FMRL Blog

Exploring disruptive storytelling technology in theory and practice.

  • FMRL.com (Main Site)
  • FMRL: Pith, Marrow & Media, The True Story
  • Read DaedalusHowell.blog
    • 0
      10 Feb 2011

      The Daily: Murdoch's iPad Newspaper Can't Wrap a Fish

      • Edit
      • Delete
      • Tags
      • Autopost
      For a media magnate whose empire first began to bubble in vats of newspaper ink, one might think launching the first of its kind iPad-only newspaper app would not be in their best interests. Unless, of course, the magnate is Rupert Murdoch of News Corp. whose vats runneth over – and now with ones and zeroes. Led by veteran newspaperman and editor-in-chief Jesse Angelo (late of the New’s Corp-owned New York Post), The Daily is being billed in-house as “a category first: a tablet-native national news brand built from the ground up to publish original content exclusively for the iPad.” This one can glean from the new apps’s website (even apps have websites apparently) but that’s essentially where the new venture’s relationship with the web essentially ends. The Daily is meant to be consumed entirely within the sleek interface of Apple’s tablet phenom as a discrete standalone experience forged from words, images, video, infomatics and animations baked fresh daily and delivered piping hot direct to your iPad. Sentimentalists wax fondly that “newspapers are a daily miracle” (or in some cases, a weekly miracle), however, The Daily, for all its journalistic aspirations, serves more to remind how miraculous the iPad is. If ever there was a proof that there exists a unified field theory of media delivery – supplanting television, radio, print, cinema and daily newspapers in its wake – this is it. That said, Murdoch’s quotidian quota of bleeding leads and the sundry other tropes squeezed from ye olde printing press is quite impressive – not least of which for sinking $30 million in development (and $500,000 in weekly expenses) into what amounts to a video game with news. “My first impression is very positive,” said Roger Fidler, program director for digital publishing at the Reynolds Journalism Institute who also oversees the Digital Publishing Alliance, which brings together media industry leaders and innovators, including the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times and the Wall Street Journal. “Team Murdoch has done what I’ve always hoped newspapers would do with their tablet editions – create an interactive hybrid of print and web that is visually rich and enjoyable to read. It clearly demonstrates the value of involving publication designers in the production process.” For Fidler, The Daily has been a longtime coming. Internationally recognized as a new media pioneer, Fidler first envisioned tablets and digital newspapers back in the 1980’s. Now that they’ve arrived bundled as The Daily for a mere 99 cents a week, or $39.99 a year, they might just save newspapers. “The app has a lot of advantages, one I think simplicity for people, more of a feeling of being a curated package of information with a beginning and an end,” observed Fidler. Or perhaps, The Daily is a so-called “killer app” that will actually destroy newspapers but in so doing free their spirits to live in the Digital Age. Sure, the app might not save all newspapers but it will certainly help Murdoch’s newspaper holdings eventually transition into the light. “I think newspapers have to realize that the publications being developed for the iPad may, in fact, become the dominant forum for reading news content in the not too distant future,” said Fidler. “We clearly are seeing a steady trend of declining leadership of printed newspapers and of steady migration to digital.” “Digital” is an abstract concept, the iPad is $600 of cold, hard cash in the midst of a recession. At that price point, will Murdoch’s new format find the ubiquity of the traditional media upon which his empire has previously relied? “You know, people felt the same way about television when it first emerged in the 1940s and 50s, that only rich people would have it,” said Fidler. “Now they have people with television sets in almost every room of their house and it’s become the common medium. My sense is that the tablet will evolve intro a common reading device and media device for education, for business, for a host of applications and that reading newspapers on it will be just one other important use for that device.”
      • views
      • Tweet
    • 0
      17 Dec 2010

