TAP-iはタブレット端末やスマートフォン向けの新しいニュースメディアです。TAP-i(タップ・アイ) by 毎日新聞 + スポニチ for SMARTPHONE, TABLET
The Data Journalism Handbook 1 When you combine the sheer scale and range of digital information now available with a journalist’s "nose for news" and her ability to tell a compelling story, a new world of possibility opens up. Explore the potential, limits, and applied uses of this new and fascinating field. Produced by European Journalism Centre PDF (EN)
Had Narrative Science—a company that trains computers to write news stories—created this piece, it probably would not mention that the company's Chicago headquarters lie only a long baseball toss from the Tribune newspaper building. Nor would it dwell on the fact that this potentially job-killing technology was incubated in part at Northwestern's Medill School of Journalism, Media, Integrated Mark
京都府亀岡市の府道で、少年が運転する軽自動車が集団登校中の児童に突っ込んだ事故で被害者の救命を担当した公立豊岡病院但馬救命救急センターがブログで取材手法を厳しく批判しています。具体的に、読売、毎日、朝日の新聞社名を出し(後に新聞社の名前は削られた)「マスコミの人間の心は腐っているのでしょうか」と問いかけています。 TECCMC's BLOG(但馬救命救急センターのブログ)「マスコミの人間に心はあるのか」 自分が事件や事故を取材する社会部の記者だったのは10年以上前ですが、大きな事故の病院取材はとても難しく、「こんな取材が本当に望まれているのか、何の意味があるのか」と自問自答する記者にとっても辛い取材であったことを思い出しました。 このような現場での無理な取材は、事故や災害で何度も批判を浴びてきました。なぜ繰り返されるのかという構造的な問題に目を向けて考えて見ます。 なぜ被害者を取材しようと
Telling climate stories through a solutions and data lens How solutions storytelling can engage local communities on mitigating the climate crisis The time is now for journalists to halt the doom and gloom narrative around the climate crisis and instead reframe the narrative with a solutions approach. Journalist Sherry Ricchiardi examines how to tell such solutions stories with data by highlightin
Celebrate King's Day with TNW 🎟 Use code GEZELLIG40 on your Business, Investor and Startup passes today! This offer ends on April 29 → It is only fitting that the latest citizen journalist app, Signal, is coming right out of the Middle East, courtesy of Lebanese entrepreneur, Mark Malkoun. No area in the world has highlighted the effect of citizen journalism more effectively, this past year, than
A new framework for innovation in journalism: How a computer scientist would do it Nick Diakopolous, in a new report from CUNY, argues that journalism is a lot like computer science, since both are fundamentally concerned with information. What if journalism were invented today? How would a computer scientist go about building it, improving it, iterating it? He might start by mapping out some fund
State of the News Media 2012New Devices, Platforms Spur More News Consumption A mounting body of evidence finds that the spread of mobile technology is adding to news consumption, strengthening the appeal of traditional news brands and even boosting reading of long-form journalism. But the evidence also shows that technology companies are strengthening their grip on who profits, according to the 2
A year after launching a controversial paywall, the New York Times says it has nearly half a million paying subscribers for its flagship paper. It also says it will make it harder for people to read on the Web without paying up. The Times is cutting back on the number of “free” articles it lets nonsubscribers read, from 20 a month to 10. The change goes into effect in April. The rest of the paywal
We’ve heard that social media is a great source of traffic for news outlets so often that it’s close to textbook. Yes, Facebook, Twitter and the rest are important, according the 2012 State of the News Media report by Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism — but not yet as important as the buzz might lead you to think. That’s not to dismiss the value, rather to put it in perspe
As part of its campaign to increase its social presence and to change the way people access news online, the BBC has rolled out its new BBC News Control Panel for its official Facebook page to give people more control over the news that they see on their News Stream. The changes have come as part of a change in how its visitors reach the BBC News website, with less than 50% of its 8 million+ visit
In the not-so-distant past, news generally tended to travel in a few well-worn paths. It was reported by a newspaper, it appeared on television at noon or 6 p.m. or it was mentioned on a drive-time radio show — and those involved usually had plenty of time to report it and produce it. The arrival of CNN and 24-hour news changed all of that, however, and Twitter and Facebook have changed it again:
by Andrew Beaujon Published Feb. 13, 2012 7:08 am Updated Feb. 13, 2012 7:13 am Project for Excellence in Journalism News organizations are doing a crummy job of capitalizing on online advertising’s growth. The Pew Research Center’s Project for Excellence in Journalism studied the websites of 11 newspapers, several TV networks, and Yahoo and the Huffington Post, and found that “even the top news
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