Starting Easter on Boxing Day
Easter in 2010 doesn’t fall until the first weekend in April, yet for some reason I’ve already had my first Cadbury’s Creme Egg of the year.
Not only that but I’ve seen Easter mugs, bunnies and all manor of chocolate based symbols of the dawn of Spring.
All this despite the Christmas decorations still being up around us and Slade being played on the radio.
We complain on an annual basis about how early Christmas crap starts appearing in the shops – the earliest sign for me was wrapping paper on sale in September.
But having Easter based eggs out on Boxing Day? That my friend is just taking the very sweet, egg shaped gooey desire a stretch to far.
Although to be honest – it’s never too early for a Creme Egg – just keep the bunnies locked up until March.
Now be nice to this sleep deprived grumpy old git in his 29th year or I’ll write a blog post about all the cool mantoys I got for Christmas from my wonderfully geeky wife.
Credit: The photo used on this post was taken by by adobemac and made available under a Creative Commons licence through Flickr.
Related articles by Zemanta
- Tesco stocks shelves with Easter eggs just days after Christmas (telegraph.co.uk)
Independent printing payments
With the launch of the new Sunday Times websites (separating from The Times) fast approaching and with all this talk of Rupert Murdoch introducing charges on the various newspaper websites he owns around the world I thought I’d take a look at alternatives.
The Independent Newspaper has an interesting way of making a bit of extra cash from their website – they’re restricting printing.
OK it might seem strange to want to print a story you’ve got right in front of you on the screen but being able to print something and then take it away to read later is a useful resource.
It’s also useful to be able to print if you want to hand it out as a resource at a talk/debate or lesson – so the idea of having ‘extra’ charges for extra prints isn’t that silly.
Unfortunately, this is the internet so they have to rely on a ‘good will’ model.
They’ve got a system in placefrom iCopyright that allows them to offer you alternatives for printing within a popup – but that wouldn’t stop you just copying and pasting.
You get the choice of a ‘free print’ where you can make up to five copies using your home or office printer for free (with an ad).
You can make an Instant print on your home printer with six or more copies from 25p to £1 per copy without ads.
You can get a quote for customised prints with your own logo for more than 100 copies on high quality paper.
Or you can have 50+ copies printed by them and sent to you within two business days, these cost 75p to £1.10 per copy – again with no adverts.
So the site itself, the articles on screen are free to view (at the moment) but printing on a bulk level will cost you money. Not sure this helps them or makes any real difference – but it is different.
Go live
Another approach might be to follow the trend currently being set by the music industry and go live, take your wares to the people.
Felix from Basement Jaxx told me that where once they would go on tour to support and promote their album – now they release an album to support a tour.
Newspapers could learn from this model, and this is one I think The Guardian seem to be catching on to.
This could be as simple as having live versions of their more popular podcasts with a paying audience or it could be by hosting full conferences.
It could be by funding talks or debates in regional theatres by controversial figures or even by running quiz nights with a star host.
Whatever approach is taken, whether it be to charge for full access to a newspaper website, to charge for premium content but leave news free or to go for an alternative like printing or live events – there seems to be plenty of choices.
I think in the end the approach that works, once the world of print newspapers is no longer viable on any serious scale, will be a combination of everything but the ‘all charge’ approach currently being favoured by News Corp.
I think what we’ll see is large multimedia news sites that charge for access to premium content like popular columnists, games and media content.
This could also include business specific content like financial data, academic resources and media industry jobs.
But at the same time make news and information content available for free and funded by advertising so that your average user, who won’t see any benefit in paying for news can still give you some revenue.
Related articles by Zemanta
- Rupert Murdoch Indulges in Verbal Tantrum Against Google and BBC (businesspundit.com)
- News Corp Sites ‘To Be Removed From Google’ (news.sky.com)
- Reality Check: 80% Won’t Pay for Online Content (And the Other 20% Are Probably Lying) (gawker.com)
- Murdoch says TV is News Corp’s future (telegraph.co.uk)
- Growing and Monetizing News Media (conversationagent.com)
- Rupert Murdoch: The Digital Don Quixote? (markevanstech.com)
- UK’s Times Online’s Paid Plans: Charging For ’24-Hour Access To Digital Edition’ (paidcontent.org)
- Rupert Murdoch delays plans to charge for online news (telegraph.co.uk)
- On Murdoch And Google, Or, Hey, Rupert, Where’s My Check? (washblog.com)
- Rupert Murdoch could ban Google access to his newspapers’ content (telegraph.co.uk)
New search for Beeb
When you go to bbc.co.uk at the very top of the page is a search box. This isn’t particularly unusual as there is a search box at the top of almost every page – including this one.
What is different, or at least slightly more important about the BBC search box is the fact that it sits on top of the third most visited site in Europe.
This fact alone made BBC Web Search one of the most popular online. But that puts the BBC in an interesting position, because really it shouldn’t and doesn’t need to be replicating a service that exists already and is available in dozens of different flavours.

