The Annotated New York Times
Interesting site that tracks blog entries that cite the NY Times.
Category: By-Pass The Media
Blog as TV Station..
My TV Station
Phil Shapiro calls his blog “My TV Station”. Not sure it is a TV station but does deal quite a bit with community media and digital technology.. Good stuff. Can’t find the RSS feed though.
When everyone is media, no one is
Scripting News: 2/2/2005
Dave writes:
When everyone is media, no one is 
1. Everything these days is media.
2. All media is technology and vice versa. The convergence everyone was buzzing about in the early 90s has happened. It’s behind us. There is no separation between media and technology.
…
I disagree:
The telephone company isn’t media now and people who call each other aren’t producing media (although an argument can be made). Perhaps he is just arguing an extreme.
Stay Free! now has a blog
Stay Free! Daily
The tag line:
Periodic ramblings from Stay Free!, a Brooklyn magazine focused on American media and culture
NYTimes on WikiNews
NY Public Access – Open for all
New York Daily News – City Life – You could be a star
From the article:
Community-access television gives ordinary New Yorkers
a chance to be the next Jay, Dave or Oprah
TiVo releases Java based Open Source Platform for building applications
TiVo Home Media Engine SDK
I am sold.. Unfortuantely things are looking bad for the company. I think I will bite anyway.. This is the kind of thing that I think can turn a company around.
Dan G.’s New Blog
Dan Gillmor on Grassroots Journalism, Etc.
Since Dan has left the San Jose Mercury News, he has created a new blog. Can’t wait to hear more about his new venture.
VLOGGERCON IS ON
Archive.org – Movies
Internet Archive: Moving Image Archive
Everything from the Prelinger Archives to Open Source Movies (created and uploaded by the community).
From the site:
About the Movie Archive
This collection is free and open for everyone to use.
Our goal in digitizing these movies and putting them online is to provide easy access to a rich and fascinating core collection of archival films.
By providing near-unrestricted access to these films, we hope to encourage widespread use of moving images in new contexts by people who might not have used them before.