RSS Feed     Twitter     Facebook

Posts Tagged ‘digital’

Western Digital Rolls Out First 1TB Laptop HHD

WD’s Scorpio Blue 1TB is now the 2.5-inch laptop disk drive with the world’s largest capacity, eclipsing Toshiba’s 500GB laptop SSD, released May 14. How long will it hold the title? Probably not for long.
– It certainly didn’t take long for somebody to roar past Toshiba’s
short-lived record of 500GB for the largest available laptop storage capacity,
announced on May 14.

Western
Digital on July 27 introduced two new laptop drives that knocked Toshiba’s
Portege R600-ST4203 solid-state laptop out …


Ricoh Launches Aficio Series of Color Laser Printers

Ricoh debuts two lines of printers aimed at graphics-heavy environments and businesses that require advanced security features.
– Digital office equipment provider Ricoh Americas has announced the
availability of its Ricoh Aficio SP C820DN and SP C821DN color laser printer
series, an upgrade over the previous Aficio CL7200 and SP C811DN models.
The new printers boast an upgraded engine design based on the CL7200 engine,
wh…


Robert J. Elisberg: The Writers Workbench: Universal Remote R50

As home theaters have expanded the entertainment experience in leaps forward, one remnant of this high tech extravaganza has been a pole vault backwards. The…

Digital archive for murals

Digital Planet
Tim Jokl
BBC World Service

mural on the Falls Road

The Falls Road, West Belfast, is a mainly Catholic area and is just a few hundred metres south of the Shankhill Road, a largely Protestant area.

It became an place infamous for marches and conflict, violence and divide. But this area is also famous for something else.

Hundreds of vivid murals cover just about every expanse of wall around these neighbourhoods with giant paintings adorning the ends of terraced houses.

Many, but by no means all, depict aspects of the sectarian struggle between Catholics and Protestants in the 1970s and ’80s, serving as a constant, vibrant reminder of those times.

But there are other murals. One, for example, has a theme of the war in Palestine.

Murals as memorials, Belfast

Another mural, which appeared just only a few weeks ago, is an angry reaction to the xenophobic hate mobs that recently attempted to drive immigrant families from their homes in Belfast.

Liam Moore, a design student attending the University of Ulster, has developed a special interest this public art.

"They’re pretty inspirational," he told BBC World Service’s Digital Planet programme. "There are lots of topics and themes.

"Belfast is a very artistic and creative city to be in. There’s lots of poetry, there’s lots of writing.

"If you think about the murals too, it’s a big creative expression of sometimes political opinions and undertones. Especially from other cultures. A lot of residents feel they can connect to other divided nations, such as Israel and Palestine."

Hyper murals

Liam has been documenting the murals for a number of years, using digital technologies to capture and conserve them.

Since the murals often change or are painted over, his work has been about keeping a record. Making use of digital cameras has made it easier to preserve and share these works with the wider world.

Liam’s own design work has been based broadly on this art he is actively preserving.

"I’ve begun creating new murals," he pointed out. "I take topics from the blogosphere and current media and reflect that through graphic design. Some of that work involves the murals.

"I have created new murals, collages and mish-mashed reformed murals."

a row of murals

Liam calls these ‘hyper-murals’. They are created by digitally capturing real life murals and then isolating and enhancing sections using image manipulating software. Using the resulting library of parts, he creates a sort of mural mash-up.

Liam described the process as, "Taking images that already existed, creating a story from them. It’s like being four or five again, playing.’

Full circle

Given the murals can change so often, and without notice, it has been important to Liam to not only preserve them but to explain what a specific artist was trying to say, in a historical context and with the background of a changing society.

"It would be really nice to take existing murals, put them into a computer, digitally rearrange it, then put them back in a mural, sort of coming full-circle.

"That would be nice to see, what peoples’ thoughts and comments were on them."</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Adriana Dunn: On Embracing Digital Skeletons

How does a blogger embrace the others who will pivot you toward relative truth?

Finding Versatile MP3 Converter Software Posted By : Frank Jefferson

Digital audio comes in dozens of file formats which makes playing music a challenge sometimes for audio lovers. With a powerful and versatile MP3 converter at their fingertips, this will no longer be a problem.

