Kingsport’s Harvard Innovation in Government Award featured in informative documentary

Posted by dcate | Posted in Business, Downtowns, GoTriCities, Kingsport, Kingsport History, Media/Journalism, Regional History, Tri-Cities Business, Video | Posted on 16-12-2009

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Last week, our team at Times Digital Group completed a documentary which celebrates the recent 2009 Harvard Innovation in Government Award presented to the City of Kingsport earlier in the year. This excellent presentation features interviews with city leaders and describes the ideas and passion that helped earn this recognition and we were glad to be a part of this year’s celebration.

Battle of the Borgs – Microsoft/Google battle over Twitter/Facebook

Posted by dcate | Posted in Media/Journalism, Social Media, Technology, Web | Posted on 22-10-2009

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tugofwarThe battle for search continues to heat up as Twitter and Facebook find themselves in the middle of a tug-of-war between Microsoft and Google.

On Wednesday afternoon Microsoft was first to the press with their announcement at the Web 2.0 conference in San Francisco on Wednesday that their new Bing search engine will index both Facebook and Twitter updates.

In the Information Week article, Qi Lu and Yusuf Mehdi, SVP of the Microsoft’s online audience business, made the announcement.

“We are going to get access to all of the public Twitter information in real-time,” said Mehdi.

A beta of the new version of Bing with Twitter data, referred to by Mehdi as “Bing Wave Two,” should go live shortly. Facebook integration, he said, would come later.

You can view the new Bing app here, but I still prefer the Twitter interface for real-time search.

In a foreboding comment, he also stated, “Microsoft’s search goal of understanding user intent, an aim he likened to building “a mind reader.”

I’m not sure that’s the most positive statement for the VP’s to roll out. After all, it’s most common to refer to Microsoft as “The Borg.”

I’ll hand it to Microsoft though. Even though they don’t have a system in place yet, they made a good PR power play to bring more awareness to the Google competitor.

Google made a quick move too. Later in the day, they also announced their search engine would index Twitter’s content too. They didn’t say anything about Facebook, but they did trump the idea their new service would out-perform Bing by rendering faster results with greater accuracy. It wasn’t that long ago Google was rumored to buy Twitter which is now valued at $1 billion.

What was more intriguing for me was what happened after I read the press release.

Almost immediately after I saw the announcement on Twitter, I “retweeted” the news out to my followers and less than 15 minutes later a Google Alert arrived in my email’s inbox.

I monitor various keywords from Google and everytime someone enters a new topic with my name…boom…they send me an email. I monitor a number of topics of interest and it was surprising to see my Twitter comment work its way through Google so quickly for the first time.

This was an interesting announcement for both companies and the integration of this content gives significant credo to both social media services.

Real-time search is a hot topic right now. Unfortunately, after the balloon boy instance last week, I’m starting to question real-time information and still appreciate a journalist who checks his facts.

Although Twitter and Facebook content will now appear in both of the major search engines, I’m compelled to consider the entropy for both systems too.

As things get bigger and more information like Twitter and Facebook content floods the two search engines, how relevant and effective will search be in the future? Will it become too cluttered to find what you’re looking for?

Who knows, maybe there’s room for a new concept in search where some company comes up with a search engine for relative topics? Instead of being the borg, perhaps we’ll see search in the future that focuses only on specific interests alone.

Google still accounts for the majority references for search inquiries here at Times-News Online.

Last month, references from Google represented almost 20% of our online traffic, while Bing came in below Yahoo references at 3%. There’s no doubt Bing is stealing some of the audience and hopefully this competition will lead to a better user experience for everyone.

Which search engine do you prefer? Do you have a personal favorite?

So long email, you can keep the spam!

Posted by dcate | Posted in Business, Media/Journalism, Social Media, Technology, This and That | Posted on 15-10-2009

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Email had a good run, but it’s been broke for a long time and very soon, it may be a thing of the past.

