An image forms in my head as he describes the
scene: a man hurrying down a crowded street puts his hand to his
head. Speaking to himself with two fingers to his ear, he can be
mistaken for one of two things: a nut or Inspector Gadget. The
man is using a new computerized wristwatch phone developed in
Japan. The device sends voice signals through the man's hand.
When the person on the other end speaks, the phone produces
vibrations that go through the man's fingertips and turn into
sound.
"That's cool," says Paul Schneidereit, editor of
the Computing section at The Chronicle-Herald
in Halifax and the person explaining the gizmo. "It doesn't
matter how much computer knowledge you have, you get it." Almost
as remarkable as the phone itself is the fact that a computing
section even exists at the Herald. Nova
Scotia is the fourth most wired province in Canada, so it's not
surprising that a newspaper based there has a dedicated
technology section. What's noteworthy is that the section is in
the last big independent daily newspaper in the country: strapped
for resources, the Herald still includes a
weekly technology section.
Today, half of all Canadians
have a computer at home and almost all of them have Internet
access. Movie theatres, bank lineups, even high school corridors
have turned into orchestra rehearsals gone mad as the sounds of
Beethoven, Mozart and Rimsky-Korsakov whine from cell phones,
pagers and handheld organizers. Technology is a part of Canadian
culture and major Canadian dailies have caught on; 18 out of 26
of them produce a regular technology section.
Still,
technology journalism has not been given the commitment it
deserves-a three-month examination of the tech coverage in seven
Canadian dailies reveals a lack of Canadian wire content and an
inundation of public relations hype. But there's an even greater
problem. For the most part, Canadian dailies still haven't seen
the full potential of technology journalism. Focusing mostly on
business coverage, product reviews and previews, the dailies use
technology journalism to seduce advertisers. If you're not in the
market for a new scanner, a digital camera or the latest
software, the tech coverage in the dailies won't be of much use
to you. That's because the editors and managers are missing the
point. Technology relates to every aspect of our lives-from our
daily routine to our education and socialization. Product
pitches, "hot" website lists and business blurbs won't cut it. If
editors and management are unwilling to divert additional
resources to improving their technology coverage, people will
stop reading.
In 1994, The Toronto Star
became the first Canadian newspaper to leap into
regular technology coverage with the Fast Forward section. This
was the first time a segment of the paper was devoted to
high-tech trends and products. The paper cashed in on the hype of
technology and gave readers a shallow glimpse of what products
were out there and which ones were coming through reviews and
trivial features. Over the next few years, other Canadian dailies
started technology sections of their own. The
Chronicle-Herald, The Edmonton Journal
and The Vancouver Sun covered
the business aspects of the dot-com world and mixed in some
lighter fare, such as interesting websites and software reviews.
In the beginning, these sections catered to new users,
first-time computer buyers and tech newbies. Unfortunately, these
sections didn't keep up as Canadians in general, and their
readers in particular, became more tech savvy. Today's tech
readers want context: what technology means to them, how it
affects their lives. Only now is one Canadian daily making a
strong attempt to provide that.
It wasn't until 1998,
with the launch of The Ottawa Citizen's High
Tech Report (now Techweekly), that tech reporting in Canada could
be taken seriously. Dedicated to the business goings-on of the
high-tech world, the weekly 16-page section was one of the
largest in the country. High Tech Report scrutinized every aspect
of the technology sector from an Ottawa perspective. It covered
topics like how to use technology to improve your business and
the myths and the hype of e-commerce. That kind of analysis
caught the attention of the other papers. A version of the
e-commerce piece appeared in The Edmonton
Journal's technology section two weeks later. By the
end of 1999, The Globe and Mail and the
National Post had introduced their own
technology sections.
As Canada's high-tech sector began
booming, technology journalism made its way into the business
world. Pieces were no longer for newbies or techies; they were
for investors or users-business pieces dominated technology
writing. While daily business sections carried a large technology
component, papers such as The Globe and
Mail, the National Post and
The Ottawa Citizen set aside most of the
space in their technology sections for business stories. Of
course, the business side of technology is useful, but technology
journalism should not be limited to that. The consequences of
technology on a personal level is another important side,
something that's difficult to get at when you're writing about
quarterly results, company mergers and financial statistics.
It's not that papers aren't interested in technology:
they're spending money covering the topic. In 1994 there were
only a handful of full-time technology writers in the country;
today there are more than 30. Technology supplements are popping
up more often in the dailies. But just because technology is
being covered doesn't mean it's being covered well.
Today technology journalism faces several problems. Wire
content is one of them: simply put, there isn't enough of it.
Smaller papers have nowhere to turn when wire services can't
provide them with breaking tech stories that aren't local. At the
Chronicle-Herald, 85 per cent of the
technology content is pulled from the wires. With no staff and a
limited budget, there are few options. If a story is happening
across the country and it's not on the wires, the
Herald can't cover it.
