Archive for the 'editing' Category

Employment - RSS feed for SND newspaper design job bank

SND Job Bank

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I was frustrated that I could not find anywhere a RSS feed for jobs posted to the SND job Bank so I made one myself.
Here it is.

The SND update blog just announced an upgrade to the blog. (They are now using Experession Engine to blog on.)

Oh, and they also have a new CSS template. But on the development side - not much there.

You won’t find a search bar, or a reader comments module or RSS feeds for comments, tutorials or multimedia.
Also I could find no widgets or tools that make it demonstrably more interactive or viral than it was before.

No search bar? You have got to be kidding me.

Just as importantly they missed a chance to upgrade some of their antiquated databases - like the one that delivers job results via Lasso. Lasso? Are you kidding me? It’s a LAMP world, people.

Job bank feed

OK. So here’s hoping the SND Web team will use this new job bank feed I developed to publish the new job openings on their home page and all their blogs.

If they need help - they know where to find me. ;-)

Enjoy.

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Maestro in Cairo - Photos from Egypt training

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Greetings from the island of Zamalek on the Nile River.

I am exhausted - but am also thrilled to share a little of the Visual Editing exchanges that have happened in Cairo this week. (I would love to give you the Charles Apple like details - I just have to admit that I am just not as good as a reporter as he is - who is?)

Alas, I do have a few photos and words to share that may encourage all of us who seek to become better visual editors.


Editors from the regional press practice an exercise in visual editing hosted by the Egypt Media Development Training Centre in Cairo

 

THURSDAY - 19 April, 2007
The training week here has ended and I have survived after delivering five long, non-stop days of training in editing, design and multimedia for working journalists in Cairo. On Monday, I gave three lectures at Cairo University at the school of Mass Comm in Giza.
The concept of applying Visual Editing meetings at the beginning of the story process was so revolutionary that, by the fourth day, we found our workshop had been crashed by a TV unit from Egypt’s Channel 2. They spent most of the day filming yesterday and the story will air tomorrow at 1 p.m.
It feels as though I found a time tunnel to the era 22 years ago - when design was only done in the composing room.

 


A Maestro worksheet translated into Arabic language for the visual editing workshops in Cairo.

 

The workshop sessions were exceptionally well received.
Just have to say to Buck Ryan . . . Sir, you are a genius! The obstacles all week were many - I don’t speak Arabic, so all of my English was translated in one of four ways (Written, Simultaneous, Consecutive or Silently Spoken into my ear by the translator)

Of course, pages read right to left, so, their was a lot of interpretattions happening!
Couldn’t find an Eye Tracking study for Arabic language readers - does anyone know of one?


An editor explains the thinking for his page at an exercise in visual editing at the Supreme Press Council in Cairo.

 

Tim Harrower - THANK YOU for allowing MDP to translate and reproduce the excellent worksheet from your book. The knowledge of Buck Ryan’s planning tool and your textbook exercise has now touched someone working in almost every newsroom in Egypt.

 


Central Cairo view from the Supreme Press Council offices next to the famous red Egyptian museum.

 

If you are a journalist reading this blog, I think you would have been proud to see the reporter/designer teams my organizers assembled respond to the visual storytelling challenges with such enthusiasm.

The Egyptian Media Development program really assembled a brilliant mix of journalists from big and small papers in the region. That is true reward of road trips like this, that no matter if I am in a newsroom in Riga, a training hall in Warsaw, or a taxi cab careening through the streets of Cairo with a reporter from the L.A. Times, I have never failed to find myself traveling in the company of journalists who are hungry to learn more and have a passion to make their newspapers better.

 

The views here are beyond words
OK - I’ll try and give you one Charles Apple moment before I head off to work in Dubai for a week.
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(Click thumbnail to enlarge photo.)

 

Enough talk. I want to take you to Egypt now. To join me for dinner, all you have to do is click on the thumbnail to fill your screen instantly with the view a photo of my hotel terrace taken at dinner this evening.

This is a 13-second exposure using an improvised ‘tripod’ of ashtray, bread basket and lens cap. This hotel is mere steps from the banks of the Nile.

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Cairo: Teaching visual editing to Egyptian journalists

Multimedia - Middle East News Agency

Salam Al Akohm.

Greetings from Cairo, Egypt

I was invited by the organizers of a newly formed USAID media development program to conduct a week of training in newspaper editing, design, online video and digital multimedia for Egyptian journalists in this developing nation.

In the orientation meeting this morning (The work week here is Sunday -Thurs) I met with Tarek Atia - the training coordinator and took these notes as we discussed the goals of this program.

MDP is an Egyptian-staffed office led by a German national with 20 years experience with Reuters.

What they do is provide resources for media to improve their operations in the areas of journalism and develop business models to create more advanced and relevant media.
What they are focused on:

1) Providing market research about media usage. (They are just now getting the results of the first independent market research study in the region)

2) Provide guidance and training for improving reporting and editing. (that’s how I got here)

3) Help media groups away from state-subsidized and institutional approaches to develop more innovative media and informed citizens.

4) Foster an enabling environment that would allow for the growth of an independent and civil society.
(Their staff legal counsel offers legal help and promotes press freedoms)

So that’s it - I will be meeting with different media groups throughout the week - and my head is spinning constanty! I met with the multimedia team at the Middle East News Agency (MENA) today and shared podcasting and videopodcasting experiences. Multimedia technology for this group currently means a staff that handles attaching photos to their wire reports - so my time with them was very well received. We actually made a podcast and video report on site with them. It was so much fun to see their enthusiasm to develop more advanced visual storytelling techniques.

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