Cincinnati

Cincinnati.com: A letter from the Publisher

From Cincinnati.com: A letter from the Publisher

The Cincinnati Enquirer has been around for 168 years – making it one of the oldest local institutions in Greater Cincinnati – and has survived 19 economic downturns, including the Great Depression. As the local economy recovers, we’ll be around to cover this story too.

Naysayers have predicted our demise many times over those years, but today The Enquirer reaches 64 percent of local adults every week, or 803,800. Enquirer Media does not have an audience problem. Nearly two-thirds of the market will read our newspaper this week. It’s the economy.

This is a nice piece of denial.  Hopefully, this is just their public face, that internally they truly realize the predicament they’re in.  Because blaming the economy and not recognizing the change in the way that the world gets its news is a bit delusional. 

The Enquirer says it reaches 803,800 people a week. But how many of them actually subscribe to the paper?  When was the last time you bought a paper?  If I had a bird or some kind of animal, I might by the paper, but otherwise I’d just read it online because by the time a newspaper is printed, it’s literally yesterday’s news. 

Obviously, there are no easy fixes as newspapers across the country are all dealing with the drop in paid subscribers and ad supported media.  It’s clear that readers of print media are decreasing and the advertising from the internet is not making up the difference.

Layoffs help the bottom line in the short term but doesn’t address the issues facing the paper and may cripple the paper as it tries to find relevance in the internet age.

So, what’s the Enquirer going to be?  Is it going to be a cobbled together collection of newswire stories?  The Cincinnati Enquirer should really be the preeminent source for Cincinnati news.  They should cover local issues exhaustively.  But, often when I want to find out what’s really going on in Cincinnati I often turn to various blogs for news and discussion.  For example, I’m interested in the re-development of Cincinnati and a site like Building Cincinnati has much more extensive information on the goings on in the city than the Enquirer.

Is it too late for the Enquirer?  Maybe. But, I still think there is an important place for traditional media.  The Enquirer still has access that bloggers can only dream about.  With professional reporters, writers, and editors the Enquirer can cover stories full time that most bloggers can not.  But who’s going to pay for the quality of professional reporting?  If ads aren’t enough to sustain the business what are the newspapers going to do?

If the Enquirer is going to make it, I believe that they need to focus on the quality of local reporting. Obsessively cover the important issues and find the unique stories in the city.  Unique and quality content is the key to good readership.  At least then the Enquirer might have a chance.

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How many times do I have to post to get rid of the S*rah P*lin ad?

Google Adwords can be a little annoying at times.  As, most of you know, I’m no fan of S*rah P*lin and blogged about her twice since she was in the news.  And now I get the S*rahPac ad from Adwords being served on the site which kind of makes me look like a supporter.

I’m tired of seeing her face, but the bad thing is that I don’t think I’ll be able to get rid of it until I post enough times to drive it off the page.  Which is what I’m attempting to do now…

Without any success so far.

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Cardstar- carry loyalty cards in your iPhone or iPod touch

CardStarscreenshot.pngEvery day it seems like there’s a new iPhone application that makes life a little easier. 
Cardstar is one of those.  It lets you get rid of your plastic loyalty cards that’s taking space in your wallet or hanging on your key chain. 

Cardstar simply stores and recreates your loyalty cards in your iPhone.  All you have to do is to choose your merchant from a list and enter your id number.  Cardstar generates the barcode that you use when checking out.  Currently there are over 190 companies listed in 7 different categories.

If your store isn’t listed, Cardstar gives you the option of generating different barcodes based on common barcode generating methods.  My gym isn’t one of the businesses listed, but I was able to recreate the barcode by trying different generation methods until I got one that visually matched what is printed on my card.

