couple of the
most gaping:
Wall Street Journal: iMac G5 Is Most
Elegant Computer, F
Wall Street Journal: iMac G5 Is Most
Elegant Computer, F
09/23/2004 05:42 PMMac Observer Sep 23 2004 10:15PM GMT
Wall Street Journal To Count Online
Subscribers
Wall Street Journal To Count Online
Subscribers
11/03/2003 07:05 PMYet another indication of how the news media is moving online. The
Wall Street Journal is now going to start
counting online subscribers in their overall subscription
count. The idea, of course, is to present higher numbers for the
sake of advertisers (even if different advertising shows up online as
in print), and to suggest good demographic numbers for advertisers.
Trying to Understand WiMax? The Wall
Street Journal Explains
Trying to Understand WiMax? The Wall
Street Journal Explains
05/24/2004 02:21 PMThe Journal's Nick Wingfield lays out the WiMax field, including the
basis of its technology, its potential for rollout, and the current
state of wireless broadband: Wingfield's article is a solid portrayal
of the state of the industry, including the likely date for real
equipment being available in the U.S. (2006, he notes, which jibes
with fellow editor Nancy Gohring's research among WiMax-backin
gcompanies), the market size, and the potential competition with
cellular data and existing wireline services. WiMax and its early
relatives has the best potential in areas in which service is
difficult to obtain (the prairie or Manhattan), wireline services
offer limits to uploads and downloads far below a wireless broadband
offering (at the edges of DSL coverage, for instance), or where
wireless broadband is just plain cheaper. In some cases, early
wireless broadband offers high speeds at cost that are the same or as
little as half of competing wireline offerings. I'm not bullish on
WiMax's mobile options, which are even further out in the future for
deployment because by the time that standard is set, the cell
companies will have had three or four years dealing with the first and
probably second iterations of 3G cellular data. Meanwhile, Wi-Fi might
blanket whole cities, an increasing trend. [link via Brian Chin]...
Daniel Pearl's widow slams Wall Street
Journal
Daniel Pearl's widow slams Wall Street
Journal
02/18/2004 02:21 AMMy fight for Danny’s
memory
news.independent.co.uk/world/asia/story.jsp?story=492014
track
this site | 5 links
"Wall Street Journal has found a study
that supports the position"
"Wall Street Journal has found a study
that supports the position"
06/22/2004 04:03 AMWall Street Journal: iMac G5 Is Most
Elegant Computer, Flawless
Wall Street Journal: iMac G5 Is Most
Elegant Computer, Flawless
09/23/2004 05:42 PMMac Observer Sep 23 2004 9:56PM GMT
Grandpa, I finally made the Wall Street
Journal -- by bl0gging
Grandpa, I finally made the Wall Street
Journal -- by bl0gging
04/14/2004 03:45 AMTwo months ago, I wrote up my experience of sending out a resume, only
to see it appear in my spam folder half an hour later. Last week, I
got a call from a reporter for the Wall Street Journal, Kris Maher,
who was doing a story on job hunting and spam filters, and who had
found my post via Google. He interviewed me over the phone, and unlike
some of my other interactions with journalists, what he wrote bears a
reasonable resemblance to what I told him, although he didn't go with
my suggestion for the story hook -- the increasing unreliability of
email. Here is what he wrote, quoted from a freely available copy of
the story as syndicated to The Arizona Republic, of all places: Tim
Bishop started to worry about spam filters after he e-mailed a resume
in February. He was shocked to discover 30 minutes after hitting the
send button that a copy he sent to himself turned up in his own spam
folder. Today, Mr. Bishop, a 42-year-old president of a
software-development company in Berkeley, Calif., runs every resume
and cover letter through three spam filters on his computer before
e-mailing them. "I figure if it passes those three filters, it's
probably OK," Mr. Bishop says. I think I wrote the story more
engagingly, but less completely, but I'll let our readers be the judge
of that. An amusing side note to the story is that my grandfather is
an old line businessman who worked for the same company for 50 years,
and even after retiring he reads the Wall Street Journal
cover-to-cover almost every day. For years he has asked about my
career, and seemed slightly puzzled at the (to him) rapid succession
of different jobs at different companies, most of which never appeared
on the pages of the WSJ. I have certainly personally done nothing
newsworthy enough to get my name in the WSJ. Imagine his surprise
tomorrow morning when he sees my name in the WSJ, not for any
accomplishment, but because I self-published a story of my experiences
with email, resumes, and spam. P.S. For the curious, and especially
for those who are hiring, my resume can be found online, avoiding all
that difficulty with spam and email. My partners and I shut down our
software development company at the end of last year, and I'm
currently looking for a...
Shame: Wall Street Journal Ignores
Murdered Journalist's Wi
Shame: Wall Street Journal Ignores
Murdered Journalist's Wi
02/17/2004 04:11 AMTechfocus Feb 17 2004 8:42AM GMT
Wall Street Journal on Silicon Valley
Political Mindset
Wall Street Journal on Silicon Valley
Political Mindset
03/31/2005 07:19 PMCorante Mar 31 2005 10:59PM GMT
Telephone Magic Brings Full-Featured
VoIP Business Phone System to Small
Business at Wholesale Prices
Telephone Magic Brings Full-Featured
VoIP Business Phone System to Small
Business at Wholesale Prices
06/17/2005 03:16 PMThe Revolutionary TalkSwitch 48-CVA provides customers with a
converged PSTN and VoIP solution at an unprecedented price [PRWEB Jun
16, 2005]
Q & A with Bill Grueskin, Managing
Editor of the Wall Street Journal
Online
Q & A with Bill Grueskin, Managing
Editor of the Wall Street Journal
Online
04/14/2005 10:09 AM"Many mainstream media blogs serve as repositories for the
journalistic detritus that wasn’t good enough for the print edition.
Hemmed in by tradition, they lack the candor and point of view that
distinguishes good blogs. Bereft of good material, they lack the depth
and quality of print journalism."
Colleges respond to changes in scholarly journal publication