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Graphic Journalist
Arizona Daily Star
Graphic Journalist
Because of the excellent suggestions from Times' Lens' contributors and since it's no secret I work at the Times as the Multimedia Editor, I went ahead and included NYTimes' Lens' Must See RSS feed to the Interactive Narratives' NetVibes Universe. You can More…
posted by Andrew DeVigal
I found Trent Nelson’s "The Click" blog via Zach Wise. The Click is quick. And their RSS feed is now a part Photojournalism area of the Interactive Narrative More…
posted by Andrew DeVigal
Want to get faster updates of multimedia stories and interactive narratives? Follow Interactive Narratives, or INarratives, on twitter at http://twitter.com/inarratives. More…
posted by Andrew DeVigal
I just added a few more feeds to our NetVibes Universe. Any other must haves on the list? New ones include: - Multimedia Shooter (on Video Journalism) - Boston.com's The Big P More…
posted by Andrew DeVigal
For almost a decade, the multimedia bootcamp workshops at the University of North Carolina provided one of the main training sites for hundreds of professional journalists seeking to understand new storytelling tools and techniques and to gain hands-on tr More…
posted by Andrew DeVigal
posted by williamcouch
Asked about his response to the suggestion that the NYT might print its last edition in 2015, Sulzberger said he saw no point in making such predictions and said all he could say was that "we will stop printing the New York Times sometime in the future, date TBD." More…
posted by tysone
Best link of the day. More…
posted by williamcouch
posted by williamcouch
posted by williamcouch
posted by williamcouch
After more than a century of peaceful co-existence, the Wall Street Journal has decided to take on the New York Times head on with its Greater New York section. New owner Rupert Murdoch declared "let the battle begin." Is this going to be a newspaper war for the ages? Or have the readers already moved on....online? More…
posted by tysone
The "civic stack" is a shared body of software and protocols for civic entities, built on open standards. A primary goal of Civic Commons is to make it easy for jurisdictions at all levels to deploy compatible software. Pooling resources into a shared civic stack reduces costs and avoids duplicated effort; equally importantly, it helps make civic IT expertise more cumulative and portable across jurisdictions, for civil servants, for citizens, and for vendors. More…
posted by tysone
posted by williamcouch
This is historiography. This is what culture actually looks like: a process of argument, of dissenting and accreting opinion, of gradual and not always correct codification.
And for the first time in history, we?re building a system that, perhaps only for a brief time but certainly for the moment, is capable of recording every single one of those infinitely valuable pieces of information. More…
posted by tysone
"Supreme Court justices generally hire clerks who have worked for federal appeals court judges. The conservative half of the court overwhelmingly hires clerks who served judges appointed by Republican presidents, while the liberal half of the court is more likely to hire clerks from judges appointed by Democrats, a pattern that was not as strong 30 years ago." More…
posted by drewvigal
"Like it or not, Android is huge. Creating an open source mobile platform was one of the smarter things Google has done. It's too bad that they haven't done that great of a job doing it. Android has succeeded despite Google. In fact it's safe to say that Android is successful for one primary reason. The iPhone is only available on AT&T. If the iPhone was on Verizon a year ago. Android would be no where near as popular. But since this has yet to happen, Android has become a huge market that isn't going away." More…
posted by drewvigal
Eight new players. Four new coaches. One new court. A whole new ballgame in Tucson. More…
The 2009 Arizona Wildcats football team might not have a big-name star or record-setting passer this season. But it has something more important than star power: Depth. More…
It started with a simple question: What happens to garbage and recyclables when they leave your curb? We explain the steps of each process, with help from City of Tucson Environmental Services Department employees. More…
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