William Perrin: An open digital Iraq inquiry

The internet opens up parts of our democracies other media cannot reach. The Obama team is merrily using internet as a can opener for information…

Mike Ragogna: Thank God It’s Thursday: Oklahoma’s College of Rock with Scott Booker, Raphael Saadiq’s New Video, Rhino’s Digital 45s, More Woodstock, The Bee Gees, and Kimya Dawson

ACM@OCU So you wanna be a rock ‘n’ roll star? Well, built on the whole “School of Rock” phenomenon that has become many musically talented…

Digital refusniks

By Jane Wakefield
Technology reporter, BBC News

Lrd Kitchener's WW1 recruitment poster

If you weren’t online what would send you dashing for the nearest mouse and keyboard

That is the dilemma facing Martha Lane Fox, erstwhile co-founder of Lastminute.com and freshly appointed Digital Champion.

It may sometimes seem like the world and her brother are tweeting or posting messages on Facebook but the reality is that 17 million Britons have never been online.

They have chosen not to do so, seeing the internet as irrelevant to their lives, too expensive or simply too daunting.

Now Ms Lane Fox is on the hunt for refuseniks.

She hosted the first meeting of her taskforce on Tuesday and its strategy will be to target the six million poorest Brits first as the correlation between social and digital exclusion becomes ever harder to ignore.

Ms Lane Fox has a tough job. As Professor Bill Dutton of the Oxford Internet Institute points out, she is trying to convert those who have no desire to be converted.

"The big question is how do you get people to experience a technology that they are predisposed not to be interested in," he asked.

Government services may not be a killer app but Whitehall definitely wants to do far more business online. Currently 80% of its transactions are done with the bottom 25% of society and migrating services online offers great cost savings.

The idea that you can buy a car tax disc online or enter a tax return, while useful, may not exactly excite the people Ms Lane Fox is targeting although a job search set up by the Department for Work and Pensions has averaged a pretty impressive one million searches per day.

Coventry City Council has taken the radical step of putting applications and bidding for social housing purely online.

The scheme has driven more people to the Foleshill UK Online centre, one of 6,000 centres around the UK designed to get more people computer literate and using the web.

"It is an internet-based service and unless you are computer literate it is not easy. It is a way of us helping people to help themselves," said Chrissie Morris, an advice officer at the centre

But putting services purely online could be a dangerous policy, thinks John Fisher, chief executive of Citizens Online, a charity set up ten years ago to target the most hard-to-reach of the digitally excluded.

"There is a danger that people move too quickly to an online model. Some cheap air tickets can now only be booked online and some offers are available exclusively on the web. The government has to be careful not to follow this route," he said.

Andrew Ferguson, editor of ThinkBroadband, agrees.

"The danger that being a Digital Champion carries is that by enabling more and more to interact with government services online, those that don’t use online services through their own choice may find things increasingly difficult.

"For local physical services like the Post Office we need to consider what effect an almost purely online social welfare system would have," he said.

Educating gangs

Users at a UK Online centre

Defining what is meant by digital exclusion could be one of Ms Lane Fox’s first jobs.

Jenny Pillar works in one of the 6,000 UK Online centres around the UK. She thinks that the government puts too much emphasis on the idea that going online improves lives.

Gleadless Valley, the deprived part of Sheffield she works in, is made up of council houses and sheltered accommodation.

Persuading people to go online by playing up how computers can improve skills and education has not been a success.

"We tend to focus on the leisure aspects first rather than educational reasons because that immediately puts down the shutters," she said.

That is not to say the centre hasn’t had educational successes.

On the estate there has been a problem with gang members.

"We got to know them because they were hanging around outside. One of them eventually did a literacy course and has a qualification now that he wouldn’t have had if the centre and its computers hadn’t been here," she said.

But for Ms Pillar, there is no point in forcing people online for "digital inclusion’s sake"

"People here may not have computers but there are very few without top of the range mobile phones. Some who have used the centre haven’t been able to read but they can use the internet and would consider themselves digitally included to the level they want to be," she said.

It means it has been hard to recruit regular users to the centre. Themes, such as family days, have proved popular but numbers remain low. In the last year there have been 450 people regularly using the centre. The population of the area is around 10,000.

This perhaps illustrates the scale of the job facing Ms Lane Fox.

Silver bullet

Cabinet meeting

One thing she is unlikely to do is throw kit at people. In the past the government has run a whole series of schemes offering cheap or free equipment but it has never been a huge success.

