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    <dc:date>2013-05-24T23:28:40Z</dc:date>
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  <item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/2123/8137">
    <title>Journal of Digital Research &amp; Publishing Semester 2 2011 (5pm class)</title>
    <link>http://hdl.handle.net/2123/8137</link>
    <description>Title: Journal of Digital Research &amp; Publishing Semester 2 2011 (5pm class)
Abstract: The Journal of Digital Communication and Culture is a publication created by students of ARIN6912 Digital Research and Publishing. This unit of study is part of the Master of Digital Communication and Culture taught by the Digital Cultures Program in the School of Letters, Art, and Media. For more information contact Chris Chesher (chris.chesher@sydney.edu.au). CONTENTS (TITLE/AUTHOR): Spreading the message: How social networks and paywalls can save Publishers (Brett McKeehan) // Are social network websites breeding antisocial young people? (Alanna Bromley) // Content curators: The DJs of the web (Claudine Pache) // Connecting with a click: Using social media as a new marketing strategy (Xingya Zhou) // Hesitations and difficulties in setting up a corporate wiki (Marie Louisa Althans) // Born to be wired: The advantages and disadvantages for Australian children growing up in a digital age (Amanda Nicholls) // Every tool is a weapon if you hold it right* (Cobie Dellicastelli) // Will newspapers survive in the digital age? (Kokkai Ng) // Is microblog changing the way we read news? (Mina Yizhen Wang) // Journalism 2.0: The business of news (Paul Giannakis) // Death to the watchdog? The Fourth Estate in a 2.0 world (Natasha Parsons) // Old news? Are new technologies causing news reporting to change track or simply speed up existing trends? (Suzanne Stebbings) // Internet @Censorship.com (Dan Lin) // Why is“Human flesh search” only popular in China? (Jingsi Wei) // Digital library: A long way to go (Hui Zheng) // From parlours to pixels: How the digital revolution is changing the way we read (Angela Shetler) // Poetry and the digital age: Friends or foes? (Stephanie Littlewood) // Has the e-book caused the death of the printed book? (Xiaoxiao Hua) // DNA match identification of copyright works system (Shen Chao) // What do you love? The optimisation of personalised searches (Monica Moruzzi)</description>
    <dc:date>2011-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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  <item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/2123/8136">
    <title>Journal of Digital Research &amp; Publishing Semester 2 2011 (1pm class)</title>
    <link>http://hdl.handle.net/2123/8136</link>
    <description>Title: Journal of Digital Research &amp; Publishing Semester 2 2011 (1pm class)
Abstract: The Journal of Digital Communication and Culture is a publication created by students of ARIN6912 Digital Research and Publishing. This unit of study is part of the Master of Digital Communication and Culture taught by the Digital Cultures Program in the School of Letters, Art, and Media. For more information contact Chris Chesher (chris.chesher@sydney.edu.au). CONTENTS (TITLE/AUTHOR): Open Access Journals for School Teachers in Indonesia (Laila Alfizanna) // Virtual Worlds, Real Money: The Economic, Legal and Social Dimensions of Virtual Property (Alexander Apte) // Keep Calm and Google It: How digital technology changes how we work with knowledge (Henrietta Ashton) // Twitter Usage in Times of Crisis (Stephanie Brown) //  The Impact of Bookscan on the Australian Publishing Industry (Guo Chen)  // Battle of the Bands (Sikhanyiso Dlamini) // The Impact of China’s Microblog and Chinese Government’s Censorship (Layla Dong) // Is Wikipedia Making Traditional Reference Books Shrinking? (Yanxi Fan) // Research in the Digital Age: Our Use of Twitter (Patrick Hsiao) // Hypertext and Literature (Li Xiaoxi) // Social Media in China: Past, Present and Future&#xD;
(Jingqi Liu) // Expanding electronic magazines in China (Liu Ying) //&#xD;
Txt Tlk: Language in the Digital World (Renelle Mower) // Journalism Practices in Remix Culture: How New Media Affects the Producction and Distribution of News (Diana Marcela Roldan) // Is the picture book dead? The rise of the iPad as a turning point in children’s literature (Lisa Margarete Schons) // The Rise of User-Generated Content and its Potential Threats (Ut Ieng Tang) // The Preservation of Cultural Heritage in Digital Publishing Context (Xi Wang)</description>