Most of the business world took notice this weekend when the Wall Street Journal made obvious predictions based on some of the communication movements over the past few months. With a headline that reads “Why Email No Longer Rules,” reporter Jessica Vascellaro opened the eyes of corporate America that email may be riding into the sunset.
From pony express to the telegraph, snail mail and email, we are shifting again toward new forms of media delivery using social services that are highly personal. They also give you more control over who you’re talking to and deliver the message almost as quick as a thought.
There are two important disruptions driving this change – spam and the new social tools like Facebook, Twitter, Internet forums and inventive new applications like Googlewave.
The word spam was derived from the SPAM sketch on the BBC by Monty Python’s Flying Circus. Of course, we all recognize the little blue can that serves as a mystery meat, but the term really refers to those pesky unsolicited emails we receive from Viagra to pleas from third-world lottery winners.
Over the past several years, spam has riddled the Internet. So much so that PC magazine reports worldwide spam now makes up 86% of all email.
There’s a lucrative industry that has spawned to battle spam. There are servers and software that can be purchased for a front-line defense against this war. Our company manages email accounts for hundreds of users and just like the national average, we’re blocking some 90% of the garbage – but these devices are hardly a silver bullet.
It’s an expensive and time-consuming game of cat and mouse too because as spammers conjure more sophisticated tactics to pollute the service, you have to constantly update and build defenses. Eventually these obtrusive acts will absorb both profits and resources to maintain any reliable service.

So there’s a question of trust with regard to email. I really only want to receive communications that are relevant and that’s where social media tools offer a disruption to electronic mail.

New reports from Nielsen indicate that Americans now spend over 68 hours per month online.

That doesn’t include those who suffer from Internet addiction, but this average is almost half of television research which reports over 168 hours per month. Together, that’s over 220 hours of time in front of a screen!

One of the fastest growing activities on the Net is the explosion of social media websites like Myspace, Facebook and Twitter – not to mention YouTube.
Unlike email, these new services allow you to share direct connections with people and groups from family to friends. Instead of an open system that accepts email from the universe, you control the filters and who can send you updates.
It’s very personal too. The friends on my Facebook account are more connected than every before. It’s like a family reunion though and lacks the depth of intimacy of dinner or a glass of wine, but this informal gathering is engaging and addictive with its virtual voyeurism.
Even Twitter has become a valuable resource for short messages. My brother and his family use this text-messaging tool quite often to shout out brief updates. Best of all, it’s a poetic medium that requires an economy of words delivered in 140 character thoughts. Perfect for the busy lifestyle.
Social media services are fast too.
Downloading email used to be a real pain. Anyone who’s ever returned to the office after a lengthy vacation knows what I’m talking about too. There’s so much junk between the relative communications that it’s easy to overlook important messages altogether.
The social media tools live and breath now on an “always-on” culture. With the growth of broadband connections, you don’t have to wait for email to download. You can watch it stream in real time on your screen anywhere you have access.
Beyond Facebook and Twitter, there are several new apps on the way that promise even more connectivity and speed. I’m still waiting for my Tricorder like Star Trek or better yet, the Dick Tracy watchband, but in the meantime, there’s a new generation of software already available for free.
Earlier this week, I received my invitation to Googlewave. This innovative new service is a software resource Google was trumping several months ago. It took several months for them to open the doors, but after a few days of playing with the tools and watching their training videos, it hasn’t lived up to the hype. However, it does reveal itself as another death nail in the coffin of email.
Googlewave is a dashboard application that combines email, documents, chat and file sharing all into one screen. It works in realtime too and once again, it’s a closed system, perfect for a collaborative environment. Wanna send something to someone in your network? Create a “wave” and watch it happen in real time.
Software like this will continue to evolve and even though email may die a slow death, it will still be around for a while. After all, we’re still sending faxes aren’t we? Some people still use a CB radio too, but just like my telephone land line, email may be a service I can do without in the near future.
I still remember the day I stopped buying stamps and it’s not that often I walk to my mailbox anymore either. Licking those envelopes is something that can gladly stay in the past too. So thank you email for making us more productive and leading our way into the digital lifestyle, but the happiest thought I can imagine is leaving the spam in the cupboard.
As for getting in touch with me, check out my Facebook account and follow me on Twitter. That’s where the best of friends and family are hanging out today.
@davidcate
http://www.facebook.com/davidcate

Kingsport reports Zombie activity and gets Jimmy Fallon’s attention on NBC

Posted by dcate | Posted in Kingsport, Kingsport History, Media/Journalism, Television, The Bad & Ugly, This and That | Posted on 07-08-2009

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Unfortunately, it’s not always the glamorous news stories that bring attention to our hometown here in Kingsport. In fact, like most viral Internet stories, it’s the sensational or stupid stories that seem to attract the most attention

In the past we’ve caught attention for a variety of stories that were laughable and hardly glamorous here at Times-News.

Last week, we logged another “Dubious Achievement Award” for Kingsport, Tennessee and our tech folks saw plenty of traffic on a news story involving a shoplifter who bit a Walmart employee.

We first started to see Kingsport pop-up in the Twitter Universe with headlines from a parody website that reports on “Zombie activity” across the nation.

