The Copy Editor

I'm Jojo Pasion Malig. I'm the usual suspect behind the night desk of the Philippines' leading news website. I like making interactive data eye candy. Mild prescriptivist.
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Twitter, as we all know, is often wrong. Even when journalists are tweeting, they can do so impulsively, passing on incorrect information that they would never let into a story without double checking it. Twitter is not a reliable source, and it is a shame that people had to resort to relying on it on these issues because they felt like updated information wasn’t otherwise available.

gannettona2012:

Back from the Online News Association annual conference, my head is spinning with a few key topics — augmented reality, data visualization, possible resurgence of audio, reporting on the go, data visualization and the role of social media directors.  (And did I mention data visualization?)

Here are resources I’m taking back to my Gannett newsroom after hearing from ONA panelists and participants. 

Some are new and have piqued people’s interest. Some still have people buzzing months or even years in.

What should we add? Comment here or tweet me at @kjmcginty.


After the Deadline This plug-in or add-on speeds up the editing process by checking your story for grammar, spelling and style.

Buffer Easily schedule articles, pictures and links to move out via your social media accounts.

Census.IRE.Org IRE led this project to make the 2010 U.S. Census data more manageable for journalists. Next up, they’ll be creating guides to help journalists and will allow you to browse the American Community Survey results.

Chartbeat Chartbeat promises real-time analytics, including how long your audience is actively engaged and how far they’ve scrolled down the page. (Paid service.  Free 30-day trial.) 

FilterStorm Dessigned specifically for photojournalists, you can edit your photos and send them in via email, FTP, Dropbox or SFTP. ($3.99 in app store)

Gopano Create, share and view 360-degree photos and videos with any camera.  (Free in app store)

HyperMac HyperMac is an external battery for any USB-driven device — your iPad, your iPhone, your laptop. “This is a life saver,” Robert Hernandez (@webjournalist) promises.

iTimeLapse Create time lapse and stop motion videos from iPhone or iPad. Options include selecting how often to snap photos and how long the video should be. ($1.99 in the app store) 

Meograph ”Four-dimensional story-telling” This is video meets infographic — combining maps, timeline, links, and multimedia to tell stories “in context of where and when.” 

Mobile Reporters’ Field Guide Developed by UC Berkley Graduate School of Journalism, this free PDF or iBook promises to be everything a reporter needs to know when reporting from an iPhone. Search Mobile Reporting Guide in the app store.

Overview “Visual document mining for journalists” Developed at the Associated Press,  Overview analyzes the complete text of every document, extracting keywords and sorting documents into categories and sub-categories. Email info@overviewproject.org or tweet @overviewproject for your “preview login.”

Podio “An online workspace for everyone”  Social work platform for basic project management tasks — calendar, contacts, activity stream — that helps teams collaborate and communicate. (Free and paid versions.)

Reddit “The front page of the Internet” Site tracks what’s new and what’s popular online. Submit your own links, or vote on others to drive what’s appearing on the front page. (“I think Reddit is on the rise,” said Liz Heron.)

Reporters Committee First Aid mobile app Free guide gives reporters in the field immediate access to legal resources, particularly in situations where access or news gathering may be stymied. Search “reporters committee” in App Store.

Scribble Live Create, curate and publish content to provide real time coverage and storytelling.

SpliceApp A video editing app that works with music, photos, text or video clips. ($3.99 in app store)

Spundge “Smarter curation, genius content.” Read, save, filter and annotate content from the web — Facebook, Flickr, Instagram, Twitter and YouTube included. (Free and paid versions) 

Spotify Digital music service gives you access to millions of songs. Consider creating and sharing music playlists from your local music scene.

Storify Take the best of what people post on social media — photos, tweets, videos — and easily publish it into a compelling story. 

Topsy Search content published on Twitter and the web, and sort it by date or relevance.

Ustream Broadcast (free) live video to the world from a computer or iPhone in minutes, or watch thousands of shows.

Vyclone Record a video at the same time and place as another person, and this app will automatically synch your videos into a single, multi-angle masterpiece (based on GPS). (Free in app store)

Watch Up Tap the news videos you want to watch, creating your own playlist. Then sit back and watch. (Free iPad app.)  


Want more? Links to other sources

  • Amy Webb, founder of WebbMedia, presented the Top 10 Tech Trends for 2012 to a standing-room only crowd — and she wants your input here.
  • Robert Hernandez posted this collection of multimedia tools a while back that is mostly still relevant.
  • A “Q and A with Liz Heron on Her Share-worthy Strategies” (via @caseycapachi) here.


— Compiled by Kate McGinty, reporter for The Desert Sun in Palm Springs, California.

futurejournalismproject:

On the Importance of Journalists Understanding Technology


The latest in our conversation with Farai Chideya, in which she discusses her own experiences learning new technologies and how—especially as an entrepreneur in the journalism world—knowing the tech side of things has helped her collaborate, innovate, and pursue great journalism.

This.

Instead of effectively cold-calling individuals on social media platforms, build a relationship first. This means taking an interest in each individual, and showing them how your resources, skills and experience can directly benefit them. A savvy social media strategy would consistently give, give, give – rather than shouting more white noise at an audience which could be web-weary.

How not to lay out the front page

[via Sands Media Services]

We don’t select publications anymore, we select links. Even as the Web grew, publishers assured one another that the need for a trusted news source would preserve newspapers’ relevance, but it turned out that the trust we have in our friends is, for most of us, an adequate substitute for deciding what to read, watch, or listen to.
Clay Shirky, Failing geometry

Reuters News says one of its Twitter accounts was hacked on Sunday and false tweets were posted, mainly related to the current unrest in Syria.

The company earlier said the blogging platform of the Reuters News website was compromised on Friday and a false posting purporting to carry an interview with a Syrian rebel leader was illegally posted on a Reuters’ journalist’s blog.

There was another serious technical limitation of 20th-century media: There was no way to go back to what was reported before. You could look at yesterday’s paper if you hadn’t thrown it out, or even go to the library and look up last year on microfilm. Similarly, there were radio and television archives. But it was so hard to rewind that most people never did.

Each story was meant to be viewed only once, on the day of its publication or broadcast. The news media were not, and could not be, reference media.

The Future of News As We Know It, July 2012: A new, free ebook collection from Nieman Lab for August.

Here’s an EPUB reader extension for Firefox to read the ebook on your PC.

The GIF, invented by CompuServe in 1987, has many advantages over video: It requires no Flash and works in any browser on any device. It is silent, and therefore viewable in environments where sound is not available or desirable (i.e., the office). It’s incredibly shareable, as any visit to Tumblr will attest.
Andrew Phelps explains at Nieman Lab how and why the GIF has crossed over into mainstream media and become a multimedia storytelling device.
Yes, you can save a pile of money by eliminating editors. You can also save money by eliminating inspectors at meat-packing plants. The question is what you plan to do about the inevitable consequences.

If you’re a fellow data mapper, here’s Data Roller, which converts shapefiles (.shp) to .csv format [h/t @datenjournalist]

We want to make journalists’ lives easier through software. From what we’ve heard, transcription is one of their pain points and while Transcribe can’t do the transcription automatically for them (at least, not yet) we could make the transcription process a little easier for them through our tool.