Post by ansarulit11 on Nov 9, 2022 5:28:19 GMT
You also have digital curation, which is defined as the preservation and maintenance of digital assets. I look at it simply as distilling information for myself and my audience. When we think of curation, a lot of times we think of it from an audience perspective; but I do think this idea of personal curation is often overlooked, which we’re going to highlight in some of the future episodes. But for you, Demian, when you think about curation, how do you define it for yourself? Demian Farnworth: Let me make an historical note here really quickly. Newspapers in the beginning, American newspapers 300 years back, that was basically all that they did.
There was no individual, independent reporting. A newspaper philippines photo editor on the east coast would get a story, they would write the story, and it was pretty basic. “So-and-so committed a crime against somebody else.” Or “Britain declares war on the US,” like that. Well, that information was then just basically transferred to other newspapers who curated this information. They looked for news like that, and just shared it with their audience. across the nation and the continent. So this idea of curation is age old. It’s always been around.
Why should an online content creator also curate? Jerod: So why curate? Demian: The bottom line is you are already reading, or at least you should be, and if you’re reading, sharing that information with your audience is a great way to feed content that you don’t have to create. So if you have an audience on Twitter or Google+ or Facebook, everything that you read, whether it’s online or even offline, you can turn into a post that you curate and you share. And that also builds relationships with the people who create the content you share. It’s basically networking. So when you come across an article about reading, for example: You like it, you read it, you sift through it, then you sit down and you write a quick post about it on.
There was no individual, independent reporting. A newspaper philippines photo editor on the east coast would get a story, they would write the story, and it was pretty basic. “So-and-so committed a crime against somebody else.” Or “Britain declares war on the US,” like that. Well, that information was then just basically transferred to other newspapers who curated this information. They looked for news like that, and just shared it with their audience. across the nation and the continent. So this idea of curation is age old. It’s always been around.
Why should an online content creator also curate? Jerod: So why curate? Demian: The bottom line is you are already reading, or at least you should be, and if you’re reading, sharing that information with your audience is a great way to feed content that you don’t have to create. So if you have an audience on Twitter or Google+ or Facebook, everything that you read, whether it’s online or even offline, you can turn into a post that you curate and you share. And that also builds relationships with the people who create the content you share. It’s basically networking. So when you come across an article about reading, for example: You like it, you read it, you sift through it, then you sit down and you write a quick post about it on.