Orange County Register Lays Off 110, “Not Just Profitablity”

Orange County Register Lays Off 110, “Not Just Profitablity”

Editor and Publisher is reporting that the Orange County Register is laying off 110 by Friday.  We should remember that their parent company a few months ago launched a pilot program to outsource some editing to India, in addition to also sending some pages for pagination overseas as well.  A flat world indeed! OCR Publisher Terry Horne: “This isn’t necessarily just to improve profitability, we have to become a different kind of company,” Horne said. “We will be more focused…

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Monitor shifts from print to Web-based strategy

Monitor shifts from print to Web-based strategy

Monitor shifts from print to Web-based strategy. Wow – read the post before this first.  Then read this.  Here’s where we’re going, folks.  This is earth shattering. The Christian Science Monitor plans major changes in April 2009 that are expected to make it the first newspaper with a national audience to shift from a daily print format to an online publication that is updated continuously each day. The changes at the Monitor will include enhancing the content on CSMonitor.com, starting…

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New York Times To Staff: Relax, We’re Not Firing You Yet

New York Times To Staff: Relax, We’re Not Firing You Yet

New York Times To Staff: Relax, We’re Not Firing You Yet Wow – even with out the Silicon Valley Insider’s snark, this is a wild and wooly bit to go out to the troops from the NYT Editor, Bill Keller.  The cattle must have been close to stampede… Check out the Insiders conclusion: But we have a problem with Bill’s characterization of the cuts around the industry as “short-sighted.” Bill’s business reporters would never characterize them that way, and if…

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Moving Up When Things Are Down

Moving Up When Things Are Down

Yesterday the Interwebs were all a twitter after a couple A-list-types were laid off and the production schedule pared back at Revision3.  We need to get over it.  Companies have to adjust to the new reality of our economic misfortune. It would be utterly irresponsible for a company not to act, but that doesn’t make it easier for any of the folks affected. It was all fun and games for Twitter when it was Joe WebDev at Seesmic, or Jane…

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WordPress 2.6.3 Released, and Issues with Auto Upgrade

WordPress 2.6.3 Released, and Issues with Auto Upgrade

The folks at Automattic today released WordPress 2.6.3 which is a minor security patch to the Snoopy script they use for displaying rss feeds in the admin area.  Not an utterly crucial upgrade, but one you might want to take just to be sure your secure.  The upgrade took me 5 minutes using the auto upgrade plugin. One issue that I noticed while using the auto upgrade plugin, which was also upgraded, was that the script failed repeatedly on the…

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Geek.com makes the Top 10 Gadget Sites on Fast Company

Geek.com makes the Top 10 Gadget Sites on Fast Company

The Top 10 Gadget Sites | Fast Company We relaunched geek.com last month, and this month Geek’s made the FastCompany.com list of top 10 gadget sites.  Congratulations to Joel, Sal, Robb and the rest of the Team! We’re in good company, with my college buddy Jim Louderback’s Revision3 making the list for Tekzilla (love it!) and Leo Laporte’s Twit.tv as well (I’m a subscriber…).

Media Ethics and Political Affiliations

Media Ethics and Political Affiliations

Watching the Twitter streams of the newly minted gurus of Social Media, I’m often surprised by how little many of the experts actually know about traditional media. In fact, I’m surprised by how many of us actually have bought the “journalistic ethics” and “media bias” lines we see so often. One of the giants of the Social Media, who I’m not gonna call out here, the other day expressed dismay that the Boston Globe had made an endorsement of Senator…

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A Good Run, But We Fell Short

A Good Run, But We Fell Short

Okay, this will be the last Red Sox post of the year.  The boys put up a valient effort and gave us some utterly gut wrenching baseball the past few nights. There isn’t much I can say, the better team did win in the end, despite an incredible, heroic, effort by the Sox, The boys at SurvivingGrady.com sum it up best: Yeah, losing sucks. It always sucks. But after 2004, it just doesn’t hurt as bad. Instead of busting out…

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