Friday, January 26, 2007
If James Bond was a reporter...
We were given xda-II's in 2004, and just recently it was upgraded to a Sony Ericsson P990i. I'm not tech savvy. But I love the way both phones have cameras we can use to shoot with in case our cameraman's denied entry, or the way it allows us to check our email and send scripts even while we're walking.
But then I saw Newsgear. Now that's really cool. If James Bond was a reporter, he'd have the stuff in Newsgear. Practical and useful.. but classy.Imagine a volvo for a complete mobile online newsroom. And all those little gadgets you need to have wi-fi and be able to stream live video and audio directly back to the net. It's impressive because its creative. Function wise speaking, it's the t-v network's OB (outside broadcast) VAN equivalent--only much cheaper. (or is it? maybe they shouldn't have used a Volvo..)
Anyway, it simply shows how new technology coupled with ingenuity can match the kind of equipment only big-time media companies could afford then. It makes a level playing field doable.
Here in the Philippines though, the concept of having Newsgear's stuff on the road strikes me as scary. Carjacking in the city. Undisciplined drivers on the road. Limited wi-fi zones. And bringing them to where news happens outside the city would probably mean a typhoon ravaged area or the jungles where the military's hunting down terrorist rebels. Now would you really bring a Volvo there?
Monday, January 15, 2007
On moblogging and Saddam's execution
A few days before
Moblogging? It's a work in progress.
Sunday, January 7, 2007
Whose blogs do we trust?
But who decides what’s ethical anyway? Traditional journalism, after long years of practice, still does not have a uniform code of ethics applied across all borders. There are still a lot of gray areas. Most of the time journalists are made to answer for any false information they spread through libel suits against them and the network/ publication they represent. Or the audience simply stops trusting them.
But how about bloggers who practice journalism?
It’s been said that the internet is full of unreliable information. And blogs provide everyone a chance to publish information- whether true or false, good or bad. And so it doesn’t come as a surprise why many are still wary of this new medium. Because who can tell whose blogs are to be trusted?
In fact, even journalists who do blogs are asked why they do so. Is it an extension of their work? Or do they post things their papers/networks do not allow them to? If journalists do commentaries on their post, doesn’t it go against their goal of being neutral on issues?
Another thing said is that blogging is a powerful tool of freedom of expression for ordinary people. Some might say it’s not as big in the Philippines as in countries where the press is censored; the Philippines being one of the freest press in Asia. But for those whose freedom to report in this democracy has been questioned, blogging has also been a welcome medium.
But how powerful can a tool for the ordinary people be when only 11 million out of the 86 million Filipinos are internet users? That’s not even half of the population.