Michael Becker

April 29th, 2010 by

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Meeting of the minds

April 29th, 2010 by

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To host or to be a host

April 29th, 2010 by

Yesterday, one of our editors sent an e-mail to the newsroom regarding style issues. And it brought up a host of questions.

For those who aren’t keen on “style” as it pertains to writing, style is a word we use to describe the particular way we write things. It can be related to grammar or spelling or punctuation. It can even be related to personal preference in some cases.

For example, the Associated Press tells us not to use the Oxford comma in lists and that we should spell out numbers below 10. We also know, thanks to our local style guide, that in Bozeman it’s properly written as Peets Hill.

These style e-mails come around from time to time as a matter of course. However, this e-mail had one note that I knew couldn’t be right.

hosting 1.png

The editor said flat-out that host can’t be a verb. The problem is that our AP Stylebook has no entry for host. And, as all good AP Style-abiding reporters know, that means that the fallback dictionary must provide an answer — and by dictionary, I mean Webster’s New World College Dictionary, fourth edition, the dictionary of the Associated Press.

I’ll paraphrase the entry for host:

  1. noun, one who entertains guests
  2. noun, a person who keeps an inn or hostel
  3. noun, a country or area that provides a place or services for events
  4. noun, an organism in which a parasite lives
  5. noun, a main or central computer
  6. verb, to act as a host

In addition, someone had already asked this question of the Associated Press editors, and the AP answer was posted to the website:

hosting 2.png

I had the editor dead to rights. When presented with all this evidence — I respectfully waited until the editor had been in the office for a full five minutes first — the editor recanted. Victory!

OK, maybe it’s not as exciting as all that, but sometimes language issues get passionate. It’s just part of the business, I guess.

Montana Tech students' personal information accidentally mass e-mailed

April 29th, 2010 by

Personal information for 267 former Montana Tech students was accidentally e-mailed to the entire campus last week, KBZK reports.

The e-mail, sent on April 22, contained names, Social Security numbers, addresses, phone numbers and birthdates of students who took part in an undergraduate research program from 1998 to 2006, KBZK’s report said.

The college’s chancellor, Frank Gilmore, said in a written statement:

We have recalled the email message, reviewed procedures to ensure that a similar incident does not occur in the future, and investigated methods to protect the credit of those affected. The university is working diligently to address problems caused by this incident and any further implications it might have.

Of course, as the college acknowledges in its letter to the affected students, the message can only be partially recalled.

Tech is offering to pay for some security measures to help people make sure their identities are safe. The college also provided the former students with a guide to what they should do next.

Funny thing about this, I think, is the Web address the college chose to use for this accident: http://www.mtech.edu/incident/.

There’s some truth in advertising for you.

Georgia newsroom saving money by replacing paper scripts with iPads

April 28th, 2010 by
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Photo from Poynter/Al Tompkins

A newsroom in Albany, Ga., will save thousands of dollars a year in printing costs by using iPads instead of paper scripts, Al Tompkins at Poynter reports.

Check out the photo, which shows how much paper the iPad saves in a single day. Follow the link for the full interview with news director Terry Graham.

U.S. Generals: PowerPoint is the real enemy

April 28th, 2010 by

The New York Times had a story a couple of days ago about the evils of PowerPoint, as it relates to the U.S. military.

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A screenshot of Microsoft PowerPoint (from Wikipedia)

It seems that more than a few officers spend a disproportionate amount of time making PowerPoint slides for military briefings and press conferences.

Not only is this inefficient but military leaders told the Times that reducing issues to bullet points can give everyone involved a dangerously simple view of what are often far more complex situations.

Military matters aside, how many of you out there have far more experience with PowerPoint than you’d like?

The poetry of Twitter, or the significance of what you had for breakfast

April 27th, 2010 by

Twitter: Millions use it to broadcast tiny bits of thought and notes about their days to other Twitter users around the world.

Some see these often inane and uninteresting dispatches as proof of Twitter’s worthlessness, but not Robert Bennet and Ben Leubner.

The two Montana State University English professors see strong ties between Twitter and some of the best poetry of the past century.

