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"There also is a substantial gap between journalism and computer science. Too many journalists don't respect technology development as a creative activity — they think developers should just build stuff they want. Too many technologists don't respect journalism as an intellectual activity — they think journalists just pump out content for their algorithms to process. Too many journalists really don't like technology change; they blame it for hurting media businesses, threatening their livelihoods and diminishing the quality of news available in local communities. Too many technologists think it's not their job to worry about the negative impact of technology innovation on media companies and journalism — and when they do think about the consequences, think only about information at the national and global level (which is broader, deeper and more accessible than ever) and not at the local level (where online news ventures rarely do the kind of original reporting that newspapers do)."
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"Amy Gahran, my fellow Knight News Challenge winner, blogged this week about the need for journalism schools to collaborate with computer science programs, but I know from experience that it's difficult to make such collaborations equally valuable for students and faculty in both disciplines. In part, this is because journalists and programmers have different ideas about what kinds of problems are interesting to solve."
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"Could terrorists use Twitter, the instant messaging and micro-blogging service? Presumably so, just as they could use credit cards and can openers."
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Too, too funny….
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Wanna learn more about the semantic web? David Herrold and Brian Boyer say this site is also a good place to start.
