Archive for August 3rd, 2005

Capture The News With Your Camera Phone And Sell The Results

Scoopt, the world’s first ‘citizen journalism’ picture agency, officially launches on August 4th. Now anybody with a cameraphone can sell their pictures to the press on the same terms as a professional photographer. Scoopt bridges the divide between the public and picture desk.

Using MMS and mobile email technology, Scoopt members can submit photographs straight from the scene in seconds. Scoopt then licenses these photos for publication to the mainstream media. Membership is free and without commitment.

Scoopt members retain copyright to their photographs, and receive 50% of each and every licensing and syndication deal. This is in direct contrast to signing over universal copyright in exchange for a one-off flat fee, which is what usually happens when a member of the public tries to sell directly to a picture desk.

To protect media buyers, Scoopt applies vigorous measures to verify the authenticity of its material. Only members can submit material and Scoopt insists upon full and legally binding disclosure about each submission (the ‘who/what/when/where/how’). Scoopt also has a strong internal editorial policy governing what it will and will not handle.

The Scoopt premise is simple. Virtually everybody now has a mobile phone, and virtually every mobile phone has a built-in camera. This means that somebody, somewhere, is in a position to photograph just about anything that happens on the planet.

“The shocking events in London on 7th and 21st July brought citizen journalism into sudden, sharp focus, demonstrating once and for all that images taken by members of the public can be startling and evocative. Citizen journalism is here to stay and set to change the nature of news. Scoopt is at the forefront of this revolution, ensuring that frontline citizen reporters are properly and professionally represented. The key thing is joining Scoopt now so that you can send in your photos immediately next time you find yourself in the right place at the right time.”

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Apple Finally Embraces The Two Button Mouse

Apple\'s Mighty MouseFor those us who find the Apple Mac an incredibly frustrating computer to use (yes, Mac fans - there are lots of us), among the many ‘features’ that get up our noses one stands out as the prince of poorly thought out design. Apple has stuck with the one button mouse through thick and thin, despite sneakily supporting two buttons in the OS but neglecting to tell the hoards who fall for their silver-cased charms.

That has all changed - enter the Apple two button mouse.

What do you mean, you can only see one button and a little rubber nipple? This is Apple. They have to do things differently and function will always be compromised by design.

The ‘Mighty Mouse’ presents a seamless shell reminiscent of all Apple mice, but under the hood it has four independently programmable buttons. Using them is a case of depressing the shell in the relevant direction for the traditional left-click / right-click, or squeezing the touch sensitive pads on either side for other functions. The ‘nipple’ is actually a tiny scroll ball which offers 360-degree scrolling capability, allowing you to move all over a document, not just up and down as with a normal scroll wheel.

The one button mouse was born at the same time as the Mac, when GUI pioneer and Mac designer Jef Raskin, who sadly passed away in February, made what he later admitted was a poor decision. Given his time again Raskin says he would have gone for two buttons. It’s taken Apple two decades to correct the mistake.

The Mighty Mouse, despite our skepticism about all things Mac, looks like it is verging on innovative. Unfortunately, sometimes innovation is pointless, but we look forward to having a go with the little plastic rodent to find out if Apple are onto a winner.

Mighty Mouse is available for a suggested retail price of $$49 and requires Mac OS X, Windows 2000 or Windows XP (yes, Windows user can have a piece of Apple design now if they like). Mac OS X version 10.4.2 “Tiger” is required to customize buttons for one-click access to Spotlight, Dashboard and Exposé or to launch applications.

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