Did you know Kingsport was under an amber alert this past week too as the Zombie Nation caught wind of the headline?

I was surprised too when I heard popular late-night talk show host Jimmy Fallon refer to the story too in his Monday night monologue on NBC. Fortunately, he left out the town’s name, but he did reference the story.

Fallons comments are here at the 4.00 time marker.

He states…”In Tennessee, A Walmart employee was bitten while trying to fend off a shoplifter. Fortunately, since it was a Walmart employee, there were no teeth involved.”

We must be thankful for the small things I presume and like they say – Any press is good press – or is it?

fallon

Twitter and social media fuel protests in Iran

Posted by dcate | Posted in Media/Journalism, Technology, Web | Posted on 16-06-2009

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Recent news from Iran is intriguing and the most interesting aspect about this global topic is how social media services like Twitter and YouTube are helping to fuel a revolution.

Over the weekend, a major election in Iran between hard-liner Mahmoud Ahmadinejad and his opponent Mir Hossein Moussavi erupted with claims of voter fraud.

The election was Friday, but there really wasn’t too much online about the event until Sunday. That’s when I thought about turning on the television to feed my curiosity, but instead of switching on the tube, I decided to explore what people were saying on Twitter.

Twitter is a fascinating new Internet micro-blogging service that has caught my interest over the past several weeks and almost immediately I could see a firestorm brewing. In particular, Twitter users were criticizing CNN for lack of coverage about this important historical event.

User were posting short-messages using what is called a “hash-tag” method and writing comments with the phrase “#CNNfail” to complain about the lack of coverage. A search of this tag revealed thousands of protests.

Most people who question Twitter’s relevance wonder why anyone would use this service to inform others about breakfast, but it’s much more important than that because Twitter is reshaping the Internet with “real time searching.”

Twitter’s unique distinction is the ability to look up any subject and see what’s being said right now and by using the phrase “#CNNfail” before online comments, users probably influenced CNN’s coverage because the rest of the night was spent in features and debate about the situation.

picture-34When you sign up for a Twitter account, the home page has a Top 10 index of topics that are being discussed on Twitter. In a glance, you can see what the “Twitterverse” is talking about and right now, the buzz is all about Iran.

When using Twitter, you can only publish 140 characters of commentary, but that’s enough, because Twitter is an incredibly efficient channel for the ground war in this torn country. Students, protesters and reformers from Tehran are publishing messages via Twitter that point to cell phone photos, blogs, videos and all kinds of information from the inside out.

It only takes a few seconds for hundreds of new Twitter comments to pile in on your browser. As you refresh the screen new details are keeping the major media sites tuned in as photos of club-toting vigilantes on motorcycles beat citizens and even journalists lives are at risks as they attempt to cover this revolution.

Below are a couple of the recent street videos and be warned, these are both gripping and unsettling.

The government in Iran has made every attempt to shut down all reports revoking visas and shutting down sites like Friendster, Facebook and others. Their attempts to darken this breaking news story is futile though because the streets are in control of the media now and the regime will have a hard time keeping this one under cover.

It’s hard to keep up with all the information via Twitter, but the service provides a deluge of information to explore and it’s obvious the media giants are watching this channel with the rest of the world. Furthermore, CNN, Wired Magazine and New York Times all agree that Twitter has played a influential role in this current wave of political activism. See the links below, or visit Twitter today and click on the search topic #Iranelection to view what’s happening…right now.

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Twitter’s growth has been in an meteoric upward graph for the past several months.

They were hoping to take a break last night to run some maintenance for about 90 minutes. However, Twitter users convinced the service to delay their scheduled downtime to ensure that citizens in Iran had a window to voice the events taking place in their country. It was a good move and brought on by users who suggested the extension using the hashtag “#nomaintenance” throughout the day on Monday.

The downside of the real-time functions of Twitter is accuracy and filters. Breaking stories, images and comments coming from cell phones are hardly reputable in many cases and you never know what’s going to show up next – even spammers are learning ways to infiltrate this popular audience. However, it does give us an avalanche of detail and the media is consumed with this efficient method of street level reporting and thankfully, the debate and conversations are helping a country make an important transition.

There’s no doubt these new tools are powerful channels for swaying popular thought too.

A colleague of mind reminds me that revolutionaries use whatever weapons they can to report atrocities in this global age. And yes, it wasn’t that long ago fax machines and satellite phones communicated around the world.

What makes this event different is the realty that we all have a front row seat to this raw coverage. Twitter is simple to use and available for free to anyone with a computer. With your account you have access to a tsunami of real time information as change comes to the desert in the Middle East and it’s reshaping how news arrives to the social conscious.