About 35 people attended the professors’ mid-April talk on the “Poetics of Twittering,” held in conjunction with National Poetry Month.

“We thought it was a way for people to see a connection between poetry and what they’re doing in their daily lives,” Bennett said.

Critics of Twitter, like political analyst William Bradley, say they don’t want tweets about a person’s breakfast interrupting their day.

Bradley wrote, “If someone … demands to tell me about their desire for a baked potato and a viewing of ‘The Singing Nun,’ I’m not too happy.”

But Leubner argues that a tweet about this morning’s breakfast can be about more than simply waffles and orange juice.

“We see something deeper in the idea of what you had for breakfast,” he said.

As an example, Bennett notes poet Frank O’Hara, who often wrote in a style prescient of Twitter, as in his 1964 book “Lunch Poems.”

In “A Step Away from Them,” O’Hara describes the sights seen on a lunch-hour walk: people eating, cabs driving, a bargain wristwatch.

“A glass of papaya juice and back to work. My heart is in my pocket, it is Poems by Pierre Reverdy,” O’Hara wrote.

“There’s this idea that art has to be deep and abstract and about Greek mythology,” Bennett said. “Yeah, that’s one kind of art, but not the only kind.”

Twitter is an appropriate medium for our fast-paced modern times, Leubner says, Plus, it can be a gateway to writing and reading poetry.

“You should take the material of your life and turn it into something interesting,” he said.

“There’s a real challenge to tweeting. You have to say something important and say it quickly,” Bennett said.

“Instead of telling the kids to quit tweeting and go to school, we should teach them to be more thoughtful in their tweeting,” he said.

Further reading: The professors suggest O’Hara, Lawrence Ferlinghetti and the beat poets as good starting points for “daily life” poetry.

Michael Becker always wants story ideas. Reach him at 582-2657, becker@dailychronicle.com or on Twitter at @superjaberwocky.

More updates coming…

April 27th, 2010 by

I’ve been a little lax in updating the blog for a few days now. Blame it on some family matters keeping me occupied all weekend and out of the office Monday and half of today. I’ll get back into the groove quite soon.

Oh, and I started playing World of Warcraft again. No doubt, plenty of discipline will be required to keep me in the habit of blogging regularly. However, if you happen to be on the Turalyon server, look me up. My player’s name is Kirke.

Point of discussion: Should the Chronicle put promotional updates on its Facebook page?

April 26th, 2010 by

Social networking has been much on our company’s mind lately, so much so that I’m part of a corporate committee that meets regularly to talk about issues relating to Facebook, Twitter and other social media matters.

One of the issues that’s come up of late is how to use Facebook to the utmost benefit. If you “like” the Chronicle on Facebook (and if you don’t why not toss us some love), then you know we post links to our stories there several times each day. We also post photos, videos, bulletins and other newsy material as needed.

So far, the material we’ve put onto Facebook has been just that: newsy. The question before our committee is whether we should allow other types of content onto our wall.

Of course, I’m talking about advertising in one for or another.

The discussion is not about whether to put pure ads into the Facebook stream. That idea doesn’t have a lot of traction. No, the notion here is whether to advertise some of the newspaper’s promotions in the Facebook feed.

For example, say the newspaper started offering a groupon-like promotion. One member of the committee suggested that this is just the sort of thing that our fans likers on Facebook would want to know about; hence, we should put it in the feed.

It’s not an ad for someone else. It’s an ad for a service or promotion the paper is offering. That’s the point of discussion between members of the committee, some of whom feel that any self-promotion will violate the pure news stream and push our likers away (and cost us their trust to boot).

So I put the question to you, readers. What do you think the Chronicle should do? Should we allow promotional messages into our Facebook feed, or should we keep it all news and notes?

Weekend Reading: Guides to Facebook's recent changes

April 23rd, 2010 by

This week, Facebook made some changes to the way it interacts with other websites. The changes make it easier for third-party sites to personalize themselves for visitors who happen to also be Facebook members.

facebook-logo5.jpgOf course, this raised privacy issues, especially when it comes to sites that aren’t Facebook using Facebook users’ data for any reason.

If you want to read up on these changes and some of the concerns about them, may I recommend: