-
Website
http://www.scobleizer.com/ -
Original page
http://scobleizer.com/2006/11/07/best-political-news/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
danja
44 comments · 4 points
-
polizeros
52 comments · 1 points
-
AndyBeard
69 comments · 4 points
-
Zachary Adam Cohen
35 comments · 8 points
-
dbarefoot
40 comments · 3 points
-
-
Popular Threads
-
The best and worst thing Twitter did in 2009: RT
1 day ago · 22 comments
-
World-brand-building mistakes France’s entrepreneurs make
1 week ago · 181 comments
-
2010: the year SEO isn’t important anymore
1 week ago · 67 comments
-
A new addition here: the Meebo bar
1 day ago · 7 comments
-
iPhone developers abandoning app model for HTML5?
1 week ago · 52 comments
-
The best and worst thing Twitter did in 2009: RT
whatreallyhappened.com
www.voltairenet.org/en
english.aljazeera.net/HomePage
www.haaretz.com/
www.guardian.co.uk/
these aren't bad either:
thinkprogress.org
electronicintifada.net/new.shtml
http://signs-of-the-times.org/signs/signs.php
http://www.wakeupfromyourslumber.com/
just get an rss feed reader like newz crawler, rssowl, or feeddemon, and you'll have your own news aggregator. :)
http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2006/pages/results/...
i do have the TV on- Chris Mathews -MSNBC whaaaatching the Governator acceptance speech right now. urgh.
Tomorrow. :-)
Reuters supplemented their own reports with a live-updating headline box to collect reports from other sources, i.e., projected calls from the networks, concession speechs, etc. Sure beat tracking multiple sites. Offical results were broken down on multiple page, with drill-down access via maps, etc.
The NYT also did well. More news, less filler. Khoi Vinh and his design team set the stage by cranking out some nice work.
Nationally, I read a lot of bloggers, but mostly as filters for major media. As such, they did OK...but they were too nationally-focused to be useful sometimes. For example, Josh Marshall's TPM was following contested House races, but he was still showing a CNN projection on NC 11 long after the Asheville paper had reported a concession speech. Lesson there: listen to your readers and let them feed you info, don't just pass along big media reports.
Where else?