News innovation
Just catching up with a report, via Editors Weblog, on a meeting of Dutch and Flemish media execs sharing projects on innovation in news. The reports themselves are mostly in Dutch but the summary reveals some interesting work, including:
* An experiment called Farcast using dolled-up mobile phones for reporting, grabbing audio, photos, and text with GPS attached, working through a dedicated server to publish the news. The meetingn presentation says tThe Dutch news agency dispatched 15 units for four months with 25 users who ended up sending in 500 posts. It was up to four hours faster than traditional channels. Obviously, this doesn’t replace those channels — that is, the typed report. But to be able to get instant multimedia reports up without hassle could be very powerful.
* Another hardware experiment with a dolled-up laptop for news-gathering.
* A local networked journalism product called Hasseltlokaal using what they called many-to-many publishing. Has 20 local reporters between 17 and 70 filing 4-5 articles a day. Sounds like a local Netzeitung Readers-Edition.
* Another model of connecting the people formerly known as readers to ask and answer each others’ questions.
* A free youth paper/site called SP!TS. The kids like the name.
* An e-paper gadget.
Not all of it will work. But this is the sort of innovation we need in news.
Tags: cuny, journalism, newnews, newsinnovation
December 15th, 2006 at 9:26 pm
[...] BuzzMachine » News innovation “Dutch and Flemish media execs sharing projects on innovation in news” (tags: internet newspapers innovation trends) [...]
December 22nd, 2006 at 9:45 am
[...] The BBC starts an experiment in networked journalism using students equipped with Nokia phones (aka news gathering devices) hooked up with GPS to get location (aka hyperlocal) information. Sounds a bit like the Farcast project described here. I do like the idea of a new device that can record and send along and publish geographically tagged photos, video, text, and audio. The phones we have — like my beloved Treo — are almost there, but they need to enable easier text input and easy editing of multimedia without any publishing hassles on the other end. [...]