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Conferences where Zemanta will be in May

Filed under: conferences — jure @ 10:22 12. May, 2008

A passenger :en:jet aircraft flying over Downtown :en:San Jose, California on the way to land at Mineta San Jose International Airport. Photo by John Pozniak on :en:July 5, :en:2004. The building in the foreground is 95 S. Market St, which is across the street from Cathedral Basilica of St. Joseph.Image via Wikipedia

Second half of May will be quite busy for us with many conferences. We’re trying to visit as many as possible to have a chance to meet you and see what other innovative people in the industry are doing.

 

Here is a short list of them, in order of happening:

 

NT Konferenca, Portorož

Semantic Technology Conference, San Jose

Thinking Digital, Newcastle

BarCamp NorthEast, Newcastle

@Media 2008, London

BarCamp London 4, London

European Sematic Web Conference, Tenerife

 

 

(drop a note to jure@zemanta.com to arrange a meetup or follow our twitter.com/zemanta for instant notifications)

EuroPrix TopTalent Award

Filed under: zemanta — andraz @ 0:30 25. Nov, 2007

I’ve just got a message from Uroš saying that we won the EuroPrix TopTalent Award in the category of Content Tools & Interface Design! We applied with Odprti kop solution which we did for Slovenian national television just before founding Zemanta.

It is an award for the most innovative projects in European media space for young professionals. Gašper and Uroš were present at the gala ceremony. Photos are coming soon.

Also yesterday was exactly 6 months since Zemanta was launched! A nice gift indeed.

Linking in old media

Filed under: blogging experience, zemanta — andraz @ 2:42 23. Nov, 2007

imageHow can you tell the difference between articles of big media and blogs?

Large majority of old-media that moved to internet has a very strict rules that they should never ever link to sites outside their conglomerate. If by some coincidence they do, they put all the links at the end of the article and make them as unnoticeable as possible.

The official line is that they are afraid to be held responsible for accuracy of the content they link to. The true reason is that either newspapers and TV-derived sites are trying to prevent their readers leaving or their journalistic staff simply hasn’t caught up with the meaning of the web yet.

I’ve seen a lot of both. From my time at RTV Slovenia I can tell that a lot of journalists (with exceptions!) haven’t grasped the idea of a reader/viewer being able to do basic research on their own. This is somehow excusable, big cultures are slow to absorb new concepts. There is not much that can be done (except waiting). However the first excuse - being afraid of losing readers - is really just an unexcusable strategic mistake.

Not providing to the audience direct links to referenced and relevant documents is actually a missed opportunity to fulfill the real need of curiosity. Missed opportunity to be user’s starting point of inquiry into any topic.

And then media companies complain how search engines are capturing all the users by leveraging other’s people content. Well, it is the media companies that are refusing to be the user’s home base which he can actually leave to explore the wilderness.