Category curation

Heading into the future with Dan Dare

Took a trip to the British Science Museum at the weekend to get my fix of sci-fi for free. They have a great exhibition of Dan Dare at the moment, but I was more intrigued by the Eili Baki artwork once again. Photos below along with loads of other 50s paraphernalia.

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Enki Bilal in the studio

Months ago I went with my nephew and nieces to the National Science museum in London. In it they this interesting wall where they had curated a whole a host of artifacts and memorbilia to demonstrate how technology impacts culture. Really impressive.

This is when I discovered Enki Bilal, the French comic book creator. This led me to watch the film Immortal which was absolutely terrible, but his designs are so inspirational. Reminds me of some of the best artists of 2001 AD.

Anyway, I’ve found a video for you to watch where he’s working in his studio so you can see for yourselves. Hope you enjoy it.

Online news, online curation and Google Books

Yesterday three great things happened. Firstly, I became a member of the Online News Association. I don’t write news as part of my role here at MSN, but I have some involvement with the daily entertainment news desk which is run by our brilliant Senior Editor Colleen Last. There may be the whole debate about ‘is curation actually journalism’ but, as a publisher, we are still responsible for the the news we serve up, be it from PA or Reuters. So the same strict attention to detail is part of the process. Plus, visitors will always vote with their feet, or eyeballs if the news is late or lame.

Anyway, I’ve joined ONA to give me a further insight into the complexities of news reporting. I’ve only been to the one session so far with guest speaker Guido Fawkes, but that was good enough. I look forward to loads more interesting debates.

The second great thing that happened this week – Mike Ward, head of the Department of Journalism at the University of Central Lancashire, visited us. It was good to exchange questions and get a little closer to the issues he is involved in. At MSN I’ve taken for granted the multi-tasked nature of our roles. We don’t have the formal structures that, say, a newspaper might adopt in an online team. If a team member has the talent (or inclination) then they might be writing blogs, shooting and editing video, recording podcasts, scripting shows etc. Does this produce a Jack of all trades master of none? I think it encourages editors to think about the different ways they can tell a story with the tools that are available to them. But, Mike certainly got me thinking about the expectations we place on journalists to get the job done.

Lastly, in the evening I attended a session on ‘Google and the Digitisation of Books’ organised by the Stationer’s Company. Here, Santiago de la Mora discussed Google’s strategy in this area and details around the Google Book settlement issue. Very interesting and left me with the following questions:

  • Will the settlement result in Google actually getting a copyright agreement passed into US law?
  • Will Google start to charge for these books?
  • Will Google adopt a DRM approach to digitalisation? If so, look what DRM did for the music industry with disastrous consequences.
  • Will Google start providing a commercial digitalisation service where companies can use their technology, but not their distribution network?

So, there you go. Three great things. All I need to do is top that today and I’ll be lined up for an excellent weekend. Until next time.

All in all it’s just another brick in the wall…

Now that’s a rather depressing title for a blog post isn’t it – casting all manner of associations, not least of which might include a psychedelic rock band from the 1970s. But that’s not what I mean at all. In fact I was merely referencing the fantastic work that has been carried out on MSN UK recently – an entire redesign no less – documented on our ‘Wide Page’ wall as the photo below clearly illustrates.

PIC 0045 thumb All in all it’s just another brick in the wall…

I’ve taken this photo because this week i will be removing these print-outs to replace them with some SEO best practice guides for our Editors to view. Once ‘actioned’ I will document the occasion in a photo and then drastically change the title of this blog to widen my potential reach beyond that of Pink Floyd fans.

But saying that, I do love Pink Floyd so please feel free to enjoy the following video:

Jeremy Clarkson on MSN Cars

You may not have seen our World of Jeremy Clarkson special that we have running in MSN Cars at the moment. Apart from detailing everything you could possibilly want to know about ‘he of tight denim’, it also features a fantastic question and answer interview the MSN Cars team threw at him.

I love the relentlessness of this video. It starts sensibly enough, but as the questions become more leftfield you can almost see Jeremy thinking ‘oh my god, what’s coming next?’

Nice one to the Cars team for putting this together.

(click on image below to launch video clip)

image21 Jeremy Clarkson on MSN Cars

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