With broadband costs falling and plenty of schemes around offering cheap new or recycled equipment access is becoming less of a barrier.

A recent report from regulator Ofcom found that 43% of those currently offline would remain disconnected even if they were given a free PC and broadband connection.

"The challenge of getting people online and using services will not just be a case of buying people computers and giving them an hour or two of training," said Mr Ferguson.

"Computer use is an ongoing learning experience, as those who already help friends and family will testify to, so ensuring that free local resources are available to people will be important," he said.

Citizens Online has been running its Everybody Online campaign for five years. In that time it has claims to have converted 88,000 people to become regular online users at an average cost of £50 per person.

Ms Lane Fox is likely to have a budget of around £300m which may be rather modest for the task in hand, thinks Mr Fisher.

"The government may be looking for a silver bullet but it is pretty simple. People need to be shown the technology in an environment that they feel comfortable in and find things to do that directly relate to their lives," said Mr Fisher.

The government has calculated that each new person online creates an extra £220 per year to the country’s GDP (Gross Domestic Product).

Industrial strength

His advice to Ms Lane Fox is to build on best practice.

"At a local level there are loads of great schemes going on but they are fragmented. Ms Lane Fox needs to give them industrial strength and a national focus," he said.

Some critics believe the government is paying lip-service to the problem of digital inclusion.

They question how much Ms Lane-Fox can achieve given she is only going to devote two days per week over the course of the next two years to her Digital Champion role.

The government too seems to have downgraded the problem. In 2008, Gordon Brown acknowledged the importance of persuading more people online and appointed a Digital Inclusion cabinet minister, in the form of Paul Murphy.

But following recent reshuffles, that post has now disappeared and the issue has come back under the wider remit of the Communications Minister.

Lord Carter currently holds that post but will be leaving the role at the summer recess and no successor has been appointed as yet.

Mr Fisher thinks Ms Lane Fox will be hampered by the government’s lack of commitment to the problem.

"Without powerful and informed Cabinet level support, what chance has she of opening the closed doors of the major Whitehall Departments who simply refuse to accept that there is even an issue to be addressed" he asked.

Others question whether Ms Lane Fox, who was educated at private school and boasts a marquess for a great-grandfather, is the ideal candidate for the job.

"In terms of Martha Lane Fox herself, I don’t think she is seen as someone at the forefront of the technology race by the general public, and may not be someone who immediately makes people feel like she is working for them," said Mr Ferguson.

"Someone who was more readily identifiable by the sector of the population the Digital Champion is most likely to be working with may have been a better choice," he said.

She is most likely to be judged on her results.

"The great thing about this type of campaign is that its very easy to measure success," said Alex Salter, co-founder of broadband measurement site SamKnows.

Given that we’re looking to get six million people online in this first phase I’d like to see a trigger-style site, showing how many of the six million come online over the next 12 months," he added. </p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

BBC Worldwide/C4 deal ‘within weeks’

BBC Worldwide chief executive confident of striking a deal following new streamlined proposal

The BBC Worldwide chief executive, John Smith, is confident a deal to form a joint venture with Channel 4 will be signed within weeks following the tabling of a new streamlined proposal that he claims has gained traction with both parties.

Both broadcasters have been locked in at times fraught discussions to thrash out a commercial partnership deal to secure the future of Channel, 4 which claims it faces a funding gap of as much as £150m from 2012.

Smith, who would not elaborate on specific stumbling blocks, said the new proposition would pull in parts of Channel 4′s operation, including ad sales as well as using its strong heritage in genres such as gardening, property and food.

“[I feel we are] weeks away from being able to agree – longer for a legally binding contract – a term sheet [document outlining main points of the deal]. I’d like to think we will do it irrespective of politics. If it makes commercial sense I always believe we should do it.”

Outgoing communications minister Lord Carter had urged a final plan to be submitted for inclusion in last month’s Digital Britain report. The failure to do so left the report calling weakly for further discussions on “the practical and strategic implications of further structural separation”.

“We pitched to Channel 4 our proposal for a UK-only joint venture in November last year,” said Smith. “To be honest it was a bit frustrating [that a deal was not done]. A couple of weeks ago we pitched an amended, smaller proposal taking away the things that were sticking points”.

