First panel: Research on Online Journalism
Opening Session
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Lorraine Branham, director, School of Journalism, University of Texas at Austin
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Rosental Calmon Alves, professor & Knight Chair in Journalism, University of Texas at Austin
First panel: Online Journalism in Asia, Europe and Latin America – What is different and how does it compare with the U.S.?
Moderator and discussant: Lorraine Branham, director, School of Journalism, UT Austin
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Manuel Gago, professor, University of Santiago de Compostela, Spain
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Ari Heinonen, professor of New Media Journalism, University of Tampere, Finland
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Guillermo Franco, editor, El Tiempo.com, Colombia
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Makoto Ota, Staff Writer, The Yomiuri Shimbun (www.yomiuri.co.jp)Japan
Second panel: Online News financial independence – Has the business model come of age?
Moderator: Nancy Regent, vice-president/managingeditor, Hoovers.com
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Peter Zollman, founding principal, Classified Intelligence and Advanced Media Group
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John Granatino, vice president of news and operations, Belo Interactive
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William Grueskin, managing editor, The Wall Street Journal Online
Digital Newspapers: Where do we go from here?
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Keynote speaker: Roger Fidler, director, Institute for Cyberinformation, and professor, Journalism and Mass Communication, Kent State University
Third panel: Online news presentation- Have we already developed the language for this genre of Journalism?
Moderator and presenter: Leah Gentry, managing director, Finberg-Gentry/The Digital Futurist Consultancy, and Adjunct Professor, USC Annenberg School of Journalism
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Gary Kebbel, news director, America Online
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Michael Silberman, MSNBC.com Managing Editor East Coast
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Naka Nathaniel, NYTimes.com Multimedia Editor
Fourth panel: Online News status – Has it become indispensable?
Moderator and presenter: Charlotte-Anne Lucas, content director, MySanAntonio.com
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Doug Feaver, executive editor of WashingtonPost.com, and president of Online News Association
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Steve Klein, coordinator of the electronic journalism program, George Mason University
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Steve Outing, Senior Editor Poynter Institute and columnist, Editor & Publisher magazine
First panel: Research on Online Journalism
Moderator and presenter: Paula Poindexter, associate professor, School of Journalism, UT Austin
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Guillermo Franco, editor, ElTiempo.com, Bogotá, Colombia
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Steve Outing, Senior Editor Poynter Institute and columnist, Editor & Publisher magazine
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Rosental Alves and Amy Schmitz Weiss, School of Journalism, UT Austin
Research Panel: The State of Blog Journalism
Moderator and discussant: Mark Tremayne, assistant-professor, School of Journalism, UT Austin
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Blog, blog, blog: web log learning experience in journalism classes
Eric M. Wiltse, senior lecturer, Department of Journalism, University of Wyoming
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When the Audience is the Producer: the art of the collaborative weblog
Lou Rutigliano, graduate student, School of Journalism, UT Austin
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Blogging the Story
Sue Robinson, graduate student, Temple University
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Weblogs and the Search for User-Driven Ethical Models
J. Richard Stevens, graduate student, School of Journalism, UT Austin
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Citizens or Journalists? Legal and ethical rules governing journalists' personal Web logs
Kathleen K. Olson, assistant professor, Lehigh University
Keynote: New Frontiers for Online News: Wireless, Knowledge Management, the Information Society, and More
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Keynote speaker: Madanmohan Rao, consultant/author; editor, "The Asia-Pacific Internet Handbook" based in Bangalore, India
Research Panel: Reconsidering Journalism and its Effects on a Wired World
Moderator and discussant: Stephen D. Reese, professor, School of Journalism, UT Austin
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You've got News: a permission-marketing model using sponsored electronic newsletters
Anca C. Micu (graduate student) and Clyde H. Bentley (associate professor), University of Missouri-Columbia
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Wikipedia as Participatory Journalism: Reliable Sources?
Andrew Lih, assistant professor, Hong Kong University
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Travelling without moving: Foreign news and boundary-crossing in Cyberspace
Jeremy Edwards, graduate student, UT Austin
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Redefining Multimedia Toward a More Packaged Journalism Online
Amy Zerba, graduate student, UT Austin
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Examining the Media Agenda: a comparison of the way traditional and online media presented the 2000 and 2004 presidential primaries
Donica Mensing, assistant professor, University of Nevada-Reno
Closing session
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Rosental Calmon Alves, professor, Knight Chair in Journalism and UNESCO Chair in Communication, UT Austin