Posted: April 28th, 2009 | Author: Maha Rafi Atal | Filed under: Ephemera | 2 Comments »

Believe it or not, Cappuccino-ers, this digital coffeehouse turns one year old today, and it’s instructive to think how much has happened in the realms of technology, politics, business, and media that are our daily grist:
6. The
media apocalypse picked up its pace, taking down t
he Christian Science Monitor (in print), the
Rocky Mountain News, the
Seattle Post-Intelligencer,
the Tribune Company, the
Philadelphia Inquirer, and most recently,
Portfolio. The madness of those on both extremes expanded. Jeff
Jarvis called for us all to become Google [who
want to help newspapers, promise], while the
Associated Press hammered all the aggregator startups for linking fees. But the beginnings of a
cross-platform future began to emerge
in the ashes of the recession, with the
battle on between individualists and institutionalists to structure of that future model.
7. The downsizing of our over-leveraged ambitions brought a downsizing of technology trends, favoring the rise of the netbook over the laptop and desktop and most significantly, the rise of
Twitter as a challenger to Facebook. In a sign of the media apocalypse, see above, commentators hailed Twitter not only as a useful social tool, but a
s some form of alternative journalism. Not only does this
violate the speech/press divide (a victory for radical individualists), but confuses what Twitter offers users. Yours truly joined several weeks ago to test the service out, and I’m finding it to be more like
Facebook before the applications:Â Indeed, as one
who misses old Facebook, I’m glad to have it as a tool. It is all conversation with people I know that resembles the early days of social networking, lots of aspirational expressions “Maha wishes she could get more sleep.” or “Maha is mysterious,” and very little by way of information content. Indeed, when
falsehoods appear on Twitter, there’s no effort by the company to shut them down and a certain
flippancy from its founders about what goes on the site. That’s okay, because so long Twitter is just a social platform, it’s not legally or economically accountable for facts. Â It’s just people talking, and people lie. That’s
why the best “journalistic” use of Twitter I’ve seen is the same as the journalistic use of people in the analog world–
quote them saying their piece, go out and verify or debunk what they say and put the raw facts in your words. Twitter, Facebook et al are a beautifully efficient way for reporters to get the views of the man on the street that have peppered our stories for years.
Thanks to everyone who’s kept the conversation fiesty on these pages–here’s to another year of digital caffeination.
congrats, beta for persistence and keeping your sense of outrage
Great job keeping up the blog…just found it and I’ll be sure to keep reading!
What exactly do you mean by the beginnings of Web 3.0? I’d say we’re still in the throes of w2.0, but what does 3.0 look like to you?
By the way…take a look at your Tina Fey / Sarah Palin link – I think you’ve been Palin-Roll’d!