The main point of the BBC search box was and still is to help you find content on the MASSIVE bbc.co.uk website – not around the rest of the web.
Well now the BBC seem to have reset the focus – although you can still tick the ‘The Web’ radio box on the homepage to get to the old web search engine – it’s been removed from the normal results and isn’t checked by default.
Now the focus is squarly on finding BBC content and the layout has seen a massive improvement.
First it’s been moved into the new template style – so its centre aligned and wide with the BBC deep BBC black bar across the top.

But the box layout has stayed in place – it just looks and works better now it has more room to breath and show itself off.
In the main column you get the search results – so I searched for Jersey and got all the results on bbc.co.uk for my little island.
It also breaks the results down by site as well and gives you the news & sport results with a time stamp to show how old they are.
Then on the right hand side you have a box with TV & Radio results – that pulls data from /programmes and underneath that you have the news & sport results.
Then at the bottom you have a couple of BBC selected ‘also on the web’ results with a link to the full web search underneath that.
At the top, below the BBC bar you get three boxes – a chance to refine your search results by type of result. This used to be a choice of BBC, News & Sport, Web and A/V (if I’m remembering correctly).
Now it gives you the choice of All Results, News & Sport and TV & Radio Programmes. Which has really only been possible since the launch of /programmes – a site that gives EVERY BBC show its own place on the web.

This seems to be restricted to shows on network stations at the momen and shows aired since /programmes first went into beta – but my understanding is that it will eventually include ALL BBC shows from all time.
BBC Local Radio shows should be added to /programmes by early 2009 – not sure about the BBC Archive shows – they may already be in there.
The /programme pages are also fairly text heavy at the moment – unless its a current show, in which case it should have an iPlayer window.
But a post on the BBC Internet Blog suggests this will be expanded to include video clips of the shows as well – this got me wondering whether /topgear will be converted into a /programmes site given the size and investment in topgear.com by BBC Worldwide.
The other area is News & Sport.

This pretty much speaks for itself to be honest – its results from the BBC News & Sport websites. On the left you get the text results – direct links to stories (that you can sort by date or relevance) and on the right you get Audio and Video clips.
I was thinking it might have been nice to have been able to play (especially the audio clips) the clips directly from the results instead of having to go to the page first – but then I thought that might make load times so painful it wouldn’t be worth the effort.
All in all its a nice change, not sure the results are going to be any more helpful – I personally use an advanced Google Search when I’m looking for stories I’ve written (although you can search for my name, Ryan Morrison, on BBC search to find ‘some’ of my articles.
Find out more about the update on Fabric of Folly and the BBC Internet Blog.
Here’s a big image of the search results page for you.





![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=1c7f7283-f1ed-4f7c-92e2-bcdf29452197)
![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=f01f1564-974d-471c-86af-0dfd4b5f72ef)

![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_c.png?x-id=8e435e10-f45b-4441-a0d7-ab11eb35e98d)