Jeff’s Media Diary

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I decided to present my media diary primarily as a short video highlighting the varied ways media reaches me. Watch it here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TeeHQJxOCtg&feature=youtu.be

This is in no way meant to be comprehensive, and in full disclosure it is a composite of two days.

Putting this together taught me a few key lessons:

* I’m nearly always consuming media — I was surprised by just how often. It depends on your definition of media, of course, but even when I was having a conversation with my wife or a friend, I noticed that there was often some form of media playing in the background (a TV in a restaurant, kids music at an indoor playground, etc.). And as you can see in the video I listen to podcasts on my iPhone whenever I’m walking, riding the T, or doing chores. So it’s rare that I go for more than half an hour without some kind of media input while I’m awake.

* Nearly all media I consume is digital, but I’m holding onto some print, mainly newspapers (Boston Globe and student newspapers) and a couple of magazines (the New Yorker and some cooking magazines). At times that creates awkward workflows, though. For instance, one day this week I picked up a Harvard Crimson when walking past a newspaper box in the law school, and I found an interesting story I wanted to share. So I opened my laptop, directed my browser to the Harvard Crimson online, then Tweeted the link to the story. Switching from print to an online version of the same article was a pain, but a couple of my followers retweeted it and it sparked a conversation with another journalist about the article, so I’m glad I did. I’m not in the habit of visiting the Crimson online, but I try to pick up the print paper while on campus because it’s nice to have the print to read while waiting for class to start. This incident made me realize that it would be easier if I just read the Crimson on my phone or laptop, and I’m sure that’s where I’m headed in the future.

* I guess I’m addicted to podcasts.

Content/Device Breakdown

I did log my computer activity for several days using RescueTime to get a more-detailed sense of my consumption patterns. I also kept a diary manually with major types of activity, since I found that RescueTime sometimes misclassified my usage. Here are some highlights:

* On a typical day I use my laptop for between 5 and 6 hours.

* When on my laptop, my biggest activity is e-mail. I spend about 10 to 20 minutes per day on Twitter (via Hootsuite), and about 15 minutes on Facebook. I do make a point to go to a few newspaper sources throughout the day (The New York Times is my home page and I often check Google News). I’m sad to say I read DrudgeReport every day.

* I use my iPhone to entertain me whenever I’m by myself (this adds up to a couple of hours a day of usage). I either listen to podcasts, check my e-mail, check Facebook, or read an article on the phone. This realization makes me think of that recent Louis CK rant.
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Katerina’s Media Diary

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Are we consuming media through intermediaries? This exercise was a realization of my fragmented – yet concentrated – media consumption. I constantly live under tight deadlines, I switch browsers and leave traces on devices – such as library laptops – that are not my own.  The Triple Revolution, as described by Lee Rainie & Barry Wellman, has shaped the way I get informed. I get 90% of media online, I follow the trends through social networks and “weak ties”, and interact mostly via my mobile phone.

Realizing that my everyday media consumption cannot be measured by one tool (Rescue Time) and due to privacy concerns, I decided to keep a “totally manual media diary”. First, I retrieved my browsing history from my laptop. Then, I added the one from my mobile phone and kept notes about the use of my favorite applications. Finally, I tried to estimate the percentage of my offline media consumption during the week – excluding phone calls – and dividing it in three categories: schoolwork, entertainment and unwinding. The only limitation of this methodology was  the measurement of the exact time I spent at each activity. However, I estimated that I spent 32 hours consuming media online and 21 hours offline.

INFOGRAPH KATERINA1

Observations

* My digital media universe is diverse, yet unevenly distributed. At home, I consume most of my daily stories, news and entertainment through 3 websites: Facebook, Gmail (personal and professional) and Youtube. My first “entry” to mainstream media (The New York Times, The Atlantic, The Boston Globe etc) is through what Henry Jenkins called Spreadable Media or “user-generated content.” The power of “weak ties” (school email list, newsletters, Facebook updates etc) has proven to give access to a great variety of information.

* I tend to use my Android mobile phone in a similar way: through specific applications during specific times (such as the morning commute). In fact, I mostly engage with news stories on my phone between 7 and 10 am. Of course, multitasking reduces my attention to information and the time I spend reading on the device.

*Video is bad on mobile devices. I do not have cable, nor a television at home so video platforms work great for information, trends and entertainment on my laptop. However, they are my least favorite application on my phone.

*Audio applications are the winners of the mobile battle, but they vary according the the operating system (IOS, Android).

INFOGRAPHIC KATERINA2

* I usually read on a screen. I read news quickly. But do I read what is important? Most of the links I click on, come from “references”: either friends and acquaintances via my Facebook newsfeed or through my schools email list.

* I am still a Sunday morning paper enthusiast. I do not have a print subscription, but I enjoy my digital one. I always print the articles I am really interested in.

INFOGRAPHIC KATERINA3* My offline media appetite is satisfied by coursework and entertainment (books, music playlists) is mostly used as a way to unwind and concentrate.

INFOGRAPHIC KATERINA4

Questions

* Can we measure overall media consumption / satisfaction / loyalty / enjoyment?

* Will mainstream media be able to reach their readers directly? If not, who should determine which stories are promoted on social networking sites?

Kevin Hu’s Media Journal

This exercise in self-awareness of our digital lives was informative and alarming. I’d like to comment on why, how much, and how I consumed media this past week, and what can be learned from this reflection.

