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Publishers find the AI era not all that lucrative
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Nov. 1, 2010, 6 p.m.

Links on Twitter: TPM sees mobile traffic bump, Web users don’t like stock photos of people, Foursquare a hit at DC rally

Documentary film director Drea Cooper on visual storytelling and the fine line between journalism and art http://nie.mn/bmovj6 »

The Approval Matrix + the iPad: Highbrow and Brilliant. http://nie.mn/cSNIkh »

"Why confine such a potent idea to one televised event when it could live on so much longer online?" http://nie.mn/bEE4Dk »

MapRoulette? MapCrunch offers a serendipitous slideshow of Google Street View locales http://nie.mn/dbGoqh (via @mathewi) »

What to do with a Twitter star on your staff http://nie.mn/dchFmf »

Ever wondered what a Facebook wall looks like–in real life? Here’s @Mashable‘s http://nie.mn/bkEj49 http://yfrog.com/4xs15p »

This weekend’s Rally for Sanity in DC got nearly 30,000 Foursquare check-ins http://nie.mn/9vHypm »

Fascinating: Web users are drawn to photos of "real people" but ignore stock images of "generic people" http://nie.mn/dz8LO4 (via @zseward) »

TPM now gets about 7% of its total visits from mobile devices–up from 3.5% in Nov 2009 http://nie.mn/d2Mwwx »

Each day, around 1 million new devices—computers, mobile phones, TVs, etc.—are hooked up to the Internet http://nie.mn/cu8xVR »

Blekko, the user-driven search engine, debuts today http://nie.mn/aDJWVo »

POSTED     Nov. 1, 2010, 6 p.m.
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Publishers find the AI era not all that lucrative
“Welcome, surely. Lucrative, in a sense. Game changer? Hardly.”
All eyes are on Brazil
“If humanity is to overcome the unprecedented threat of weaponized disinformation and digital populism, Brazil is an essential fort to be held.”
Embrace the barbell
“It’s time to abandon middling stories and go very short or very long.”