Hi, welcome to my site.
I´m a Journalism student as well as a Multimedia graduate. I´m interested in the social web and the media.

Picture of Piers Dillon-Scott

Tag Archives: web

My LifeStream

Today pdscott: New media could ‘destroy civil society’…apparently http://t.co/8E1GCXcm pdscott: Dublin’s @measurementconf takes a closer look at professional social media use http://t.co/CQEZV0R5 #DoneDealsocial pdscott: RT @thesociable PlayStation Network aligns under Sony Entertainment Network brand http://t.co/jY9K9ZlI piers posted 3 items. 1h ago via Twitter piers published Daily Digest for February 6th. 2h ago via piersdillonscott.com Dublin’s [...]

Corporations + New Media ≠ Journalism?

Not only does web journalism allow professional and citizen journalists to become mass communicators it also corporations to reach the masses. Google, as you would expect, is particularly adapt at using new media to tell stories online. While this blurres the line between PR and journalism Google’s use of new media demonstrates just how an [...]

Live Articles/Dead Weight?

Fashionably late to the party March 18th saw the launch of CNN’s “This Just In” news blog site. Responding to the recent trend for ‘real-time‘ content mainstream media organisations have been developing such news blog sites to report breaking and rolling news stories as “live articles/blogs”. With a mix of informal language, citizen journalist as [...]

Social Media on the Rise in Newsrooms

The social media blog Mashable posted a very interesting blog about the use of social media in TV newsrooms. Some 77% of TV newsrooms have a Twitter account while 36% us it “constantly.” Only 13% say they do not use social media at all. Papper: Radio News Does not Make Use of Social Media from [...]

Drinking from Niagara Falls

A short one but The Guardian’s Kevin Anderson has an interesting piece on the “tools of the trade” for online journalists. According to Mr Anderson The internet is not like trying to drink from a firehose but rather like trying to drink from Niagara Falls. For any media professional trying to remain up to speed [...]

New Media, New Responsibilities?

Some three years after The Guardian redeveloped its website to include new media the site is still leading the way in online reporting. But this does not mean that it always get it right. In 2007 a Reuters photojournalist, Namir Noor-Eldeen, was killed in Iraq after being fired upon by a U.S. helicopter gunship. The [...]

Online Journalism

Surprisingly online journalism is nothing new- in 1981 the San Francisco examiner went online. At $20 to download the paper (most of which which was spent on just the phone call) it was not a revolutionary it was not revolutionary it was an important step online. Thirteen years later in January 1994 the Palo Alto [...]

Three Screens and Glowing Rectangles

An article in Time Magazine some years ago reported that new media will “make radio as obsolete as the horse” and destroy the American cinema industry. Children will not need to go to school as classes will be brought directly into their homes and Presidential candidates will use it to win elections. The article was [...]

Health and Online Safety

Apparently the HSE is a fan, looking over my stats this morning it seems a member of the executive was having a look around one of my sites. There is nothing unusual in this, but I would have thought that the national health service would be using better equipment than IE6 . Ok, so the [...]

Haiti 360

The web runs on memes- memes (‘cultural units of knowledge’) are at the very heart of Web 2.0. The ‘Green Revolution’ in Iran last year ran on meme’s; users in Iran generated content that was retweeted and reported, emailed and IMed to followers and friends. There is a Reithian value to internet meme’s. In the [...]

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