Following Erhardt’s lead, I used RescueTime to collection data on my computer usage patterns. This was based on the assumption that, since my days are marked by staring at a monitor, my computer can tell me about my media footprint. That’s not the case, as we’ll see. A summary histogram of the six days since Thursday 2/6 is below, with applications/tabs on the X axis and hours spent on the Y axis:

KZHWeeklyHistogramBreakdown

Localhost:3000 is a development URL, so time in that category + sublime text 2 + iTerm are together the time I spend writing code. The second and eighth categories sum to the time I spend playing the video game League of Legends, which is scary (bothersome question: where do the rest of the 168 – x hours in a week go???). A list of the twenty categories in which I spent over thirty minutes is below:

KZHWeeklyList

For completeness, here is a stacked bar chart with days on the X axis and colors signifying different categories. We can see that, while my computer time varies, the distribution of time is somewhat stable.

KZHWeeklyStackedByDay

From this tool, I supposedly spent little time on e-mail. That’s totally not true. I e-mail mostly on my phone and iPad, which is lost in this analysis. Furthermore, I would like to know not how much time I spent on an activity, but how many times I checked it. For example, I know that the little time I spend on the computer checking e-mail is likely due to habitual inbox checking rather than composing messages.

Speaking of my phone, RescueTIme does not capture the hours of pre-sleep phone Redditing costing half an hour a day and probably a substantial chunk of well-being.

But do I really spend no time reading articles or books? Here’s the moral of the rant: most important pieces of media I’ve consumed — those that enriched my understanding or changed a perspective — were not on the computer.

KZHMediaDietBooks

Three were by print: the papers “Visualization and Cognition” by Bruno Latour and “Modeling games in the Newtonian World” by David Hestenes (both via Bret Victor’s 60 over 60 list), and chapters 3-12 of Hobbe’s Leviathan (pages 20-90 in my copy). My print reading was six hours spread over Saturday and Sunday.

In contrast, I listened to the audiobook version of The Better Angels of our Nature by Steven Pinker (paired with Hobbes and recommended by my advisor Cesar Hidalgo) during my walks to and from the Media Lab. That’s 30 minutes every day, and summed to around three hours. Similarly, I read On Intelligence by Jeff Hawkins on my kindle for about 15 minutes (chapters 5-9) before diving into compulsive pre-sleep Reddit-ing.

But what about news? Sadly I realized that most of my knowledge of current events is through word-of-mouth or Facebook statuses. Very little is through reading extended pieces offering thoughtful analyses, which is alarming.

If I were to perform this experiment again, I would do more comprehensive and rigorous accounting of media consumption on all platforms. I would like to understand what types of news I do read and should read, and also how much time I spend on one device versus another.

Aleszu’s Media Diary

mediadiary_AleszuHow I harvested my data (a self-scrape using IFTTT)



The breakdown of my 13 and a half hours of media consumption over 6 days revealed some interesting patterns.

– I listen to a heck of a lot of podcasts. Well, I used to work in public radio. They’re incredibly efficient at giving me news. (No click bait and barely any ads)

– The only entertainment media I consumed was music and that was 22% of my consumption.

– My breakdown of news by language was interesting. 25% in a foreign language. I’ve been reading a lot more Brazilian outlets since my trip there.

– My week is interesting to look at. I consumed the most on Friday and on Monday. Monday I know was because I spent lots of time walking and at the gym–so lots of podcasts. Friday I can’t think of anything besides a lot of free time to sit around and surf the Internet and read.

– Most articles came from Feedly, most radio from NPR/PRI. Seems about right.

 

 

my news spaces

 

My News spaces:

Mine Gencel Bek

The graph attached at below titled news spaces shows my differing news consumption according to the lines of geography, themes and identities. The separation is made for analytical purposes and may not reflect the real percentage values. It is possible to say that I do consume the news mostly on Turkey and the local (Boston. Cambrige) though. My US news consumption, the last one, I believe is less as the world news. It depends on the conjuncture though. Still, it is a tough finding I find difficult to face though as someone who is supposed to negate nationalism and value the other nations politically. Truths hurt! Still self-reflexivity is a must for an academic, I believe. So nothing to feel shamed about to share with you.

 

The graph also include information on my identities. As a world citizen and journalism scholar, I tend to read political and academic news. Nieman lab news is the one I certainly follow everyday regarding the news industry in the US and the world.

 

There are of course other media I consume but here I mentioned only the most regular ones. At the moment, it is just so unbearable to follow the government supported media every day, for example. Therefore I stick to t24 news. That is also because of the fact there are a lot of news every day in Turkey.

 

My local news consumption also involves politics but still mostly related with being mother and consumer. I follow some free websites to find out activities for my daughter during the weekend mostly.

 

news spaces
This is also what came out from rescue time:

Over the past week, you logged:

13h 42m

Your productivity score:

55%

very distracting! neutral productive very productive!
Very distracting time!

Very productive time!

Most of your time went towards:

26%
Communication & Scheduling
20%
Design & Composition
17%
Uncategorized
13%
Reference & Learning
11%
News & Opinion

It seems that gmail takes a lot of time but it is not only talking and networking as recscue time coded. I receive RSS from many newsblogs and I read though g-mail. So. g-mail finding is not so bad.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Top applications and websites:

3h 16m
Gmail
1h 20m
PowerPoint
1h 3m
Adobe Reader
1h
Google Docs