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To: Peter Dierks who wrote (358312)4/8/2010 12:38:33 PM
From: Nadine Carroll4 Recommendations  Respond to of 794330
 
Money graf:

The journalists at the press conference didn't have a bias as the term is normally used; that is, I didn't get the sense that they were inherently for or against the company or its product. They just appeared to think they knew the subject well enough, or had a set enough idea in their heads as to what this kind of story was about, that they pursued only the lines of questioning necessary to fill in the blanks of that presumed story line. As a result, they left the press conference with less knowledge and understanding than they otherwise might have had. And while nobody could have said the resulting stories were entirely wrong, they definitely suffered from that lapse. Especially, as might be expected, when it came to the predictions they made about the product's evolution or future

What the author doesn't say, but we know from experience, is that all experts are prone to over-certainty, but at least most experts actually are experts, if only in a narrow speciality; but journalists just think they are experts, based on a couple of day's worth of information and a story framework that will be approved by their editors.