JCL Blog

Dave Winer and Steve Jobs

Yesterday I wrote about how much respect I had for Keith Richards regard for his heroes -- particularly once most of his contemporaries were worshiping themselves.  On the theme of heroes, and not on my being Keith Richards but rather following his example, here are two of mine:

Dave Winer:  A cantankerous techie who has returned to New York for yet another chapter of his career. If you are not already a follower, there is a pretty good page about him on Wikipedia here.  His blog Scripting, and his podcast Rebooting the News with Jay Rosen are two that I follow, but he has done/is doing so much (see the links on his Scripting blog).  I have never met him, but would thoroughly enjoy a beer and a lively discussion about tech -- particularly on his self removal from the middle of the circle in Silicon Valley to foster the growth of a new circle in NYC.  

Steve Jobs:  I am hardly the first guy to say that Steve Jobs is a hero.  His work over the past 14 years at Apple says alot of it.  Not that market cap is a true indicator of value, but here is a chart of the stock VS the NASDAQ since his return in 1997.

 

 

I imagine a moment when Steve is looking at prototypes of the iPod Touch, to this day I think it is the most amazing of his amazing machines, sometime in 2006 deciding on the size, what to have in or out, the fine points of the form factor...  Mine lasted for three years, the third of which I was often heard marveling about how I used it every day and the magic was still there.  The guy has a passion for what he does.  Unbelievable.

Upon meeting him I would ask:  have you ever hung out with Keith Richards?

 

Later:  Links added and if you want to hear one of the best podcasts ever, listen to yesterday's Rebooting the news with Dave Winer, Jay Rosen, and Doc Searls (guest).  There are some podcasts that I skim through at 2X, this one I am going to listen to twice.

 

Pew Says Tech is less than 2% of Media Coverage

If you are interested in technology media coverage or new media, you should take half an hour and study the report just out from the Pew Research Center.  Here are the main points I took from reading it:

Echo-chamber: Technology coverage in mainstream media is less than 2% of the total.  This just shows how those of us in the industry spend all of our time talking at each other!  Twitter is more reflective of the tech biz with 51% about technology.  So anyone getting their news from Twitter is going to have the bias of a technology insider.  

Microsoft is in the back of the media bus:  Of companies featured in the media it was 15% to Apple, 11% to Google, and Microsoft comes in at 3%.  Jay Rosen and Dave Winer had an interesting take on it on Rebooting the News this week.  They proposed that Google and Apple are fighting on purpose just to suck all of the oxygen away from Microsoft and everyone else.  Whatever the reason, it is apparent to people on the inside and the real world that Microsoft is not making the news these days.

Keep it Simple:  If you want to get into the main stream media, keep your story simple.  The study has a stark example comparing policy coverage on texting while driving to policy coverage on net neutrality.  Texting got 12% and net neutrality got 2%.  If those of us in the industry cannot form a clear description of what net neutrality is:  how is anyone in the real world going to become interested?

No matter your take on the results, we are lucky to have a quality organization like Pew to do a study like this.

Please Somebody Make the iPhone News Stop

I was not going to say anything about the iPhone 4 antenna thing because I thought that doing so would in effect say that I too think it is actually news.  

So instead I am going to just say the opposite -- this is not news, let's move on.  Can you believe the coverage?  Look at this search from the WSJ a few minutes ago:

If by some insufferable malady you still want to read more on this topic, try this post by Dave Winer.  I particularly like the part where he says this about Apple: "You have to count your change, and don't expect them to do the right thing, unless you twist their arm real hard, and usually it isn't worth the trouble..."

Let's move on to something...anything.

Who is Writing

Anyone who reads should be interested in what is happening in the media industry right now.  Anyone interested in that should follow “Rebooting the News” where Dave Winer and Jay Rosen talk weekly about the business of writing things.  I have been following their podcast for the last couple of months and have benefited tremendously.  Check it out.

This week Dave Winer brought up the topic of the places he would like to get his news and started me down a path of thinking about who writes what and why I write.  Here are some ways to categorize the authors you read and thoughts about the roles one can take while writing.

Expert:  I will go with Malcolm Gladwell’s description of an expert from Outliers – 10,000 hours or 10 years. The problem with experts however is it is very difficult to obtain the expertise without also taking on a bias.  I write often about things I consider myself an expert in.   Using Gladwell's measure I consider myself an expert in Technology Marketing (13 years), Organization Leadership (13 years), Education Philanthropy (20 years), The Computer Industry (25 years), and Boating (40 years).  I also have more than 10,000 hours in commercial real estate, public speaking, and sailboat racing, but don’t do enough currently to consider myself an expert.  Unfortunately, every post is bloated with my bias.  Some posts may even have an agenda.  Right now I am not sure if this is a bad thing.  

Interestingly the 1997 book “The Elements of Journalism” list as the forth element: “its practitioners must maintain an independence from those they cover”.  So I do like to read things written by experts, but there is always a bias to contend with.  Just think of Al Gore’s piece on the Opinion Page of the NY Times this Sunday.  Clearly he has the 10,000 hours, but we are getting a healthy helping of bias with that expertise.  And back to the is this a bad thing idea - Al Gore drives me crazy with his agenda.  Right or not the way he delivers his expertise chafes.

Reporter:  Dave Winer also has a post where he referenced The Giant Pool of Money created by This American Life.  He clearly outlines the benefits of consuming content reported by professionals.  Only a fool would attempt to name the top reporters.  Just think Woodard and Bernstein and before you know it the list is 100s long.  New media has introduced us to amateur reporters.  Amateur as in not paid - although we are all too aware of amateur in the other sense.  Although “The Elements of Journalism” does not use the word trust in its list – a reporter cannot add value without the trust of the reader and a professional works a lifetime to build that trust.  This is why we referred to Walter Cronkite as the most trusted man in America.

A good reporter does not need to be an expert in anything but building trust and reporting.  We benefit from the craft because it is an absolute pleasure to read and for the lack of bias.  A professional reporter with access to multiple experts of varying biases is a recipe for a meaningful contribution.

First Hand Accounts:  In the case of a developing or breaking story nothing can beat being there.  New media tools give us access to people “on the ground” in proximity to natural disasters, wars, political unrest, special events, and many other stories as they unfold.  These people do not need to be experts, or professionals, as long as they are there and can relate what is happening.  Any person on the street in Iran, Haiti, or Chile with a mobile enabled Twitter account qualifies – and even better with a camera.

The triple play of access to experts, professional reporting skills, and first hand proximity is what wins the big prizes and delivers the unforgettable pieces. 

Opinion:  By definition opinion is heavy on bias.   Done well it may include an argument supporting a position.  Like the stories major publications put above the fold, the choice of opinion topics says a great deal about a publication’s views because the number of opinion pieces in a paper are often limited by resources or the space on the page.  Conversely, a great deal of blogged content is opinion, and there are not space constraints on the web.  The choice of topics does say something about the author – as long as there isn’t so much of it that the meaning fails to shine through.

Gonzo / Satire / Skewering:  Jon Stewart is the new Cronkite?  Here the NY Times takes a look at the popularity of the Daily Show, where they don’t claim to be journalists, experts, on site, or anything but funny.  There are many points well made through satire from Vonnegut to South Park.  Unfortunately it is only a short leap from well crafted satire to the culture that is all too common of late where flaming the people on the other side is spewed out as if it was contributing to the discourse.  I think Jon Stewart is a rare talent.  I would put him in the comedian bucket.  Not sure what bucket to put Glenn Beck in – but not journalism.

Going forward, I am going to pay closer attention to these categories as I read and I suspect it will cause me to seek the rest of the story more often.