Following the publication of Digital Britain Luke Johnson, the Channel 4 chairman, reiterated the broadcaster’s desire to join forces with BBC Worldwide as the “preferred means of securing more sustainable funding to support our public service delivery”.

The implications of a smaller deal are unclear, with the BBC warning in its submission to Digital Britain in March that a tie-up with BBC Worldwide would not fulfill the government’s ambition of creating a new public service broadcaster of “real scale”.

The Channel Five chief executive, Dawn Airey, a keen proponent of a tie-up with Channel 4 as an alternative, has warned that any deal that involved the transfer of assets, and which could be interpreted as state aid for Channel 4, would be pounced upon by rival broadcasters also feeling the pinch.

A month before Digital Britain was published, Smith told the House of Lords communications committee that the partnership would include BBC Worldwide’s UK assets, including its 50% stake in the UKTV pay-TV channels business – including Gold and Dave – and its 60% stake in the DVD business 2Entertain. The venture would also include the remaining 50% stake in UKTV held by Virgin Media, which BBC Worldwide is keen to acquire, and the 40% of 2Entertain owned by Woolworths.

• To contact the MediaGuardian news desk email editor@mediaguardian.co.uk or phone 020 3353 3857. For all other inquiries please call the main Guardian switchboard on 020 3353 2000.

• If you are writing a comment for publication, please mark clearly “for publication”.

guardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2009 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds


Russian Firm Values Facebook Stock at $6.5B

Russia’s Digital Sky Technologies is willing to pay $14.77 per share for Facebook common stock, boosting its stake to as much as 3.5 percent and valuing the world’s largest online social network at about $6.5 billion.
– SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) Russia’s Digital Sky Technologies said it
will pay $14.77 a share for Facebook common stock, boosting its stake
to as much as 3.5 percent and valuing the world’s largest online social
network at about $6.5 billion.
While that is below the $10 billion valuation set by Digi…


Promise Technology Offers Digital Media Server

Promise’s NAS media server offers cost-conscious businesses and home office users power and performance while reducing the amount of power needed to run it.
– Promise Technology, known as the originator of SATA/ATA redundant
array of inexpensive disks (RAID) products, announced a digital media server
aimed at small business and home office users, the SmartStor NS4600. The
server, priced at $399.00 and available through retail and reseller channels,
of…


Promise Technology Offers Digital Media Server

Promise’s NAS media server offers cost-conscious businesses and home office users power and performance while reducing the amount of power needed to run it.
– Promise Technology, known as the originator of SATA/ATA redundant
array of inexpensive disks (RAID) products, announced a digital media server
aimed at small business and home office users, the SmartStor NS4600. The
server, priced at $399 and available through retail and reseller channels,
offer…


Engaging with the net

The Digital Britain report offers a lot to work with, says Bill Thompson.

"We live in a largely digitised country, so in one sense the Digital Britain report is an exercise in ensuring that the legal and regulatory system catches up with the lived reality for most of the UK population rather than a visionary document describing a far-distant future.

As such it is a serious attempt to ensure that government makes the best possible use of the network in serving us all, and that businesses offering access to the internet or providing services and content over the network are regulated, rewarded and cajoled as necessary to ensure that the UK does not fall even further behind the rest of the industrialised world.

READ THE DIGITAL BRITAIN REPORT

Digital Britain report(3MB)
Most computers will open PDF documents automatically, but you may need to download Adobe Acrobat Reader.

I criticised the interim report when it was published in January because it had been written behind closed doors and offered few opportunities for consultation and engagement for those outside the charmed circle of invited experts.

But it is clear that Stephen Carter and his team have listened to and taken notice of the extensive debate around their initial proposals. The result, though far from perfect, offers a good basis for work on the detail of implementation and legislation, and there are clear signs that those who want to engage will be able to do so.

There are suggestions on how to liberalise and improve access to wireless infrastructure, with potentially transformative proposals to shake up spectrum allocation to build a next generation mobile network offering 50Mpbs in cities and 5Mpbs in rural areas.

There is a confirmed commitment to delivering a universal 2Mbps (megabits per second) fixed-line broadband service to the whole country by 2012, and a six pound a year levy on existing copper telephone lines to pay for the ‘final third’ next generation coverage if the market cannot deliver. Two megabits per second is too slow for me, but universal service offers so many opportunities for engagement that it’s definitely worth having.

