Sunday, August 4, 2019
Journalism On The Internet Essay -- Media Journalism Web Cyberspace Es
Journalism on the Internet      The common forms of media in today's world each have both advantages and  disadvantages. The Internet has been around for an almost equal amount of time  as most of them, but only recently has it become a popular way of retrieving  information. The Internet takes the best of all other medium and combines them  into a very unique form. The Internet is the best way to retrieve information.  This combination of paper publishing, TV, radio, telephones, and mail is the  future of communications. The internet has several types of journalism which can  be defined into three sections. One section is online magazines, online  broadcasting, and other online services. The next group is resource files and  web pages. The third is discussion groups/forums and e-mail. I will investigate  these areas of the net, showing the advantages and disadvantages of each in  comparison to the conventional forms.    In order to understand what all these topics are you must first understand  what the internet is. The simple answer is that it is computers all over the  globe connected together by telephone wires. It was first made by the military,  "No one owns the Internet", to have a network with no centre. That way it could  never be destroyed by nuclear war. Since then, universities have used it and it  has evolved into what it is today. It is a library that contains mail, stories,  news advertising, and just about everything else. "In a sense, freenets are a  literacy movement for computer mediated communication today, as public libraries  were to reading for an earlier generation." Now that the term "the net" is  understood lets look at some sections of the net.    An online magazine is a computer that lets users access it through the net.  This computer stores one or more magazines which users can read. "PC magazine  and other magazines are available on the Web" "Maclean's Magazine and Canadian  Business online; and Reuters' Canadian Newsclips." This form is much better that  conventional publishing, "we are using the online service to enhance the print  magazine", for several reasons. It is environmentally safe, "Publish without  Paper", most are free, "$50 a month on CompuServe", you can get any article from  any year at the touch of a button, and you can search for key words. "Search  engines make it easy pinpointing just the information you nee...              ..., p.  20    Chris Carder, "Sports on the Internet a winner", Toronto Computes, November,  (1995), P. 98    Chris Carder, "Sports on the Internet a winner", Toronto Computes, November,  (1995), P. 98    Patrick McKenna, "Netscape's Digital Envelope For Internet Transactions", The  Computer Paper, September, (1995), p. 90    Patrick McKenna, "Netscape's Digital Envelope For Internet Transactions", The  Computer Paper, September, (1995), p. 90    Michael J. Miller, "Where Do I Want to Go Today", PC Magazine, March 28, (1995),  P. 75    Doug Bennet, "Confessions of an online publisher", Toronto Computes, November  (1995), p. 37    Michael J. Miller, "Where Do I Want to Go Today", PC Magazine, March 28, (1995),  P. 75    Bill Kempthorne, "Internet, So What?", The Computer Paper, September, (1995), p.  21    Bill Kempthorne, "Internet, So What?", The Computer Paper, September, (1995), p.  21    Bill Kempthorne, "Internet, So What?", The Computer Paper, September, (1995), p.  21    Sorelle Saidman, "Online Canadian Content Expanding despite Prodigy Setback",  Toronto Computes, November, (1995), p. 9    Bill Kempthorne, "Internet, So What?", The Computer Paper, September, (1995), p.  22                         
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