Link of the Week: April 6 - 12
The New Yahoo!
Yahoo!, founded in 1994, recently replaced its Google-driven Yahoo! News search engine with one created in-house. According to an article by Greg Jarboe at SearchEngineWatch.com, this news story searcher may rival Google’s.

The article notes several advantages to the new Yahoo! News technology, including: More frequent crawls throughout the day that refresh content three times more often, which make results "more up-to-the-minute; A "Sort by" feature on the results page that enables users to sort results by relevance or date with one click; An "Also try" feature on the results page that suggest related searches to help users refine their query and get more focused search results; and New commands on the advanced search page that allow users to search by location or news source.”

Like other search engines featured on this page recently, Yahoo! has a toolbar which, as an added benefit, blocks pop-up windows.

Nonprofits Online
View our latest links page for nonprofits here.

Media Forum Links

The handouts that were distributed by journalists at our media forum are online. Journalist contact information is posted also, if you want to follow up with any of the people you met at the forum (or if you live in the Asheville area and want to see what you missed!).

Link/Article of the Week Archives
For your convenience, we've begun archiving past weeks' featured links and articles.

The Missing Link
Have any suggestions for us regarding next week’s link? Or is there information you seek, but you can’t find a helpful link? Let us know! If others would benefit from the information, we just may track down a link for you, or use your suggestion as Link of the Week.

Contribute Online!
It is now possible to contribute to FIRE online using your credit card. Please help us out, we can't be effective without your financial support! In the future, we will also be using similar technology, provided by PayPal, to enable you to pay for our upcoming events from our website with ease.

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Welcome to FIRE, a non-profit organization which provides community media resources to the Appalachian region. You can use the search box on this page to search our online archive of media outlets throughout the area. If you are a local journalist (or want to be), visit the "Resources for Journalists" section. You'll find resources that will improve your community reporting skills and will enable area residents to easily locate your published articles online.

FIRE's purpose is to promote citizen participation and community-based media. Please contact us if you would like to participate in our programs or if you have any feedback that will improve this Web site.

 

 

Article Spotlight:
Nightmare on Eagle Street: Clashing visions scuttle plan:
Stuart Gaines of Mountain Xpress takes an in-depth look at the derailing of a redevelopment plan, and also the benefits of the struggle to revitalize The Block. The story is at Nightmare on Eagle Street; the timeline is at Block of Ages.

 

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Fund for Investigative Reporting and Editing (FIRE)
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