It’s hard to tell how this will play out over the next few days, but it’s certain we’ve never seen anything quite like this and social media tools are only going to become more powerful as we move forward giving everyone a platform to promote a cause in The Digital Age. For the people in Iran, we can only hope the phrase “people lead – governments follow” has a chance to come true in this part of the world.

Follow me on Twitter – http://www.twitter.com/davidcate

Other related stories;

CNN’s Coverage of Iran Protests Criticized – NYTimes.com

Tear gas and Twitter: Iranians take their protests online – CNN.com

FriendFeed Blocked In Iran, The Service’s Most Active Region

Taking to the Streets — and Tweets — in Tehran | Danger Room | Wired.com

Activists Launch Hack Attacks on Tehran Regime | Danger Room | Wired.com

Iran election: state moves to end ‘Facebook revolution’ – Times Online

Twitter Reschedules Maintenance To Allow Iranian Protests To Continue

New Commercials from GoTriCities

Posted by dcate | Posted in Advertising, GoTriCities, Media/Journalism, Television, Tri-Cities Business, Video | Posted on 31-05-2009

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I’m very proud of some of the new commercials we have been producing with our creative staff at GoTriCities. Here are a couple of new projects we moved out of the studios last week.

The first one is a new commercial for IShopTheTri.com – a new regional Internet directory based out of Johnson City. The commercial focuses on the depth and variety of the listings in this useful Internet application and has a chic music bed to support the tech framework.

IShopTheTri Video Commercial from David Cate on Vimeo.

The second video supports a new mobile application we just launched for Town and Country Realty. Brad Smith did a great job as talent on the spot and Elaine Rinder was a pleasureable voiceover for both of these new videos.

Town and Country Mobile Video from David Cate on Vimeo.

Enjoy!

Recent speaking engagements – working toward the art of public presentations

Posted by dcate | Posted in Advertising, Business, GoTriCities, Media/Journalism, Technology, This and That, Tri-Cities Business, Video, Web | Posted on 31-05-2009

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Speaking to an audience has gotten easier for me in the past several years. With 24 years of experience in sales, you get to the point where the butterflies subside, especially after you make a mountain of mistakes along the way.

There’s still a bit of anxiety though and these opportunities are always learning experiences because mastering the art of presentation is a key to business success and I had chance to speak a three gatherings recently.

We’re getting ready to launch the Kingsport Chamber of Commerce website this week. Prior to the launch, I spoke to their Board of Directors for a sneak preview at their offices in Kingsport on May 20th. A group of 50 or so people were in the room that day and I had 10 minutes to deliver the quick tour.

daveadclubOn Thursday, May 16th, I was invited to speak to the Tri-Cities Metro Advertising Federation in Johnson City on the subject of Social Media. Mary Ellen Miller was also speaking that day and we had a chance to present several new ideas to the area’s advertising and marketing professionals.

This was a small group, but it was a significant gathering of peers at the Bank of Tennessee Financial offices in Johnson City. This swanky conference room overlooks State of Franklin road and the board room there has some of the coolest presentation tech that I’ve seen lately.

With windows all around, I lowered the screens in the circular office and presented a 15 minute presentation before about 35 agency reps, banks, hospitals, public relations professionals and small businesses.

My presentation was a collection of social media tools from our newspaper network, a review of the tools reshaping the media landscape and review of some of the ideas our clients are implementing using Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter and other tools.

My main theme was the fact that social media isn’t all that new, citing our human desire for interaction and authenticity in conversations, but the the tools have certainly changed and we reviewed those ideas together.

Some of the interesting points of conversations from the session included how to effectively separate personal and professional identities using social media and how to ensure productivity in the workplace with these tools proliferating our lives.

Mary Ellen Miller did a great job introducing a lively collection of social media public relations examples and has been very successful re-branding herself after experience in television news, magazines and leading a PR firm at a local tech company. Her discussions on Social Media will continue on WJHL over the next several weeks.

adclub

Special thanks to Sarah Clevinger with The Bank of Tennessee and Jessica Bland with The Corporate Image for organizing this event. It helped me to sharpen my Keynote skills and I enjoyed sharing the new ideas about Social Media.

I’ll continue that discussion with clients over the next several weeks including a presentation to the Kingsport Chamber of Commerce tomorrow – June 1.

My last presentation was caught on video and that gives me a chance to critique the work.

The Kingsport Chamber of Commerce sponsors a Fourth Friday Breakfast every month at MeadowView Resort and Convention Center and they had me on the agenda for their session on May 22nd.