Another
problem with technology writing is jargon. Early technology
writing assumed that all readers were inexperienced with
computers, as it should have: in 1994 only 25 per cent of
Canadians had home computers, Windows 95 hadn't been launched yet
and the Palm Pilot was but a dream. Rob Cribb, who wrote for Fast
Forward and still contributes to a number of sections at
The Toronto Star, says, "The way you write
about technology today is dramatically different than a few years
ago. I used to have a clause after the word 'Internet' explaining
what it is." Today, technology writers must deal with the fact
that some of their readers don't understand anything about
technology while others are veteran software programmers. Writers
have to know where to strike a balance between high-tech
vocabulary and lay terms without insulting either audience.
"There is a question of degree and I think over time we've
learned where that line is," says Jim Bagnall, a technology
writer at the Citizen since 1993. "But it's
still a moving target because people are getting more and more
used to technology now." It's difficult for writers to know where
that target is for every article, and while most do a good job of
keeping it simple, less experienced readers are often overlooked.
The Vancouver Sun's John Dvorak
writes a Q and A column that aims to solve the problems people
have with their computers. And while a column like that is bound
to use technical terms, Dvorak's advice can sometimes be
confusing. "I'm afraid you can't make him write in English,"
jokes Peter Wilson, editor of the Sun 's Net
Works section. Recently, for example, explaining a problem with
Windows 98, Dvorak wrote, "Often the problem is caused by the
motherboard BIOS setup (power management). Play around with the
options there."
Dvorak isn't alone, though. Many other
writers also overlook simple explanations. A September article in
The Toronto Star dissects a computer
buyer's guide put out by Compaq. The article points out many of
the inaccuracies in Compaq's pamphlet, casually using terms such
as "shadow mask" and "aperture grille" as if they were as common
as "chat room" or "email."
The easy acceptance of public
relations propaganda in the form of press releases is the most
visible problem in technology journalism today. It affects not
only the consumer-oriented product reviews but the
investor-oriented business pieces as well. "It's probably the
most hyped industry today," says the Star 's
Cribb. "No other industry puts out more press releases containing
exclamation points."
Natalie Southworth, until recently
a technology writer for the Globe , notes
the "manufactured" vocabulary of the tech world, referring to
terms like "e-growth industry," "e-chain revolution" and
"cyberclutter," which didn't exist a decade ago. "It's so infused
with hype and with buzz words. You put an 'e' in front
of it and suddenly it's supposed to mean something," she says.
You just have to look at e-Xchange, an eight-page
supplement included with the National Post
in September, to see what she means. There, among the
catchphrases and tech drivel, were endorsements of dot-com
companies, gimmicky websites and gadgets. Articles about a Rogers
AT&T mobile web browser, a Kodak digital camera and
various online services filled the space between the real
advertisements. A column labelled "Datebook" lists upcoming
"conferences and classes," with a small note at the bottom that
includes contact info should you want your event to appear in the
next supplement.
Newspaper supplements are
the worst promoters of public relations hype. They are often
written by freelancers who depend on companies to send them
products or invite them to press conferences. A bad review could
mean not getting a product or an invitation next time-and not
getting paid. And while this may be true for any type of
supplement,technology inserts only magnify the flaws found in
daily technology reporting: more jargon, more PR regurgitation
and less critical analysis.
Rob Thompson, a technology
writer with the Financial Post and the
Post 's technology section, is leery of
technology journalism in supplements. "I think you've got to be
kind of careful of the motives behind some of those things.
Essentially a lot of the stories that come out of supplements
have been purchased by companies. They pay for you to go to
events. They pay for the hotel when you're there. They pay to
take you to dinner. There are going to be some people who will
write shit because of that, who will write just fluff, blow-job
pieces on the company because of that. I see that a lot."
But full-time writers fall into the PR trap, too. One
reason is inexperience. "There's a shortage in the high-tech
industry of programmers and researchers, but there's also a
shortage of class-A high-tech reporters," says Hugh Paterson,
editor of the Citizen's Techweekly. "In many
circumstances you have to hire on talented, bright, young
reporters who train to be high-tech reporters." And if reporters
can't grasp the technology they're writing about, they're more
likely to use industry jargon found in press releases. "A lot of
writers here are kind of bothered by it or are frightened by
[technology]," says the Post's Thompson. "They almost never have
any technology background." It's a common problem, and most
papers aren't willing to invest the money needed to change that.
"In terms of reporting manpower, management hasn't seen any great
need to hire a whole bunch of technology reporters to do an
extended technology section," says Schneidereit of the
Herald .
Peter Collum, editor of
the technology section at The Edmonton
Journal , also isn't impressed with management's
decisions. "I think management has been very head-in-the-ground
about keeping it strictly ad-driven; I never know till Wednesday
what my page count will be for Thursday's paper," he says. Like
their reporters, some managers and editors don't fully understand
technology either. This might be why they aren't devoting any
extra resources to improving their technology coverage. "I think
depending on who you've got as bosses, if they're not comfortable
and familiar with technology, they don't necessarily grasp what
readers want to grasp," Collum says.
