Summer 2009
July 7th, 2009 — Uncategorized
July 3rd, 2009 — Uncategorized
This video was shot at The River School in Reno, NV.
July 1st, 2009 — Uncategorized
On June, 28, trgedy struck in Santa Fe County.
A wrong-way driver slammed into a car carrying five teenagers. Four died at the scene; one survived and was airlifted to a trauma center. The driver of the other car sustained minor injuries.
I worked on the Web, social media and mobile distribution. I pulled stats and created an interactive graphic and put the call out for reader submissions to our Web site.
I cropped photos, wrote headlines and internal sub-heads.
Traffic on that day spiked. I bring that up not to brag, but to acknowledge that we were able to serve as a community hub on that day, providing a place for people to grieve and share their feelings.
I’m glad I had the training from the Maynard Multimedia Program on that day. Had I not had the training, it would have been good - with the training, it was much better.
Here’s the work:

The photograph was made by a reporter using a point-and-shoot. He emailed it to me. I cropped the image, fixed the color and wrote the caption that ran underneath. At this point, the story is a short I adapted from the sheriff department’s news release, pending a follow up with the reporter.
Throughout the day the images were updated and new text added to the story.
The community was looking for a place to discuss what had happened and a place to share their feelings. Our comment forums became that place. For the most part, there was little trouble. Folks genuinely showed their concern. However, it was important to not allow people to add rumors and second-hand information. In a few instances, I spiked comments that included rumors and what ultimately was wrong information.

I’m going to talk more about this. As a local news source, our responsibility is to help the community understand itself always, but especially in times of great sadness.
HML
June 30th, 2009 — Uncategorized
I met Jo while walking along the Truckee River during our first full weekend in Reno. She’s something of a local ambassador who can’t help but talk about the town she enjoys so much.
June 19th, 2009 — Uncategorized
Here’s another book in the Head First series that I think might be worth your time if you’re interested in learning the programming language known as Javascript. Lots of illustrations and exercises to help you learn this.
June 19th, 2009 — Uncategorized
Here’s my test map
View University of Nevada, Reno in a larger map
June 16th, 2009 — Uncategorized
June 17 begins a day long discussion on journalistic ethics as part of the Maynard Multimedia Editing Program. Our instructor will be Melissa McCoy, former deputy managing editor of The Los Angeles Times.
I’m a bit of a chatterbox. But my plan is to do more listening and absorbing than talking tomorrow. I didn’t go to journalism school. I worked for nearly a decade between stints at university.
I came to journalism at the end of my 20s, when I already had pretty strong opinions of my own about what constituted honest and ethical behavior. And into that, what I learned from good folk have informed my stances and opinions today.
So, it might be interesting to hear the discussion led by others who are each at different points in their career and from different backgrounds.
More importantly, I want to hear the reasoning people use when making their decisions. All too often I’ve heard folk discuss their ethical views by reciting what they were taught rather than what they had arrived at through their own reasoning.
On goes the thinking cap and open go the ears and mind.
June 16th, 2009 — Uncategorized
Here’s a funny bit The Daily did at The Times. It’s good fun. And good for The Times, having some fun. Enjoy.
June 10th, 2009 — Uncategorized
Below is a training piece using Soundslides to form a photo gallery. The audio used in this training project would never be used for a story of this sadness and magnitude. Where I work, we have a convention in which we build cover slides for our slideshows that include such information as date and other relevant information so that information can be delivered and not necessarlity repeated through the presentation.
Below is an audio clip I created on Audacity this morning. The clips were provided by our instructor, Michelle Johnson.
Below is the code I used to implement the audio player, all you need do is insert the URL of the audio file (MP3_FILE_URL) you want to play.
June 9th, 2009 — Uncategorized
I love discounts. I love free.
As Bill Cosby used to say, “All for one, one for all and three-for-five.”
Being a small market Web editor with eyes bigger than his budget, I can’t help but to look for cheap or free features to round out my offerings. I want my users to have the benefit of rich functionality. I want them to enjoy their visits to my site and tell their friends.
This is fun for me.
But reality never disappears. Economics and priorities dictate that I can’t enjoy the benefits of having a room filled with programmers developing new and rich applications for our readers.
So here are some of my picks for strong applications that you can use in your newsroom and Web site.
Social Networking
Here are projects I’ve launched on the platform:
Kick Apps - These guys have a great product. When you’ve outgrown Ning, this is where you go next. The KickApps API gives the savvy customer more ability to integrate social networking tools more intimately to their content than had been possible before. The free version has some tough limitations for a business, but they are worth a look. Fees can be steep depending on usage, but quality is excellent.
Document displays
Scribd - these folks will take the uploads of all those reports and display them in an easy to use format that is free and no more difficult to implement than the embedding of a youttube video.Live streaming video
Time wasters
Photo sharing
Flickr - big, well built and readily known, here’s an opportunity to build reader submission areas that are the real deal. Coming soon…So there are a few resources that I’d like you to check out and weigh in on. I’d love to hear your ideas and thoughts on resources that newspaper companies can use on their Web sites.