<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"?><oembed><version><![CDATA[1.0]]></version><provider_name><![CDATA[A Blog Around The Clock]]></provider_name><provider_url><![CDATA[http://blog.coturnix.org]]></provider_url><author_name><![CDATA[Bora Zivkovic]]></author_name><author_url><![CDATA[https://blog.coturnix.org/author/coturnix/]]></author_url><title><![CDATA[Mindcasting]]></title><type><![CDATA[link]]></type><html><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/technology/2009/03/on-twitter-mind.html" target="_blank" title="">On Twitter, mindcasting is the new lifecasting</a>:</p>
<blockquote><p>Even a few years ago the word &#8220;blog&#8221; inspired that peculiar mix of derision and dismissal that seems to haunt new media innovations long after they&#8217;re proven. A blogger was a lonely, pajama-clad person in a dark room, typing out banal musings he mistook for interesting ones, to be read by a handful of friends or strangers if they were read at all.<br />
That blogs have now become a fixture of media and culture might, you&#8217;d think, give critics pause before indulging in another round of new media ridicule. But it ain&#8217;t so.<br />
Twitter, the micro-messaging service where users broadcast short thoughts to one another, has been widely labeled the newest form of digital narcissism. And if it&#8217;s not self-obsession tweeters are accused of, it&#8217;s self-promotion, solipsism or flat out frivolousness.<br />
But naysayers will soon eat their tweets. There&#8217;s already a vibrant community of Twitter users who are using the system to share and filter the hyper-glut of online information with ingenious efficiency. Forget what you had for breakfast or how much you hate Mondays. That&#8217;s just lifecasting.<br />
Mindcasting is where it&#8217;s at.<br />
The distinction is courtesy of Jay Rosen (@jayrosen_nyu), a journalism professor and new media analyst at New York University. For him, Twitter is a new way to conduct a real-time, multi-way dialogue with thousands of his colleagues and fellow netizens.<br />
&#8220;Mindcasting came about when I was trying to achieve a very high signal-to noise-ratio,&#8221; he explained. This meant using his Twitter account to send out tweets pointing to the best media news and analysis he could find, 15 or 20 times a day. &#8220;I could work on the concept of a Twitter feed as an editorial product of my own.&#8221;<br />
As Rosen noted, that product is itself a distillation of the huge stream of input he gets from the nearly 550 journalists, analysts and news outlets he follows on Twitter. &#8220;I&#8217;ve hand-built my own tipster network,&#8221; he said. &#8220;It&#8217;s editing the Web for me in real time.&#8221;&#8230;.</p></blockquote>
<p>Read the rest&#8230;.then start following <a href="http://twitter.com/jayrosen_nyu" target="_blank" title="">Jay</a> on Twitter and stop laughing at the phenomenon:</p>
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