প্রতিষ্ঠাতা সম্পাদক/প্রকাশক/মুদ্রাকর : ইশফাকুল মজিদ সম্পাদনা নির্বাহী /প্রকাশক : মামুনুল মজিদ lপ্রতিষ্ঠা:১৯৯৩(মার্চ),ডিএ:৬১২৫ lসম্পাদনা ঠিকানা : ৩৮ এনায়েতগঞ্জ আবু আর্ট প্রেস পিলখানা ১ নং গেট,লালবাগ, ঢাকা ] lপ্রেস : ইস্টার্ন কমেরসিএল সার্ভিসেস , ঢাকা রিপোর্টার্স ইউনিটি - ৮/৪-এ তোপখানা ঢাকাl##সম্পাদনা নির্বাহী সাবেক সংবাদ সংস্থা ইস্টার্ন নিউজ এজেন্সী বিশেষসংবাদদাতা,দৈনিক দেশ বাংলা
http://themonthlymuktidooth.blogspot.com
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
IRAN ARREST AMERICAN JOURNALISTS/MEDIA NEWS AND WASHINGTON NEWS
Dear Maha Masud (Ms)
Thanks for your response.I'd do the necessary as you suggested in estimated time.Our national postal express EMS would deliver the sent packet.I'd be very pleased if we meet soon with you and my other associates of NPF.
CONFERENCE ON VIOLENCE WEATHER
Add authority and color to your weather broadcast when it’s most-watched – before, during and after a serious storm. Our all-expenses-paid program offers an inside look at the NOAA Severe Storms Laboratory and the National Weather Center in Norman, OK, plus sessions led by the nation’s leading experts on hurricanes, tornadoes and other severe weather, as well as journalism professionals from the Gaylord College of Journalism and Mass Communication. Other topics include:
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This educational program of the National Press Foundation is underwritten by the Ethics and Excellence in Journalism Foundation. Fellowships include airfare, transfers, three or four nights’ lodging (depending on flight schedules) and most meals. Application deadline: Tuesday, March 3, 2009. For more information and an application, visit our website or email programs@nationalpress.org.
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The National Press Foundation is a 501-c-3 that conducts free, all-expenses-paid programs for journalists around the country and internationally. Since 1976, the National Press Foundation has provided professional development opportunities to more than 5,000 editors, producers and reporters, helping them to better understand and explain the impact of public policy on readers and viewers. Programs held in the nation's capital, around the country, and overseas, bring journalists together with leading authorities to discuss significant issues ranging from agriculture and economics to politics and zoology.
www.nationalpress.org
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Media News - Tuesday, March 03, 2009
Europe, S.Korea ‘dominate’ global IT development
North European countries and South Korea have the fastest and most widespread telecoms and computer growth in the world, the UN's telecommunications agency said on Monday. More than one-fifth of the world's inhabitants surfed the Internet while mobile phone subscriptions exceeded the four billion mark by the end of 2008, according to the International Telecommunications Union's latest five yearly index. Although information and communications technology developed in all 154 nations surveyed between 2002 and 2007 - with the exception of 117th placed Myanmar - it was still a largely rich country phenomenon. Sweden led the index of overall ICT development followed by South Korea, which gained two places, Denmark, the Netherlands, Iceland and Norway. The top 20 was dominated by western Europe, North America and Asia. European growth since 2002 outstripped that of the United States, once the spearhead of Internet use. The United States fell from 11th to 17th place overall, despite having some of the cheapest services especially for broadband. The 'digital divide' between rich and poor only narrowed marginally over 2002. Fixed line, mobile and broadband services in developing countries were also costly to the point of being 'prohibitive' in many instances or largely confined to business use, according to the ITU. (AFP)
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US: Hearst dailies look to charge for some web
Hearst Corp. plans to hold back at least some content from its newspapers' free Web sites and appears to be on the verge of implementing a pay Web approach, according to a memo from a top Hearst executive. The memo to staffers is from Steven Swartz, president of Hearst Newspapers, which includes 16 dailies, among them the San Francisco Chronicle and Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Both the P-I and Chronicle have recently indicated they might close if severe cutbacks are not made soon. 'Exactly how much paid content to hold back from our free sites will be a judgment call made daily by our management, whose mission should be to run the best free Web sites in our markets without compromising our ability to get a fair price from consumers for the expensive, unique reporting and writing that we produce each day,' Swartz said in the memo. Swartz came on board in December, replacing George Irish, and has since indicated plans for major shifts in the company's newspaper division, including efforts to increase consolidation of resources and shared content among the Hearst dailies. Swartz's memo added that Hearst plans to add in more non-journalist's content to the sites, similar to moves being made by other daily newspapers, referring to contributions from 'prominent citizens in our communities.' (Editor and Publisher)
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Media News - Tuesday, March 03, 2009
Iran arrests American journalist ‘over wine purchase’
A US journalist has been arrested and detained in Iran, apparently after being reported to the authorities for buying a bottle of wine. Roxana Saberi, 31 - who has worked for the BBC - was taken into custody more than a month ago, according to her Iranian-born father. Her whereabouts are unknown and it is unclear whether she is still being held. An Iranian foreign ministry spokesman, Hasan Qashqavi, Monday said Saberi had been engaged in 'illegal activities' and had continued to work after her press credentials had been withdrawn in 2006. Saberi, who had also worked for the American radio station NPR, had been in Iran for six years and was writing a book about the country. Her father, Reza, who lives in Fargo, North Dakota, said he learned about his daughter's detention when she called on 10 February, about 10 days after her arrest. The family initially kept the matter quiet in the hope that she would be released but later decided to speak out. The bottle of wine appeared to be simply a pretext for her arrest, he added. While drinking alcohol is illegal under Iran's Islamic legal code, it is widely available on the black market. (The Guardian)
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Media News - Tuesday, March 03, 2009
Twitter takes Washington by storm
The halls of the US Congress are alive with the sounds of Twitter. Members of the Senate and House of Representatives - or their aides - are tapping out dozens of the micro messages a day on cellphones and computers from offices, committee meetings and even the floor of the legislature. A website, tweetcongress.org, keeps track of the representatives and senators who have taken to sending out the messages of 140 characters or less and ranks them in terms of their number of followers and messages sent. Representative John Culberson, a Republican from Texas, is one of the most tech-savvy members of the House and is believed to the first member of the 435-strong body to adopt Twitter, having started using it nearly a year ago. Culberson leads the pack in terms of messages sent -- some 2,000 or nearly four times as many as the next person on the list, Representative Nancy Pelosi, the Democratic speaker of the House from California whose Twitter feed mostly consists of links to press releases. Culberson said Twitter, which is used by more than six million people and is growing rapidly, and other social media tools are 'opening the door to a true revolution that will transform our government.' (AFP)
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