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Digitizing the news : innovation in online newspapers / Pablo J. Boczkowski.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Inside technologyPublication details: Cambridge, Mass. : MIT Press, ©2004.Description: 1 online resource (xi, 243 pages) : illustrationsContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780262268844
  • 0262268841
  • 9780262025591
  • 0262025590
  • 1417560320
  • 9781417560325
  • 1423746465
  • 9781423746461
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Digitizing the news.DDC classification:
  • 070.4 22
LOC classification:
  • PN4833 .B63 2004eb
Other classification:
  • G210. 7
Online resources:
Contents:
Emerging media -- Exploring and settling: alternatives to print in the 1980s and the early 1990s -- Hedging: a web of challenges in the second half of the 1990s -- Mimetic originality: the New York Times on the Web's technology section -- Vicarious experiences: HoustonChronicle.com's virtual voyager -- Distributed construction: New Jersey online's community connection -- "When we were print people."
Summary: In this study of how daily newspapers in America have developed electronic publishing ventures, Pablo Boczkowski shows that new media emerge not just in a burst of revolutionary technological change but by merging the structures and practices of existing media with newly available technical capabilities. His multi-disciplinary perspectives of science and technology, communication, and organization studies allow him to address the connections between technical, editorial, and work facets of new media. This approach yields analytical insights into the material culture of online newsrooms, the production processes of new media products, and the relationships between offline and online dynamics. Boczkowski traces daily newspapers' early consumer-oriented non-print publishing initiatives, from the now-forgotten videotex efforts of the 1980s to the rise of the World Wide Web in the mid- 1990s. He then examines the formative years of news on the Web during the second half of the 1990s, when the content of online newspapers varied from simple reproduction of the print edition to new material with interactive and multimedia features. With this picture of the recent history of non-print publishing as background, Boczkowski provides ethnographic, fly-on-the-wall accounts of three innovations in content creation: the Technology section of the New York Times on the Web, which was initially intended as the newspaper's space for experimentation with online news; the Virtual Voyager project of the HoustonChronicle.com, in which reporters pushed the envelope of multimedia journalism; and the Community Connection initiative of New Jersey Online, in which users became content producers. His analyses of these ventures reveal how innovation in online newspapers became an ongoing process in which different combinations of initial conditions and local contingencies led publishers along divergent paths of content creation.
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Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode
Electronic-Books Electronic-Books OPJGU Sonepat- Campus E-Books EBSCO Available

Includes bibliographical references (pages 211-237) and index.

Emerging media -- Exploring and settling: alternatives to print in the 1980s and the early 1990s -- Hedging: a web of challenges in the second half of the 1990s -- Mimetic originality: the New York Times on the Web's technology section -- Vicarious experiences: HoustonChronicle.com's virtual voyager -- Distributed construction: New Jersey online's community connection -- "When we were print people."

Print version record.

In this study of how daily newspapers in America have developed electronic publishing ventures, Pablo Boczkowski shows that new media emerge not just in a burst of revolutionary technological change but by merging the structures and practices of existing media with newly available technical capabilities. His multi-disciplinary perspectives of science and technology, communication, and organization studies allow him to address the connections between technical, editorial, and work facets of new media. This approach yields analytical insights into the material culture of online newsrooms, the production processes of new media products, and the relationships between offline and online dynamics. Boczkowski traces daily newspapers' early consumer-oriented non-print publishing initiatives, from the now-forgotten videotex efforts of the 1980s to the rise of the World Wide Web in the mid- 1990s. He then examines the formative years of news on the Web during the second half of the 1990s, when the content of online newspapers varied from simple reproduction of the print edition to new material with interactive and multimedia features. With this picture of the recent history of non-print publishing as background, Boczkowski provides ethnographic, fly-on-the-wall accounts of three innovations in content creation: the Technology section of the New York Times on the Web, which was initially intended as the newspaper's space for experimentation with online news; the Virtual Voyager project of the HoustonChronicle.com, in which reporters pushed the envelope of multimedia journalism; and the Community Connection initiative of New Jersey Online, in which users became content producers. His analyses of these ventures reveal how innovation in online newspapers became an ongoing process in which different combinations of initial conditions and local contingencies led publishers along divergent paths of content creation.

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