Archive
Welcome to the beta of the new saila.com. Send in your bugs.
Dispatches from 2009
Posted on March 17
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No more newspapers
Watching the newspapers collapse and grasp the new media dream a decade too late has been sobering.
Archive
Welcome to the beta of the new saila.com. Send in your bugs.
Seeds an Investigative reporting fund with $1.75 million - this is a good sign
Topic: Online Journalism
General overview on some client-side things that slow a Web page
Topics: CSS, JavaScript
Good resource site from a SXSW 2009 panel
Topics: Web Design, CSS
Modelled on London's transit maps, this bus map shows the routes centred on one of Seattle neighbourhoods
As experienced by a former reporter
Topics: Newspapers, Seattle
The final indignity against Seattle P-I reporters? They now have to pass a drug test to stay employed
Topics: Newspapers, Seattle
The Museum of Modern Art relaunched with a compelling new design
Topics: Web Design, Culture
A simple mac-based tool for refining grid based layouts
Topic: Web Design
China wants the IMF "SDR" unit to replace the U.S. dollar as a global reserve currency (let the conspiracy theories begin)
Danish and Norwegian media sites are campaigning their users to use any browser but IE6
Topics: Browsers, Web Design
In his goodbye post, Doug Bowman articulates the perils of designing for a big company
Topic: Web Design
Stupidly literal name, cool tool: allows you to overlay different renders of a Web page
Topics: Web Design, Browsers
This very good browser does a lot of contortions to not offend anyone, and almost succeeds
The Seattle Post-Intelligencer, the city's oldest business, will roll off the presses for the last time St. Patrick's Day
Topics: Newspapers, Seattle
Clay Shirky writes one of the most insightful essays on the what is really happening to newspapers and what we mean when we want to save them.
Topics: Newspapers, Journalism
Otherwise known as what fixing your site's bad habits
Twenty years ago today Tim-Berners Lee submitted the proposal that would become the World Wide Web
Topic: Web Technology
What if you started with an idea but only designed 51% of its potential before letting it loose?
Topic: Web Design
City newspapers may, for all practical purposes, disappear in the U.S. by year's end
Topics: Newspapers, U.S.
This inspired a sarcastic tweet from me a little ways back...
Turns out, in real world tests, CSS selectors don't effect the rendering time of Web pages
Simon Willison explains more about the Guardian Open Platform's APIs and the content available
Topics: Online Journalism, Web Technology
Time's list of newspapers possibly following the path of Rocky Mountain News or the Seattle P-I
Topics: Newspapers, U.S.
One of the longest-running publications about Web design and development has ceased publication
Topics: Web Design, Web Culture
For the city's 175th birthday, Spacing donates 175 iconic pictures to the city archives
Some staff members of the newspaper were offered a chance at continued employment in an online edition
Topics: Newspapers, Online Journalism
An attempt to set and document the best practices for social media platforms
Topic: Social Media
Having been on the ground for practical discussions of the same issues years ago, I'm amazed how many lessons have not been learned
Topics: Subscriptions & Registration, Newspapers
The incomparable Christina Wodtke outlines the key patterns for creating successful online communities
Topics: Social Media, Web Patterns
Interesting interface for searching on a set of fixed terms
Topics: User Interface, Search Engines
With the exception of a few years when Internet Explorer was actually the more standard-compliant browser, I’ve always surfed the Web with a Netscape-originated browser. I supported Mozilla when it was still struggling to make something even approaching a usable browser. My name was one of thousands to be found in a New York Times ad announcing Firefox’s debut. I have friends that work with Mozilla.
Working in the media during revolutionary times is an interesting experience. You’re at once aware of the changing landscape, and because of the need to report on it from a stable perspective, you’re unable to really participate.
Category: Journalism
Not sure I really understood what being Canadian was until…
Were it my city, I’m not sure what I would…
One of the biggest myths of the past twenty years went something like this: the generation following the baby boomers was an underachieving lot, destined not to realize the success of its parents.
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