Here are some tips from the Cardstar FAQ on how best to use Cardstar:

Are there any tips for insuring a successful scan?
1) Make sure the screen is free of dust and fingerprints. The screen MUST be clean in order to scan properly.
2) Keep the screen just shy of perpendicular to the scanner and hold the barcode image steady (don’t wave around).
3) Hold the screen approximately 5-7 inches from the scanning device.
4) Keep the screen in a vertical (portrait) orientation. Only use horizontal (landscape) orientation when the barcode is too wide to display otherwise.

UPDATE 7/13/09
Had trouble using Cardstar at the Cincinnati Public Library.  The barcode scanner at the library is tilted at an angle to make it easier to scan the barcode on books.  If you tilt the iPhone at the proper angle to be scanned, the barcode flips its orientation from vertical to horizontal making it unscanable.

I wrote an email to the developers suggesting a way of locking the direction and they said they’d think about it for the next version.

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NYTimes.com: What Does Your Credit-Card Company Know About You?

From NYTimes.com: What Does Your Credit-Card Company Know About You?

Put another way, credit-card companies are becoming much more interested in understanding their customers’ lives and psyches, because, the theory goes, knowing what makes cardholders tick will help firms determine who is a good bet and who should be shown the door as quickly as possible.

This is an interesting article from May that I somehow missed.  Credit card companies are using your purchases to create a profile on you to determine your credit worthiness by comparing your profile to others.

Related links
Marketplace.publicradio.org : 10 purchases not to put on credit cards
Marketplace.publicradio.org: Credit card companies are watching you
Voxpublica.org: Shop at Walmart? Lower your credit limit.

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MacNN.com: iPhone 3.0 causing unusually rapid battery drain?

From MacNN.com: iPhone 3.0 causing unusually rapid battery drain?

I don’t know if it’s iPhone OS 3.0 causing battery drain, but I do know that GPS and 3G can really use up your battery pretty quickly.  I find that I have to charge my iPhone 3GS more often than my original iPhone, but that may be due to the fact that I’m using my iPhone 3GS a lot more often for things my original iPhone couldn’t do as well or at all.  3G makes surfing usable- a lot better than surfing with EDGE.  Using EDGE for anything more than checking email is painful.

If you’re using GPS a lot, you’ll definitely need a car charger.  Heavy use of the GPS caused my phone to run down within a few hours.  The car charger that I use is the Griffin PowerJolt Redesign Home/Car Charger for iPod and iPhone which works for the iPhone 3GS.

Technology

NYTimes.com: Google Plans a PC Operating System

From NYTimes.com: Google Plans a PC Operating System

The software, called the Google Chrome Operating System, is initially intended for use in the tiny, low-cost portable computers known as netbooks, which have been selling quickly even as demand for other PCs has plummeted. Google said it believed the software would also be able to power full-size PCs.

Google has already developed an open-source operating system called Android that is used in mobile phones. The software is also being built into netbooks by several manufacturers.

But Google has not encouraged netbook makers to use Android. The company appears to be positioning Chrome OS as its preferred operating system for netbooks, though it said competition between the two systems would likely drive innovation.

It seems strange to me that Google is developing two different operating systems for devices that fill pretty much the same space, mobile devices.  If Apple decides to compete against netbooks with a larger touch tablet there’s little doubt that they’d be using the iPhone OS.

Overall, I think that Google feels the need to dabble in a lot of things, but outside of search, things have not always taken off.

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Wiki’s sometimes have the most useless information

Steps 

1. Think of the object used to play with (eg. tennis ball, football) as something that really bugs you, that you really want to hit 

2. Tense yourself, and look for some form of anger. Direct it towards the object. you should feel an adrenalin burst 

3. When the object comes to you, unleash that anger towards that object 

4. More often than not you will hit it, and hit it well.

Seriously, this is advise for improving your reflexes in sport?  I can’t believe that it took 4 people to collaborate on this garbage.


Plus, Yoda would say that this technique leads to the dark side- “Fear is the path to the dark side. Fear leads to angerAnger leads to hate. Hate leads to suffering.”