Team:Debrecen-Hungary/on the media

From 2010.igem.org

Revision as of 15:00, 17 October 2010 by Ophir Keret (Talk | contribs)






For us, the synthetic biological mission didn't end at raising a project. We also wished to build continuity and atract in advanced young minds for the years to come. Part of this effort included looking in media tools to raise awareness about synthetic biology and iGEM. From day one we put a project subgoal of reaching over a hundred thousand readers (1% of the Hungarian population) while targeting young readers ages 15-30. In practice we exceeded nearly twice our initial quatua, thus the effort was very succsseful. Here we present the articles and media involved.

Népszabadság (iGEM article published on June 17th, 2010

File:Https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2010/6/62/4-26-07 HUN NEPSZA.jpg Népszabadság is a large "left" Hungarian newspaper, founded in 1956. "Népszabadság" literally means "People's Freedom", and is a reference to the paper's communist roots. This newspaper is mostly owned by foreign media interests (the Swiss publishing house Ringier) although the Szabad Sajtó foundation, created by the MSZP party, owns 26.7% of Népszabadság's shares. Népszabadság has had the largest circulation (up until very recently). To date, the circulation (2010) stands on 80 thousand copies. The featured article about our team, titled [http://nol.hu/lap/tudomany/20100617-bakterium_legobol "bacteria from lego"] ,was featured on June 17th, 2010.

Click here to download the article in Hungarian, or here for a "google translated version" (we appologize for the slight errors in translation).

Article 2

write a paragraph about the newspaper in quaestion (blick, index, peoples freedom or medikus lap). How many people read it, where is it published (paper or web based) and a little detail from wikipedia. Below this information should be a donwloadable picture of our article, with a link to the original one and a reminder that it is translateble by google translate.


Medikuslap (iGEM article published on september 2010)

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