This morning meeting is open to all Chamber members to discuss business and encourage networking opportunities (plus a free breakfast) and it was up to me to open up the new Chamber website and give another peek before an audience of 250 local business people.

We had a good session and although I felt like my presentation was 20 minutes, it turned out to be only 9 minutes and that’s good. Most resources say people have at most a 30 to 60 second attention span and considering the early meeting time it would be very easy to fall asleep.

I had a good time speaking to all of these groups and look forward to other opportunities in the future.

Here’s the video from the Chamber of Commerce presentation.

Kingsport Chamber of Commerce Web Presentation from David Cate on Vimeo.

Times-News wins 10 Awards from Associated Press – including Best Website

Posted by dcate | Posted in Business, GoTriCities, Media/Journalism, Personal, Web | Posted on 12-05-2009

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timesnewsThe Kingsport Times-News was awarded with several distinct honors at the 2009 Tennessee Associated Press Managing Editors Awards held in Nashville this past weekend.

Recognized along with other newspapers by The Associated Press in the state of Tennessee, the Times-News received ten awards in their TAPME Division II class including Best Website, Best Photograph, Best Editorial and awards from other categories recognizing journalism excellence in business reporting and video production.

Congratulations to entire staff for this effort. It’s a good feeling to work with passionate professionals who seek to do their very best in a most unusual time for media.

It’s especially gratifying to receive the best website award in the state for our class too.

The Kingsport Times-News beat out The Jackson Sun and Leaf Chronicle – both newspapers owned by media giant Gannett. These newspapers like many of the other large papers in the state employ online strategies that utilize corporate software templates. I’m sure their staff was recognized by their content more than their structure because they all have the same style and layout and a good one at that.

In contrast, our two-man home-grown programming and design team held their own this year and it’s quite an honor. Kind of makes all those nights and weekends pay off – a little.

Beyond the tools and the visuals, our newspaper website owes a lot of its magnetism to New Media Editor Don Fenley who has a fierce journalist appetite for breaking news and he knows how to spin a headline.

In addition to the website recognition, our photographers swept the Photographer Awards for first, second and third.

Everyone at the Times-News recognizes the extraordinary talent of newcomer photographer Erica Yoon and she took first place in the state with Chief Photo Editor David Grace right behind her with a second and third. Erica and Ned Jilton also placed second and third in Feature and Sports Photography categories.

Stan Whitlock took first place honors for Best Editorial in the state and Sharon Caskey Hayes placed second in Business News journalism.

In addition to the traditional awards, Rain Smith was awarded with a Video Journalism award for a video he produced about a Rogersville man who built an electric car.

This was a great effort by the entire staff and although we appreciate the recognition, we still have plenty of work to do. The awards are well-deserved, but our desire to push the limits even further are rarely satisfied by any contest.

Thank you Associated Press and congratulations to everyone on our staff who helped to earn this extraordinary recognition by our peers.

For a complete list of 2009 TAPME Awards across the state of Tennessee, click here.

Jarvis delivers prophetic possibilities in ‘What Would Google Do?”

Posted by dcate | Posted in Books, Media/Journalism, Web | Posted on 18-03-2009

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41fgqtgebnl_sx160_The title is a bit campy, but the content is rich. When I first picked this up at the bookstore, a couple of 20somethings pointed a the title and giggled a bit.

That’s probably the first impression of most, but don’t be mislead, Jeff Jarvis has written a timely book for the new economy. Within its pages (yes – he did publish a printed work) you’ll find a candid and bold statement about disruptive media trends and a prophecy for everyone from advertising agencies, real estate companies, newspapers and others.

Jarvis is an refreshing, informed author, academic journalist who’s paid his dues in print and although he’s probably tough pill for most newspaper execs, he’s the right medicine for the times.

In “What Would Google Do,” Jarvis takes aim at many traditional business sectors and re-imagines their future under the terms that Google is founded upon. Transparency, usability, speed and audience are examined in a powerful book that is a must-read for anyone focused on a career in the media of the future.

Brother Keith interviews Sarah Palin

Posted by dcate | Posted in Family, Media/Journalism, Television, Video | Posted on 07-10-2008

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I first had to do a double take and make sure this wasn’t Tina Fey, but here’s another proud chapter in my brother’s career as he interviews Vice-President hopeful Sarah Palin. I’m sure his son Kevin is proud too (despite his work for Obama).

Here’s the link at Tampa Bay Online.

Got a Google Alert for his exclusive interview and Keith even got a barb in about Tina Fey’s look alike too. Nice job bro!