Wednesday, November 23, 2011
The Randomness of History
This is a problem that has to be addressed, and what would be your thoughts here?:The Convoluted Life Cycle of a News Story
| from the ok-let's-randomly-update-this-story dept.
| posted by timothy on Sunday November 20, @16:26 (Social Networks)
| with 56 comments
| https://news.slashdot.org/story/11/11/20/2126237/the-convoluted-life-cycle-of-a-news-story?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email
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[0]ideonexus writes "Once upon a time, newspapers were considered the
"first draft of history." Today, rather than the daily episodic updates
of major news stories developing a narrative over time, we have a
perpetual stream of factoids from which a story emerges. Lauren Rabaino
of mediabistro details this [1]new lifecycle of a newspaper story, from
tweets to blog posts to an eventual print edition, and asks What are the
best standards of practice? Should news sources provide a single web
address with a stream of updates, post new blog entries that link to
older ones, or should they adopt a Wiki approach to the news — revising a
single story with a history of revisions available behind the scenes?"
Discuss this story at:
https://news.slashdot.org/story/11/11/20/2126237/the-convoluted-life-cycle-of-a-news-story?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email#commentlisting
Links:
0. http://ideonexus.com/
1. http://www.mediabistro.com/10000words/the-new-convoluted-life-cycle-of-a-newspaper-story_b8552
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