    <dc:date>2011-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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  <item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/2123/8135">
    <title>Journal of Digital Research &amp; Publishing Semester 1 2011 (5pm class)</title>
    <link>http://hdl.handle.net/2123/8135</link>
    <description>Title: Journal of Digital Research &amp; Publishing Semester 1 2011 (5pm class)
Abstract: The Journal of Digital Communication and Culture is a publication created by students of ARIN6912 Digital Research and Publishing. This unit of study is part of the Master of Digital Communication and Culture taught by the Digital Cultures Program in the School of Letters, Art, and Media. For more information contact Chris Chesher (chris.chesher@sydney.edu.au). CONTENTS (TITLE/AUTHOR):Digital Publishing: what we gain and what we lose (Shutong Wang) // Making Online Pay: the prospect of the paywall in a digital and networked economy (Yi Wang) // E-mail Spam: advantages and impacts in digital publishing (Haoyu Qian) // Advertising in the new media age (Quan Quan Chen) // Twitter Theatre: notes on theatre texts and social media platforms (Alejandra Montemayor Loyo) // The appearance and impacts of electronic magazines from the perspective of media production and consumption (Ting Xu) // Pirates Versus Ninjas: the implications of hacker culture for eBook publishing (Shannon Glass) // Online Library and Copyright Protection (Yang Guo) // Identities Collide: blogging blurs boundaries (Jessica Graham) // How to Use Sina Microblog for Brand Marketing (Jingjing Yu) // Inheriting the First Amendment: a comparative framing analysis of the opposition to online content regulation (Sebastian Dixon) // The Impact of Convergence Culture on News Publishing: the rise of the Blogger (Renae Englert) // The New Design of Digital Contents for Government Applications: new generations of citizens and smart phones applications (Lorena Hevia) // Solving the Digital Divide: how the National Broadband Network will impact inequality of online access in Australia (Michael Roberts) // The Blurring of Roles: journalists and citizens in the new media landscape (Nikki Bradley) // Wikileaks and its Spinoffs: new models of journalism or the new media gatekeepers? (Nadeemy Chen)</description>
    <dc:date>2011-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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  <item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/2123/8134">
    <title>Journal of Digital Research &amp; Publishing Semester 1 2010 (7pm class)</title>
    <link>http://hdl.handle.net/2123/8134</link>
    <description>Title: Journal of Digital Research &amp; Publishing Semester 1 2010 (7pm class)
Abstract: The Journal of Digital Communication and Culture is a publication created by students of ARIN6912 Digital Research and Publishing. This unit of study is part of the Master of Digital Communication and Culture taught by the Digital Cultures Program in the School of Letters, Art, and Media. For more information contact Chris Chesher (chris.chesher@sydney.edu.au). CONTENTS (TITLE/AUTHOR): Lost online: TV series as multi-author, multi-platform metafictions (César Albarrán Torres) // Join the Group: Facebook (Marta Conejo Sobrino) // Is Twitter making news more interpersonal? (Ella Pong) // Love or Lies: Deception in internet dating (Bridget Slater) // To be or not to be: T.Sina in China (Jin Xing) // Cyberbullying and the “Net Generation” (Annie Chiv) // The rise of social media and the creation of a new digital divide (Allen Liu) // Building the Wheel: Popular Education in the Digital Era (Dan O’Reilly-Rowe) // Publishers Attempt To Reconnect With Readers (Kim Kooren) // Blooks: A New Era of Literature? (Amanda Lansdowne) // The ‘Death of the Author’ and the birth of the reader? (Tamsin Lloyd) // Crisis Communications and New Media (Tom Champion) // The Influence of Online Reviews (Amy Fong) // I Blog. You Buy. (Miren Mendoza) // ‘Will 2020 still be a Great Year to be a Fashion Blogger?’ (Kate Pagett) // The Necessity for Social Media Plans in Business Strategies (Alicia Fong Yee Shum)</description>
    <dc:date>2010-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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  <item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/2123/8133">
