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Al Tompkins, Poynter faculty member


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A dozen sites
I'm diggin'


1. The Las Vegas Sun has a crew driving to the Democratic National Convention and is filing multimedia stories along the way.

2. I have never seen anything like this amazing "Swan Lake" performance. [Flash]

3. The Livescribe Pulse Smartpen links written notes with audio. Cool for journalists and students.

4. An educator friend of mine in Lebanon reports that citizen- generated news is all the rage in Arab countries.

5. Wow, look at The (Shreveport, La.) Times' Olympic coverage. Impressive.

6. Here are photos of folks learning Soundslides in Poynter's recent seminar "Multimedia for College Educators." We'll offer this twice in 2009, in February and July.

7. ProPublica uses graphics to show the human cost of war. (See related graphics here.)

8. A spray-on waterproof coating for electronics. If this stuff really works like they say (watch the videos) it will save a lot of gear.

9. This very cool hurricane site includes live cams, a tracking map, historical maps and live radio from landfall.

10. Cake Wrecks: when professional cakes go horribly wrong.

11. This is my current home page.

12. Who killed Chandra Levy? The Washington Post spent a year looking for new clues and insights and presents its findings in a 13-part series.

All of my Diggin' sites are saved on Poynter's del.icio.us page.



Editor's Note: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium of ideas, edited story excerpts and other materials from a variety of Web sites, as well as original concepts and analysis. When the information comes directly from another source, it will be attributed and a link will be provided whenever possible. The column is fact-checked, but depends on the accuracy and integrity of the original sources cited. Errors and inaccuracies found will be corrected.





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Stateline.org points out something that, frankly, I had not considered. States that have rushed to become among the first to cast 2008 primary votes [PDF] are not just moving up their primaries; they are moving up their early balloting as well. A third of all votes cast in 2008 could be absentee or early votes, an election watcher tells Stateline.org. The ballots will have to go out soon -- so we could be about 16 weeks from the first votes being cast.

Stateline.org says:

Overlooked in the hullabaloo over states’ scrambling to be first in line to choose nominees for the White House is the impact the compressed calendar will have on early and absentee voting.
 
Voters in California, Arizona and New Jersey could be casting ballots to choose nominees for the White House barely a week after most Americans are sweeping the confetti from 2008 New Year's celebrations.
 
"People think [states] are just moving the primary up. No. They are moving their entire election processes up," Donna Brazile, chair of the Democratic National Committee’s Voting Rights Institute and formerly Vice President Al Gore's campaign manager, told Stateline.org. That means some states will have to have their ballots printed and ready to mail as early as December, she said.
 
California's election officials expect to start mailing ballots on Dec. 27 to voters who requested them, while New Jersey and Tennessee are among states planning to do the same in within the first week of January before their Feb. 5 presidential primaries. Early in-person voting begins Jan. 10 in Arizona. Absentee ballots for military personnel are mailed weeks ahead of those dates.



Coast Guard to Withhold Rescue Information

The Navy Times reports that the Coast Guard has decided to withhold the names of people it rescues after the active search is over. The ruling stems from a request a couple of years ago by a Cleveland Plain Dealer journalist who wanted to know if the Coast Guard was, as rumor had it, rescuing the same people year after year -- people who put themselves in peril when ice fishing. 

I can't imagine what the Coast Guard is thinking in claiming that these records should not be available by a Freedom of Information Act request. Generally, rescue records of civilians are not covered by medical privacy laws. Could there be some Department of Homeland Security exemption because the Coast Guard is part of the military?

If you have any experience with this kind of case, please tell us about it in the reader feedback section of this column.



Whoops -- Not Whooping Cough

Remember all those 2006 reports about a big jump in whooping cough cases around the country? Thousands of people ended up on antibiotics, and one New Hampshire hospital even limited admissions for awhile. Now we learn that a lab test commonly used to diagnose the condition misdiagnosed cases -- and it is possible there has been no big increase in whooping cough cases.



Facebook, with Wrinkles


The International Herald Tribune of Paris mentions a new twist in the world of social networks:

Technology investors and entrepreneurs, long obsessed with connecting to teenagers and 20-somethings, are starting a host of new social networking sites targeting their parents and grandparents. The sites have names like Eons, ReZoom, Multiply, Maya's Mom, BOOMj and Boomertown.




Al's Morning Multimedia -- Removing the Highest Toilet


The New York Times does a terrific job with a story about how there used to be a high-altitude toilet on California's Mount Whitney, but now rangers are issuing Wagbags: personal waste disposal bags that hikers must carry with them. The video that accompanies the article gives you an idea of why the new strict (some would say overly strict) policy is being put in place.

Usually I like videos to be raw and less-produced, but this one works very well because it gives the reader an experience that is in addition to, not a repeat of, the newspaper story. That is the key with online content -- it is not about giving more information, it is about providing a multi-sensory experience.


We are always looking for your great ideas. Send Al a few sentences and hot links.

Editor's Note: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium of ideas, edited story excerpts and other materials from a variety of Web sites, as well as original concepts and analysis. When the information comes directly from another source, it will be attributed and a link will be provided whenever possible. The column is fact-checked, but depends on the accuracy and integrity of the original sources cited. Errors and inaccuracies found will be corrected.


Posted at 5:21:33 PM

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