There’s a new resource to help journalists
and media entrepreneurs discover, tell and proliferate stories in the digital
age
From
real-time news feeds to social media walls and live streaming video to looping
clips, there exists a huge proliferation of tools that generate data and
information today. From end users to media professionals, people are using
these tools in their daily lives to generate content and tell their stories
more ubiquitously than ever.
In an effort
to help organize all of this real-time information, Google has launched an online
initiative called the Google
News Lab, which aims to be a one-stop resource for Web journalists and
media entrepreneurs to help them locate trends and cover stories more
effectively.
The resource
contains information on using the various tools that are part of Google’s
extensive portfolio--from the newly revamped Google Trends, Google Consumer Surveys,
Alerts, and Public Data Explorer to the regulars comprising Google Search,
Maps, YouTube et al. Users
can access numerous lessons on using these tools with illustrative examples on
how they can be used across the entire digital journalism pipeline
comprising researching, reporting, distributing and optimizing news stories.
This
resource appears to play into Google’s overarching aim of enabling users to
access and interpret various kinds of digital data to find and tell stories
today that would otherwise not have been possible earlier. In a sense,
interpreting big data and applying it to the newsroom.
As part of
News Labs, Google has partnered with a slew of companies including Witness
Media Lab, Matter, the European Journalism Center, the Center for Investigative
Reporting and more. These partnerships bring focus to their thrust on citizen
reporting, where virtually any user can tap into mobile technology for creating
user-generated news.
They will
also be producing a series of events called TrechRaking, which brings
together key players from the journalism, technology and design sectors
to share real-world use cases in this new wave of data-driven journalism.
The resource
is available in about 90 languages including Hindi, Tamil, Bengali and more.
Watch
Google’s view on how data journalism is poised to change the newsroom:
Source
| Daily News Analysis | 23 June 2015
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