Gillian Shaw has
been a technology writer for almost a decade, and today she
writes for the Net Works section at The Vancouver
Sun . "I think that newspapers, like all businesses,
have to recognize the impacts of change and technology, and
management has to come to grips with this, that this isn't just a
section to be hived off," she says. "You can't take technology
and say, 'Oh, here's our one page, two pages, six pages,
whatever, and this is our technology coverage.' Technology
pervades their entire coverage, it covers all areas."
If technology journalism is to make any
significant progress, it will be at the hands of the senior
editors and managers of the newspapers. Less of a commitment to
advertising revenue and more of a commitment to meaningful
journalism would be ideal, but perhaps that's too much to ask.
Instead, other sections need to be encouraged to view technology
in new ways. For example, a sports reporter could look at how
football teams use coach-to-quarterback radio transmitters
mounted inside helmets to gain an edge on their competition. Or a
fashion reporter might explore how technology is affecting the
latest designs, such as a recent jacket from Levi's and Philips
that comes complete with a built-in cell phone, music player,
remote control and, of course, washable wiring. Promoting
articles like those throughout the paper could start to turn
technology journalism around.
One paper where management
has seen the possibilities for technology journalism from the
beginning is The Ottawa Citizen . Home to
many of Canada's tech giants, Ottawa was in the middle of
Canada's high-tech industry just as public interest in technology
markets peaked. High Tech Report was an investor-oriented section
reporting on emerging technology companies and personalities, the
industry's movers and shakers. The section featured one-on-one
interviews with Canadian tech icons such as Nortel Networks' John
Roth and Jay Abbe of JDS Uniphase.
For a long time it
was enough. Not only did advertisers support the section, but the
reporting was analytical, balanced and, most of all, useful. But
last September, the paper revamped the section and introduced
Techweekly, a magazine-style section that includes sociological
analysis. Typical of this new type of technology journalism was a
December article called "Wired and Retired," which examined how
seniors are becoming more net-savvy. Product reviews replaced
stock picks, 2,000-word features on tech life in Ottawa replaced
corporate profiles and book excerpts replaced investment columns.
Gone was the standard six-column grid; instead, pages featured
two- or three-column layouts and lots of white space. Articles in
the new Techweekly were longer, more in-depth, more narrative.
That's not to say that the Citizen got rid
of its business coverage. The paper started an investment section
as well, and continued to cover Ottawa's tech sector in the
business section.
"We just wanted to get more people
involved," Bagnall says. "To profile more people, to get them in
rather than the technology and business cases." Writing for the
Techweekly, Bagnall moved from approximately 160 bylines a year
to 25. His pieces are deep and personal, such as an article he
wrote in October entitled "Viet Tech," which looked at how
Vietnamese immigrants are affecting Ottawa's telecommunications
industry. This year the Citizen is sending him to India for a
week to produce a story on how Indian entrepreneurs are changing
the tech industry in Ottawa. This amount of dedication to a
technology feature in a newspaper was previously uncommon. The
ideas might have been there, but the resources weren't.
So far, readers and advertisers love what they see.
"It's more accessible," Paterson says. "There are car ads, BMW
and Porsche ads, in the new section, and that's no accident. I
think advertisers realize that the broader approach is reaching
more of the kind of people they want." Mercedes-Benz, Lexus and
Royal Bank are certainly different from the computer-oriented
advertisers that typically fill technology sections-they are
mainstream advertisers reaching out to a mainstream audience.
"Our feeling is that if you can report in an intelligent
manner, not talk down to people, about the changes in lifestyle
we're seeing because of the Internet especially and all aspects
of high technology, I think you have a winning formula," Paterson
says. Just as there are trends in technology, there are trends in
technology journalism, and The Ottawa Citizen
has caught on to the next big one: focusing on
people.
"Every now and then you have to sit back and
reevaluate whether you still have the same goals in terms of your
stories and your target audience and whether you're meeting them
or whether you should change them," Paterson says. "High-tech
companies are doing that all the time; they're reinventing
themselves, and I think newspapers have to do the same thing."
Natalie Southworth sees the potential of technology
coverage. "I think as technology becomes more of a story and less
a fad, less a gimmick and less a new gadget in the palm of your
hand, people yearn for context and how it affects their lives. I
mean everything from how it affects their relationships, to their
work life, to their education and psychology, to their business
and personal financing, how they structure their day, their
concepts of time, space...you're looking for meaningful context."
If technology journalism is to overcome its problems and
realize its potential, it needs to be seen as more than easy ad
revenue. Writers need to move past the hype and jargon and
explore technology's implications on society and the way we live.
The most complex machinery, the most advanced technological
achievements-they all need people to make them do what they were
designed to do, to give them meaning. It's just like the man
holding a finger to his ear using the wristwatch phone. Behind
all of the chips, wires and diodes, people make it work. The same
can be said for technology journalism and its
future.