    <title>Journal of Digital Research &amp; Publishing Semester 1 2010 (5pm class)</title>
    <link>http://hdl.handle.net/2123/8133</link>
    <description>Title: Journal of Digital Research &amp; Publishing Semester 1 2010 (5pm class)
Abstract: The Journal of Digital Communication and Culture is a publication created by students of ARIN6912 Digital Research and Publishing. This unit of study is part of the Master of Digital Communication and Culture taught by the Digital Cultures Program in the School of Letters, Art, and Media. For more information contact Chris Chesher (chris.chesher@sydney.edu.au). CONTENTS (TITLE/AUTHOR): Can’t Stop the Signal: How publishing companies are taking advantage of existing readerships online (Vanessa Williams) // An Improved Digital Divide: How Chile’s political efforts have positively affected the educational divide (Paula Comandari Andueza) // E-publishing: a dictator, or a co-operator? (Huan Zhang) // iPad Invades the E-reader Market (Jianwei Zhang) // E-books and the Ownership Myth: The Limitations of Digital Rights Management on Consumers (Elizabeth Riley) // Online publishing: extensions and challenges of traditional journalism (Luqi Lin) // Online journals emerge: the audiences’ choice (Ge Xuan) // The New Journalism: Weblogs as News Sources (Hanne Kristine Fjellheim) // Why online news could influence printed newspapers (Tao Zhai) // Online and Offline Newspapers Readerships and Features (Wanxin Mei) // Online Journalism: Recycled News or Innovative Reporting (Suzi Heaton) // Magazine Publishers Go Digital (Anastasiya Kostolyndina) // Fashioning Magazines in the Digital Realm (Yeong Sassall) // Pirates or Criminals? (Martina Marsic) // Legal P2P File Sharing is Possible: A Case Study of ‘Spotify’ (XIA JU) // A new cinematic aesthetic: The effect of the digital revolution on the construction of the ‘real’ (Eliza Hansell) // Virtual Wealth: A New Kind of Property in China (Hanbing Song) // Generation Me or Generation We? Social Media Technologies, Narcissism and Online Interaction (Ola Bednarczuk)</description>
    <dc:date>2010-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
  </item>
  <item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/2123/8132">
    <title>Journal of Digital Research &amp; Publishing Semester 1 2009 (1pm class)</title>
    <link>http://hdl.handle.net/2123/8132</link>
    <description>Title: Journal of Digital Research &amp; Publishing Semester 1 2009 (1pm class)
Abstract: The Journal of Digital Communication and Culture is a publication created by students of ARIN6912 Digital Research and Publishing. This unit of study is part of the Master of Digital Communication and Culture taught by the Digital Cultures Program in the School of Letters, Art, and Media. For more information contact Chris Chesher (chris.chesher@sydney.edu.au). CONTENTS (TITLE/AUTHOR): Down the rabbit hole: literature’s adventures in e-readerland (Kathryn Knight) // Ditching the dead-tree medium (Heidi Cassell) // PEACE OR WAR? Design metaphors behind e-book readers (Gao Qun) // ‘THIS IS THE INTERNET SPEAKING’ Wikipedia, Hwang Woo-Suk, Norms, and the Social Construction of Scientific Knowledge (Katherine Calhau) // Beyond bias: Wikipedia and the construction of knowledge (Michelle Tran) // University publishing 2.0: a preliminary&#xD;
investigation (Agata Marczewska) // The public gain equal rights by Indymedia:&#xD;
depending on the technical application of Indymedia (Jing Cao) // The movement from traditional journalism to citizen journalism A case study of online newspaper&#xD;
website OhmyNews (Jialing Su) // The Comparison of Emergency Coverage between&#xD;
America and China (Wenjuan Shi) // A content analysis of the posts on Twitter and Xiaonei (Yu Cheng) // How Facebook and other social networks are changing&#xD;
information production and circulation (Emel Gusic) // Facebook, Privacy and Criminality (Wenbo Chen) // Podcast: Useful tool to facilitate learning behaviour in&#xD;
higher education (XiaoLi Pei)</description>
    <dc:date>2009-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
  </item>
  <item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/2123/8131">
    <title>Journal of Digital Research &amp; Publishing Semester 1 2009 (7pm class)</title>
    <link>http://hdl.handle.net/2123/8131</link>
    <description>Title: Journal of Digital Research &amp; Publishing Semester 1 2009 (7pm class)
