NEW FORUM FOR ONLINE WRITERS Öffentlichkeit Deposited

Artikelinhalt
  • The E-Sylum: Volume 8, Number 39, September 11, 2005, Article 18

    NEW FORUM FOR ONLINE WRITERS

    Michael Marotta writes: "Coin People (www.coinpeople.com)
    has created a new forum for writers. Numismatic Online Writers
    (NOW) acknowledges the enthusiasts in our hobby who post
    significantly on the Internet.

    Electronic forums differ from print, physically and metaphysically.
    Internet discussions are immediate, time-independent, self-validating,
    and interrupt driven.

    Typically, an event starts with a non-collector who has a question.
    They post it along with a scan of the object. Several replies will
    result. Usually, those replies agree in the main, while bringing
    forward different details. Sometimes, disagreements will arise
    about authentication, attribution, grading or pricing. Sometimes,
    errors of fact will appear -- and then be corrected by the original
    poster or by someone else. Posts and replies can be of almost
    any length, as required.

    That is different from print where one expert passes judgment,
    in a reply often limited by space. If a numismatic magazine
    publishes an error of fact, the correction appears later in a small
    space. Thus, tracking corrections is inherently difficult in print,
    whereas online corrections appear in the same thread as the
    original article. Print publications are procedural and sequential.
    Editors and writers decide what topics to pursue, granted that
    they keep an ear to the ground for advance warning of collector
    interests. However, being interrupt-driven means that online
    forums respond immediately to any individual interest, whether
    or not it is numerically "important."

    Online, "the non-collector with a question" could be an expert
    in their own right in some other area, but not know much about
    the material in question: "Does anyone collect Carpathian Bank
    Tokens?" If that question appeared in a print publication's reader's
    input column, it would be seen once and then be lost to the
    archives. However, online, anyone with an interest in Carpathian
    Bank Tokens can search the Internet and find otherwise arcane
    discussion about them. Thus, all information is always available
    online regardless of when it was created.

    This allows online writers to be validated by interaction with their
    peers. Anyone who has a deep and abiding passion for a numismatic
    series, and who shares that knowledge, is an expert, regardless of
    whether or not they have won any awards. Usually, they have not.
    There exists a gulf between print and the Internet. Few of the well-
    known names from print periodicals participate in online discussions.

    Online writers must be self-validating because they often post by
    usernames, which are aliases. You can find Q. David Bowers,
    Alan Herbert, and Beth Deisher at an ANA convention. Finding
    Old Collector, U-505, and Snaggletooth is a little harder.
    However, for those who read and post frequently, those usernames
    do identify collectors with expert knowledge in one or more areas.

    Online writing is immediate in a special way. When someone asks,
    "What is this coin?" the good reply will include some historical
    context. However, not being an article in print, the reply does not
    need to run 2000 words, opening with a lead paragraph to draw
    the reader's attention, and explaining all the relevant facts in order
    to build understanding. Online, if someone wants to know more,
    they will ask. That is another aspect of online media being
    event-driven.

    Being privately owned, some online forums do attempt a level of
    decorum. Others do not. The Usenet newsgroups are infamous
    for their flamewars. Both of those parameters can be "good" or
    "bad" depending on the context. The recent spate of lawsuits
    between Accugrade and the ANA and others began with posts
    on rec.collecting.coins, within the first month that the group
    received its Usenet charter. No print publication could afford
    to discuss a subject so aggressively. On the other hand, many
    forums are purposely low-key to avoid the negativity of unbridled
    comment. The decisions come from the owners of the websites.
    Unlike print, websites have very low start-up costs. Anyone
    can have one.

    NOW: Numismatic Online Writers, is open on Coin People.
    Registration to the website is required to post, but not to read.
    That is another difference between computers and print."

Quell-URL Veröffentlichungsdatum
  • 2005-09-11
Volumen
  • 8

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