翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Mike Machette
・ Mike MacIntosh
・ Mike MacIntyre
・ Mike Mack
・ Mike MacKenzie (politician)
・ Mike MacLeod
・ Mike MacRae
・ Mike MacWilliam
・ Mike Maczey
・ Mike Madden
・ Mike Madden (politician)
・ Mike Maddux
・ Mike Madill
・ Mike Magac
・ Mike Magario
Mike Magee (journalist)
・ Mike Magee (soccer)
・ Mike Magill
・ Mike Magnante
・ Mike Mago
・ Mike Maguire
・ Mike Mahaffey
・ Mike Mahoney (American football)
・ Mike Mahoney (catcher)
・ Mike Mahoney (first baseman)
・ Mike Mahoney (footballer)
・ Mike Mahoney (umpire)
・ Mike Mahood
・ Mike Mahovlich
・ Mike Maignan


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Mike Magee (journalist) : ウィキペディア英語版
Mike Magee (journalist)

Michael "Mike" Magee (born 7 December 1949) is a British journalist. He is credited with introducing a tabloid-style approach to the coverage of technology news.〔〔Hamm, Steve. (The Battery Recall: A Win for the Web ) in ''BusinessWeek'', 30 August 2006〕 In 2009 the ''Daily Telegraph'' placed Magee 35 in its list of Top 50 most influential Britons in technology.
Magee co-founded technology news website ''The Register'' in 1994. In 2001 he left to found ''The Inquirer''.〔Johnson, Bobbie. (VNU buys into tabloid news ) in ''The Guardian'', 26 January 2006〕 In 2010 he launched technology website ''TechEye''.〔(TechEye )〕 and in February 2013 he launched a new title for the channel called 'ChannelEye''.〔()〕
==Career==
Magee has written since the 1960s on matters related to occult and esoteric religions. In 1971 he started a small occult magazine called Azoth, and in 1973 in conjunction with David Hall, and his girlfriend Janet Bailey, started a more ambitious six monthly magazine called SOTHiS. In 1978, he went to India and met with an English tantrik guru (and former student of Aleister Crowley) called HH Shri Gurudev Mahendranath (1911–1992) who was a guru of the Uttarakaula Tantric Order of northern India. Mahendranath gave him the title of a guru and a charter to form a group of students. Magee took the tantrik name of Lokanath. Later this was to become a nucleus for the "Arcane Magical Order of the Knights of Shambhala" (AMOOKOS). This group was highly influential, particularly in the way it bought Tantrik teachings to the West. In the UK it had about 500 members. In 1990, Mahendranath claimed, despite some evidence to the contrary, that he had not ever given Magee the right to form AMOOKOS and the group fragmented. Since then Magee has concentrated on providing translations for Tantra website Shiva Shakti Mandalam.
Magee worked for VNU Business Publications on ''PC Dealer'' before working at their IT news venture VNU Newswire. He left the Newswire and co-founded ''The Register'', the UK's first Internet-based IT tabloid, with John Lettice in 1994. In the newsletter, Magee focused on computer chip reporting, and Lettice covered software.
''The Register'' used the slogan "Biting the Hand That Feeds IT" to reflect its iconoclastic attitude, attracting a following among IT professionals and investors.
In December 2000, Magee suffered a heart attack. When he returned to work, he stated publicly that he disagreed with the editorial direction of ''The Register''. He left to found ''The Inquirer'' to reflect the original editorial philosophy. Unlike ''The Register'', which had substantial capital investment, ''The Inquirer'' received little financing, but still managed to make a profit. Magee was the only full-time employee. The entire magazine was based on freelance submissions, and staff and its advertising were outsourced.
In 2006 Magee met with VNU leaders over their alleged use of a web layout similar to that of ''The Inquirer''. Magee sold ''The Inquirer'' to VNU later that year. Magee remained as editor of ''The Inquirer'' until February 2008, when he left to pursue other publishing ventures including ''TechEye''.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Mike Magee (journalist)」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.