Abstract: The Journal of Digital Communication and Culture is a publication created by students of ARIN6912 Digital Research and Publishing. This unit of study is part of the Master of Digital Communication and Culture taught by the Digital Cultures Program in the School of Letters, Art, and Media. For more information contact Chris Chesher (chris.chesher@sydney.edu.au). CONTENTS (TITLE/AUTHOR): Just zeroes and ones’: Nine Inch Nails and the move to online music publishing (Anon) // The evolution of Public Relations in the rhetorical public sphere of Web 2.0 Case study: Edelman PR representing Wal-Mart (Anita Sulentic) // Google Book Search: Digitisation of books as a positive invention (Remi Otani) // The Digital Business Ecosys¬tem and the Corporate Wiki: toward knowledge creation and innovation (Beth Powell) // Web 2.0 Activism and the battle for online space (Harry Mills) // The World Wide Web and the demise of  quality journalism (Kyle Anderson)</description>
    <dc:date>2009-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
  </item>
  <item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/2123/8130">
    <title>Journal of Digital Research &amp; Publishing Semester 1 2009 (5pm class)</title>
    <link>http://hdl.handle.net/2123/8130</link>
    <description>Title: Journal of Digital Research &amp; Publishing Semester 1 2009 (5pm class)
Abstract: The Journal of Digital Communication and Culture is a publication created by students of ARIN6912 Digital Research and Publishing. This unit of study is part of the Master of Digital Communication and Culture taught by the Digital Cultures Program in the School of Letters, Art, and Media. For more information contact Chris Chesher (chris.chesher@sydney.edu.au). CONTENTS (TITLE/AUTHOR): Automated Content Authorship: The ‘Real’ Death of the Author (Rochelle Deighton) // Facebook ‘Friends’: The Validity of Online Friendships (Kate Bateman) // Misconceived End-User Expectations to Privacy on Facebook (Ailin Bezzo) // To tweet or not to tweet Grunig’s model to brand engagement (Louise Veyret) // Gmail: Friend or Foe? (Angela Wade) // The Construct of Digital Identity: A Case Study of Self Portraits and Profile Pictures as Simulacra on Web Platforms (Tom Okagami) // Ease of Access: Suicide and Prevention (Kerilynn Petersen) // Amazon’s Impending Monopoly of E-book Markets (Ouchen Wei) // Picking Up the Pages: Discussing the Materiality of Magazines (Joy Enriquez) // Digital Footprints: a case study (Michael Schanzer) // Virtual work spaces: The changing face of communication (Gina Spithakis) // Keeping it Simple: The Shift in Video Game Development (Kimberley Lau) // Lurkers and Lolcats: An Easy Way From Out To In (Claudia Leigh)</description>
    <dc:date>2009-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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  <item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/2123/8129">
    <title>Journal of Digital Research &amp; Publishing Semester 1 2011 (1pm class)</title>
    <link>http://hdl.handle.net/2123/8129</link>
    <description>Title: Journal of Digital Research &amp; Publishing Semester 1 2011 (1pm class)
Abstract: The Journal of Digital Communication and Culture is a publication created by students of ARIN6912 Digital Research and Publishing. This unit of study is part of the Master of Digital Communication and Culture taught by the Digital Cultures Program in the School of Letters, Art, and Media. For more information contact Chris Chesher (chris.chesher@sydney.edu.au). CONTENTS (TITLE/AUTHOR): An Analysis of Online Discussion Impacts on Adult Students’ Learning (Tao Wang) // Are We Living in the Same World? Social media platforms in Australia and China compared (Kai Tang) // Choose Your Own World: The convergence of hypertext, literature and gaming (John Band) // Digital Evolution: The changing face of video game journalism (Nicholas Barkl) // Facebook Features and MySpace Memoirs: Does user behaviour within social networking sites&#xD;
qualify as a form of digital publishing? (Nadia Junaideen) // I, Consumer, Produser: The rise of collaborative content creation and its impact on producer/user relationships (Olivia Porter) // Indigenous Storytelling and the Digitised Future (Alexandra Hirst) // Online Campaigning: Web 2.0 and the Australian federal election (Keyang Yang) // Online News Content: How reading news online affects users’ understanding of news events (Kelly Stock) // Teens, Consumerism, and Converse: How lifestyle and identity are portrayed through digital publishing (Priska Febrinia Handojo) // The Impact of Technological Advancements upon Language and Communication in an Increasingly Digitised Society (Pippa Lyons)</description>