      Take Myspace, please

      • Edit
      • Delete
      • Tags
      • Autopost
      [caption id="attachment_3095" align="alignleft" width="300" caption="My Identity Crisis,"]
      Media_httpfmrlcomwpco_zaqyb
      [/caption] For sale: Social network, recently renovated, barely used. $580 million OBO. In 2005, Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation acquired the beleaguered Myspace for over half a billion dollars to complement a media empire comprising newspapers, a film studio and TV channels, including Fox News. News Corporation continued to spend millions on Myspace to capture a finicky youth market, only to find itself groping for relevancy as Facebook came to dominate the social space. One shouldn't expect Murdoch to understand kids these days, seeing as he hasn't been a teenager since 1950, which not only predates the notion of a mass "youth culture," but its original soundtrack, rock 'n' roll. But the site's current woes go beyond bridging a simple generation gap, and not for lack of trying. These days on Myspace, one is presently greeted by a video of the Black Eyed Peas pontificating about how they would "rock it" if they "hijacked" Myspace (Fergie is apparently into rainbows). This attempt by Myspace to lease some cred from the band diminishes both the reenvisioning of the site and the musicians themselves, who do their best to inject enthusiasm into the prospect of a "social entertainment" destination with little more substance than their own lyrics. The whole premise seems nebulous, which is underscored by the fact that the site doesn't even have its own name in the masthead. Rather, the page is helmed by "my_____," which invites the user to fill in the blank. You know, like Mad Libs. Perhaps Rupert's reads "my $580 Million Write-Off." With its "we beat Friendster" sheen long worn away by Murdoch's fretting fingerprints, Myspace, some speculate, is headed to the bargain bin. An acquisition, however, likely won't make much noise in a social space dominated by Facebook and Twitter. Big spenders like Google come to mind, though it's already in the social space (Orkut, right? No, wait, Google Wave? Um, Google Buzz?). Still smarting after being left at the altar by Microsoft, Yahoo isn't in a shopping mood but is working on its own Twitter clone, Yahoo! Meme. Theoretically, Microsoft could graft Myspace into its search initiative Bing so one could search for friends and find them, well, on Facebook. Perhaps the best possibility for Myspace is to be acquired by Elon Musk, cofounder of PayPal, electric carmaker Tesla Motors and SpaceX, the independent aeronautics company. Call it "MyspaceX," which would combine all of Musk's business pursuits into the first off-world colony. Recruit the outer-space colonists on Myspace (yes, that's why the sign-up is so damn inquisitive—they're gauging your space-worthiness) and catch a ride on a SpaceX rocket. The colony itself would be powered by Telsa Motors technology since, in space, there are no countries to exploit for natural resources (yet). Tickets would be paid for through Paypal, unless the underground hacker horde Anonymous launches another denial-of-service attack, which they unleashed upon the online payments site, as well as the respective sites of Visa and Mastercard, after the creditors rescinded service to Wikileaks in the wake of Cablegate. What's a denial-of-service attack? Ask the former chief security officer for News Corporation's digital properties, Hemu Nigam, who once ridded Myspace of pedophiles and warded off other online miscreants before splitting six months ago to start his own internet security consultancy. "If you are a home-computer user," Nigam says, "the only way denial-of-service attacks succeed is if the consumers are allowing their computers to be used as a zombie so that it wakes up and turns it into an army soldier at the command of a hacker out there." To prevent you computer from joining the undead, Nigam suggests you actually click "OK" the next time your computer suggests a security update. "A hacker group like Anonymous will go out there and find computers that are not updated, drop a little code in there that basically owns the computer and that sits there waiting for a command from the mother ship to these zombie computers, thousands of them in all parts of the country or the world, that says 'Wake up. It's your time.'" Perhaps this is Murdoch's evil plan for Myspace—he's using it to create an army of zombie machines to launch a massive attack on his many rivals. But isn't that what his Fox News is for? Originally published @ Bohemian.com
      • views
      • Tweet
    • Search

    • Sites I Like

      • Future Journalism Project
    • Tags

      • Lab Blog
      • Boho
      • Cinemania
      • Publish or Perish
      • FAIL File
      • Gadgets & Gadflies
      • Daedalus Howell
      • Film Lab
      • Crowd-Cloud
      • google
      • ipad
      • (Un)Sung Music
      • Brand Camp
      • Killer Apps
      • amazon
      • ebook
      • Social Media Butterfly
      • apple
      • facebook
      • Broadcastrati
      • Docs
      • Shall we play a Game?
      • Video Killed the Radio Star
      • fail
      • Search Party
      • branded entertainment
      • kindle fire
      • music video
      • transmedia
      • twitter
      • Ben Huh
      • Dmitra Smith
      • Manifestos
      • New York Times
      • R&D
      • Siri
      • This Is Spinal Tap
      • Unsolicted Advice
      • With Your Host
      • adaptation
      • anonymous
      • comcast
      • ebooks
      • filmmaking
      • hal
      • iphone 4s
      • kindle
      • netflix
      • newspapers
      • online journalism
      • sonoma
      • star wars
      • static people
      • zombies
      • /b/
      • 1350 AM
      • 1950s
      • 1977
      • 2001
      • 4-koma
      • 4chan
      • AT&T
      • Alex Komarov
      • Andrew Gurland
      • Andy Cohen
      • Andy Warhol
      • Angels & Angles
      • Animation Station
      • Anthony WeinerAnthony Weiner
      • Apollo 18
      • Artists include Anthony Discenza
      • Ashley Bell
      • Battle Ship
      • Berkeley Books
      • Best Worst Movie
      • Birdemic
      • Black Eyed Peas
      • Blackwater
      • Blair Witch Project
      • Blog
      • Brian Goldner
      • Brian Miller
      • Buzzy Martin
      • CYC
      • Candy Land
      • Chase
      • Christian Right
      • Christopher Guest
      • Clear Channel
      • Comix
      • Computational Knowledge Summit
      • CreateSpace
      • Creative Commons
      • Culture Jammers
      • Cut the cord
      • Czech Replublic
      • DIY
      • Daniel Walker
      • Dave Watson
    • Archive

      • 2012 (2)
        • March (1)
        • February (1)
      • 2011 (25)
        • December (18)
        • November (3)
        • October (2)
        • June (2)
    • Obox Design
  • FMRL Blog

    Writer and producer at FMRL where we explore new ways of making media for fans and brands.

    Columns: Bohemian.com | SonomaNews.com

    My latest:
    "I Heart Sonoma: How to Live & Drink in Wine Country" available now at an eBookstore near you.

    1278 Views
  • Get Updates

    Subscribe via RSS
    TwitterLinkedIn