And there may even be ‘cultural tax relief’ for games developers and distributors, on the lines of the model that has made Canada such an attractive place for UK developers to move to.

The report comes on a day when the importance of the internet and the services it supports has been drawn to the attention of the whole world.

"Unfortunately the proposals to limit file-sharing are less well considered and seem to be hopelessly optimistic, or perhaps to betray a naivety about how the internet works. "

Bill Thompson

Bill ThompsonThe protests over the election results in Iran have depended on Facebook, YouTube and of course Twitter to get their message to the world, put pressure on their own government and organise their activities.

Just last week the French Constitutional Council of France halted the government’s plans to give a new authority the ability to cut the network access of internet users accused of copyright violations because "the internet is a component of the freedom of expression".

In the UK the Prime Minister Gordon Brown wrote in the The Times today that "a fast internet connection is now seen by most of the public as an essential service, as indispensable as electricity, gas and water."

Locking content

The view of the network as a utility and as a tool for expression is a very different one from that put forward by the dominant players in the so-called ‘content industry’.

Record companies, film studios, newspapers and the TV broadcasters have all lobbied hard for the UK government to shape its internet policy around their interests.

They want copyright laws to be strengthened so they can lock up any and all content. They want anyone who dares to challenge their business to be kicked offline, fined and locked up. They want a world in which they control what can happen.

Fortunately that pressure seems largely to have been resisted, and the real thrust of the proposals is about getting everyone online and ensuring that the network is there to be used in ways that support creative expression, new forms of industry and new models of engagement.

Funding news

The Digital Britain of the report is one in which all have access, not one where we try to preserve old industrial models.

When it comes to newspapers the report notes that ‘Digital Britain is at the beginning of a new and possibly disruptive wave of local news, generated by communities for communities using free online media’. It recognises that ‘government and business will need collaboratively to devise new ways of funding the news’ without simply promising subsidies to the existing players who have failed to adapt to the network reality and have sought protection and subsidy.

The debate about the future of public service broadcasting includes many progressive ideas, and both the decision to make Channel 4 more than just a broadcaster but turn it into ‘the open new media authority providing the seed-corn for creative innovation in the multi-media world’, and the message to the BBC that the license fee does not belong to it are all good ones.

Unfortunately the proposals to limit file-sharing are less well considered and seem to be hopelessly optimistic, or perhaps to betray a naivety about how the internet works.
Ofcom is to be asked to oversee efforts by UK ISPs to reduce what they term ‘illegal file-sharing’ by 70%, initially through notifying those accused of downloading material or revealing their names and addresses to rights holders so that they can be prosecuted.

If this doesn’t work then Ofcom may then be granted power to oblige ISPs to limit bandwidth or block specific protocols, presumably in the hope that doing this will deter or stop downloads. But this proposal ignores the fact that work is already going on to develop new file sharing technologies that are encrypted or disguise addresses more effectively. Ofcom might well hit its 70% target just because everyone moves away from BitTorrent without actually reducing the number of files shared over the net.

However the fact that the BPI boss Geoff Taylor found it necessary to accuse the government of ‘digital dithering’ for refusing to allow rights holders to have internet users cut off – the same proposals that have just been thrown out in France – is a good sign indeed.

In the end public service broadcasting and the protection of the content industries matter far less than the promotion of universal access and the creation of tools and services that encourage everyone online to demonstrate their own creative potential.

Networked world

Children watching TV

A digital Britain is not one in which we are all sitting glued to our screens watching the same sort of television programming that we could have had on a cathode-ray set in the 1970′s, downloading blockbuster movies or listening to more dull music made by rich popstars whose only real interest is their property portfolio.

It is one in which universal access allows us all to be fully-fledged citizens of a networked world that offers opportunities for creative expression and communication instead of the passive consumption of packaged content. There’s a glimpse of that world through the Digital Britain report, and it is one that those of us who already live a networked life need to clarify, share and work to build.

"

Bill Thompson is an independent journalist and regular commentator on the BBC World Service programme Digital Planet.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

The digital age of rights

World map

The digitally deprived have rights too, says regular columnist Bill Thompson

"President Sarkozy of France recently managed to get his Création et Internet law passed by the National Assembly, and if all goes well in the Senate then French internet users will soon find their activities being supervised by HADOPI, the grandly named ‘Haute Autorité pour la Diffusion des Œuvres et la Protection des Droits sur Internet.’

