I am currently a professor of communication at Loyola University Maryland where I established the first digital media lab at the university in 1995, the same year I started teaching Web development courses.I have been reporting on information technology and computers since the beginning of the personal computer revolution in the early 1980s. After a short and unhappy stint as a political press secretary, I got a job at a start-up computer magazine and within a couple of months I was a technology reporter. I also freelanced for a wide range of publication including The Los Angeles Times and Ad Week.
During this time, largely to get more control of my writing, I entered a Ph.D. program at the University of California, San Diego. While still a Ph.D. candidate, I became the editor-in-chief of a monthly professional journal called Scientific Computing and Automation, which reported on the use of information technology in science and engineering. In that role, I attended the third World Human Genome conference, several fascinating meetings of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the largest general scientific association in the world, and covered significant projects such as the Grand Challenges in scientific computing, an effort to apply computing power to the largest scientific problems in the world. I was also a very early adapter to the Internet and then the World Wide Web. Those were good times.
After I received my Ph.D., I continued to be an active journalist, reporting extensively on large-scale information management issues, primarily for a magazine called Database Trends and Applications. I was also the lead researcher for an IT-oriented market research company.
In the mid-1990s, I co-authored a book about how journalists could use the Internet. My latest book, Free for All: The Internet’s Transformation of Journalism (Northwestern University Press, 2010) is the first comprehensive history of the development of online journalism and intertwines the development of computers as the third great communications platform with a history of the efforts to use that platform for journalism.
My interest in technology is three-fold. I study the diffusion of innovation–why certain new technologies win wide acceptance and why others don’t. I explore the practical application of information technology—who uses this “stuff,” for what ends and how effectively. And I explore the social ramifications of living in a digital environment. All three of those interests will be reflected in this blog.
