Christmas is upon us all, but you’d be hard-pressed to tell it from the rate that various Spannerworkers are cranking out blog entries.
On Wednesday, Arjo Ghosh heralded the arrival of Spannerworks’ very own spider, as ‘Spiderman’ Alain Robert scaled the outside of our 27-floor London building. The weekend before, however, he was wondering whether the Knol project meant he would be forced to take sides between Wikipedia and Google in a battle for the world’s information.
“Personally I think that Google will make Knol earn its place in natural results fairly,” he concluded, “but at a cost to commercially orientated websites, many of which have been forced to invest more into the Adwords campaigns over the past few years as a result of algorithm tweaks.”
Such thoughts haven’t been troubling Antony Mayfield, who many of us in Content & Media suspect of knowing the world’s information in the first place. As if to underline the point, he’s produced a impressive 11 posts on Open in the last fortnight, covering topics as diverse as Channel 4’s education programming, a military influence on the language of marketing, and, er, dining in Didcot.
Nilhan Jayasinghe has been a little quieter than Antony, but he notes a subtle but important change to the way Google regards subdomains, now treating them in the same way as subfolders on the main domain.
Antony’s also been covering a topic dear to the hearts of Spannerworks’ journalists: the ongoing rumblings at the NUJ as it struggles to keep pace with the changes in the trade. He explains that, in his lecture to a post-graduate class at the Cardiff School of Journalism:
“One of the things I hope I got across was the amazing opportunities that the web presents for doing things differently and for going direct to (attention) market with interesting ideas and approaches.
“Makes me wonder what the role of a union is in this age for journalists. Should it be to focus on employers and policies or ways of encouraging journalistic enterprise?”
Still on the subject of journalism, Charlie Peverett has been taking corporations to task for hijacking the language of environmentalism. He wonders on Hackbash whether it’s time that journalists got a little “strict with the terminology”:
“Organisations are falling over themselves to say that they’re ‘going green’. They may mean that they’re carbon-offsetting their transatlantic travel or sourcing their food locally or have recently insulated their loft space.
“But when organisations that have taken a few small steps to modify their own profoundly unsustainable behaviour are labelled ‘green’, by themselves or others, we should put our feet down.”
So, with many Spannerworkers looking forward to a week off after an amazing year, we bid you a happy Christmas – at least Dax Hammond has entered into the festive spirit, although we’re not sure Raymond Briggs would approve of IRN-BRU’s take on his Snowman classic.















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