The rights it is concerned with are not those of ordinary net users but of copyright owners, and especially the large entertainment companies that have lobbied so hard and so successfully for the power to force internet service providers to terminate the accounts of those accused of downloading unlicensed copies of music, films and software.

Once HADOPI is up and running rights holders will be able to go to it with evidence of illegal downloading, and it will issue banning orders to ISPs without any need for tiresome court proceedings.

The agency is deeply controversial, and may in fact be illegal under European law as proposed changes to EU telecommunications regulations seem likely to require the involvement of the courts in any disconnection.

But even if it is legal, it is still a bad idea and must be one of the most foolish, regressive and potentially damaging moves by a government that claims to want to capitalise on the internet’s potential to transform society.

"It’s not that computers matter more than water, food, shelter and healthcare, but that the network and PCs can be used to ensure that those other things are available"
Bill Thompson

Bill Thompson

The new law treats the internet as if it was simply a conduit for delivering the sort of mindless entertainment provided by most films, TV programmes and popular music and proposes to cut people off because their actions might damage the business model of one tiny sector of the economy.

But the net is far more than television with added e-mail. As digital rights campaigner Cory Doctorow put it in an impassioned article on this issue in The Guardian last year:

"The internet is only that wire that delivers freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, and freedom of the press in a single connection. It’s only vital to the livelihood, social lives, health, civic engagement, education and leisure of hundreds of millions of people (and growing every day)."

Cory is not alone in believing that net access is too important to be regulated solely in the interests of the entertainment industry.

Earlier this month Vivian Reding, the European Commissioner responsible for Information Society and Media, spoke of "a right to Internet access" and pointed out that the EU’s new telecommunications rules "recognise explicitly that Internet access is a fundamental right such as the freedom of expression and the freedom to access information".

BILL’S LINKS

HADOPI on Wikipedia

Cory Doctorow on net access

Cnet: Is net access a human right

But if the argument against extra-judicial disconnection is so strong then surely a policy that lets network service providers keep millions of people from having a usable, fast and reliable connection to the internet must also be morally indefensible

If it is unacceptable to cut people off from the network because their actions are commercially damaging to the record companies, why is it acceptable to offer them poor or no access to broadband and mobile internet just because providing the service is commercially unattractive to ISPs or network operators

BROADBAND WORLD

MAP: BBC reporters talk broadband

World map

And if we are to be encouraged to think of access to the internet as a fundamental human right, a prerequisite of having freedom of expression, should we not be prosecuting ISPs over the ‘notspots’ in their mobile or wi-fi coverage, the communities with no access to ADSL because of the telephone network was repaired with aluminium instead of copper, or the areas bypassed by the cable providers

As a long-time contributor to Digital Planet, the BBC World Service programme about the impact of digital technology on people’s lives, I’ve seen the growing awareness within the developing world that computers and connectivity matter and can be useful. It’s not that computers matter more than water, food, shelter and healthcare, but that the network and PCs can be used to ensure that those other things are available.

Satellite imagery sent to a local computer can help villages find fresh water, mobile phones can tell farmers the prices at market so they know when to harvest.

The same arguments apply in the UK, but those of use who have easy, affordable and fast connectivity tend not to think of the plight of those who can’t get online, just as we so often fail to notice the homeless people in our towns or let our eyes glide over deprived housing estates as we sit on the train.

Of course once the kids on the local council estate start using their new-found power to create mash-ups of their favourite bands or add soundtracks to the videos they upload onto the web we’re sure to hear calls for their net access to be restricted in some way.

But at least they’ll be able to organise a Facebook campaign for themselves, and get some attention from the rest of us. At the moment the offline masses lack a voice as well as an internet connection.

"

Bill Thompson is an independent journalist and regular commentator on the BBC World Service programme Digital Planet.</p


This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Digital Revolution blog

Announcing Digital Sunlight: Publish2’s Platform for Collaborative Journalism

Today, with the signing of the largest government stimulus program in history, Publish2 is announcing a new initiative to help newsrooms faced with declining resources continue to play the watchdog role that is so vital in this time of crisis. Digital Sunlight is our code name for a new feature set that will allow citizens [...]