    <dc:date>2011-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
  </item>
  <item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/2123/8128">
    <title>Journal of Digital Research &amp; Publishing Semester 1 2010 (1pm class)</title>
    <link>http://hdl.handle.net/2123/8128</link>
    <description>Title: Journal of Digital Research &amp; Publishing Semester 1 2010 (1pm class)
Abstract: The Journal of Digital Communication and Culture is a publication created by students of ARIN6912 Digital Research and Publishing. This unit of study is part of the Master of Digital Communication and Culture taught by the Digital Cultures Program in the School of Letters, Art, and Media. For more information contact Chris Chesher (chris.chesher@sydney.edu.au). CONTENTS (TITLE/AUTHOR): Refolding the fold: the complete representation of actuality in digital culture (Sonia Therese Chan) // Mind over media? A philosophical view on user-generated media and social identity (Romina Cavagnola) // Outsiders looking in: How everyday bloggers are gaining access to the elite fashion world (Tiana Stefanic) // New media revolution: personal ads expand to the Internet (David James Misner) // Online publishing: (Anime) Fan fiction and identity (Nicola Santilli) // The practicality of magazine websites (Emma Turner) // A Cultural Historical Approach to Virtual Networking (Kate Fagan) // How social media is changing public relation practices (Katharina Otulak) // The 3D evolution after AVATAR: Welcome to 3D at homes (Jaeun Yun) // The interaction between technology, people and society —In the case of Happy Farm (Chen Chen) // Technical solutions to business challenges: the Content Management System of today (Bujuanes Livermore) // Hidden Consumerism: ‘Advergames’ and preschool children. Parents give the thumbs up? (Kathryn Lewis) // Google’s library of Alexandria: The allure and dangers of online texts (Leila Chacko) // Google’s Taking on China:an Ingenious Publicity Campaign (Junying Cui) // Redifining Glamour: Capturing Queer Subculture on TheNightBloomers.com (Ron O’Berst) // Patient Advocates in the Internet Age: a threat to traditional notions of authority in health care? (Allison Jones) // Fashion Blogs: the new menber in fashion industry (Chi Zhang) // Twitter Wave Will Drown The World? (Jie He) // The influence of cultural differences on electronic commerce (Yuan Shen).</description>
    <dc:date>2010-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
  </item>
  <item rdf:about="http://hdl.handle.net/2123/8126">
    <title>Journal of Digital Research &amp; Publishing 2008</title>
    <link>http://hdl.handle.net/2123/8126</link>
    <description>Title: Journal of Digital Research &amp; Publishing 2008
Abstract: The Journal of Digital Communication and Culture is a publication created by students of ARIN6912 Digital Research and Publishing. This unit of study is part of the Master of Digital Communication and Culture taught by the Digital Cultures Program in the School of Letters, Art, and Media. For more information contact Chris Chesher (chris.chesher@sydney.edu.au). CONTENTS (TITLE/AUTHOR): Sourcing the Freedom: Free Software vs. Open Source Software (Nicole-Kate Anderson) // Be the Media (Yue Hu) // Bloggers as Gatekeepers: Issues of Gatewatching in Journalism (Janine Corbin) // Social Capital and ICTs (Daniel Kille) // The New Media (Chufan Han) // ‘Doing’ the Online Identity (Rebecca Cornell) // Social interaction in virtual environments (Samuray Ozay) // Plug Me In: Connecting With the Net Generation (Katie Pittard) // Netspeak: An Earthquake in the Language World (Jiang Ning) //The iPod and iCulture (Zhou Yuan) // China Digital Times: the Appearance of DTV (Yin Guan) // Information Revelation and Privacy in Virtual Social Networks: Our Willingness to Divulge Personal Information (Madeleine Wood) // English-language Magazines in China (Wenjing Wille Wu) // Online expression repressed (Rhonda Prsntice) // Multivariant Narratives in World of Warcraft (Adam W Ruch) // Instant Messaging (Suneesh T. Mathews)</description>
    <dc:date>2008-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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