Skip to navigation
   
Asavin Wattanajantra's Blog

Selling my soul for the Google News love

By Asavin Wattanajantra in Editorial

Posted in Oyster, Google News, Brooker, Google on July 22, 2008 at 2:29 pm

Permalink | Author Profile

I was sent a great link to a great column by Charlie Brooker yesterday.

And sadly - I felt myself nodding in agreement to much that he wrote.

As a two year old website, we are very reliant on Google News as we know it is a launching pad for stories to get hits and find readers who wouldn’t normally come to our site by themselves.

Today’s an example - I wrote a follow up story to the Dutch Oyster Hack, with news that it was going to be revealed to the public.

Now the thing about online journalism is that it doesn’t pay to be the first to have it. It’s a complete opposite to newspaper journalism where the first to have the story out wins.

No, now you have to get it Googled and be picked up on Google News. If you notice my story and the first paragraph, I have links to all the main websites (London underground, Oyster etc) - I’ve written it short and concise and also dotted around some words which I know the bots would pick up.

I also put ‘free travel’ in the headline because its the sort of thing Google picks up.

Yes its very cynical.

But that’s online journalism. Or journalism in itself. Its not necessarily what you have in there, but sometimes just the way you present it. (Although I put some good stuff in there, as well as a statement from NXP which many of the sites didn’t get hold of - I’m hoping the Google bots take that into account.)

The thing is - it worked, and is one of the most popular stories today.

However unlike Charlie, I understand it perfectly because this is the way I was trained… Rather than having to change my way of thinking I’ve been brought up with doing things this way.

But that’s Google. Its dominance means there’s not much point fighting against it. And its no great secret anything I’ve said.

But how come I feel a bit dirty for attracting the Google love?

12345
Not yet rated
Loading ... Loading ...

 

My Wall:E

By Asavin Wattanajantra in Editorial

Posted in toy, Wall:e, Pixar, robot, fun on July 17, 2008 at 4:06 pm

Permalink | Author Profile

Oh the perks of being an IT journalist.

Look what I have sitting on my desk at the moment…

walle.jpg

It’s very cute - Although he makes a lot of noise, which I was tempted to post up as a YouTube video, but I’m frightened somebody in the office might smack me.

It’s out tomorrow - Apart from the Dark Knight its the film I have been looking forward to this year.

And before you say it - it’s a trash compactor that turns into a robot. So obviously IT related right?

I don’t care either way - its too cute.

12345
Not yet rated
Loading ... Loading ...

 

Seven months in as an IT journalist - 20 things I’ve learned.

By Asavin Wattanajantra in Editorial

Posted in list, IT PRO, Security, Social Networking on July 14, 2008 at 10:56 am

Permalink | Author Profile

Seven months in working as a Staff Writer at IT PRO… What can i say? Probably the best thing to do is in what my editor does - write a list based thing about what I’ve learned.

1 Journalists always complain about pay (especially me)

2 Some IT journalists are very strange. It’s a very incestious bunch.

3 IT journalists love getting free stuff - and won’t give it back unless prompted by the PR about fifty times.

4 Once you get a reputation in IT journalism, it’s very difficult to lose it.

5

12345
Rated: 40% (2 votes)
Loading ... Loading ...

 

   
Tag cloud

feed Google Street View DNS morph remote working update browser virtual worlds traffic Wherecloud old school instant messaging software PR hacking kill FBI MMORPG paranoia cybercrime top ten tips journalism cyber crime Farmville Daily Mail filters university of portsmouth spam Twitpocalypse BlackBerry hype data breaches sightings Flurry alibi Friendfeed Sega IM Fraud research Terminator nokia Bill Gates crime ID cards tool flashmob hackers growth video games Christmas IT PRO illegal lapto ASA James Bond privacy pirate Google Maps pride unlimited Lewis hamilton robots Beijing internet downloading Twitter streaming RSS Hitwise flexible working ducks bendy crime map Google brain social media RPG poking Mafia Wars Digital Britain staff offline Nintendo rickrolling Steve Jobs music Sophos science legal Black Hat brainwaves fire murder Facebook vote Republicans trend micro phishing flaw surveillance World of Warcraft worm tech swear words satnav phone Mozilla video death Pirate Bay NHS Spotify multimedia broadband government Mario Kindle credit card data SQL injection opinion future hack YouTube Microsoft Firefox eBooks Digg military control Apple news Kaminsky smartphone Google Reader medials uSwitch malware Second Life Sonic Scrabble Amazon app iPhone teenagers hatred Olympics status Transformers Cisco DNSSEC Clampi human clones replies sony playstation Nintendo Sega Sinclair Spectrum gaming Mario Sonic Star Trek BERTI Klingon fun password ENISA alcohol mobile funny Dark Market website David Blunkett Google pod casting
Advertisement
Advertisement