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Journalism Students + Computer Science Majors = Better News Apps for All

Written by Jolie O'Dell / June 8, 2009 9:35 AM / 7 Comments

The good old days of print journalism are becoming just that - good old days, the domain of old timers who reminisce about tape recorders and digging through other people's garbage bins.

While such reminiscences undoubtedly wrench a wistful sigh from the breast of those who lived and worked in those heady days (like, before 2002), educating young would-be journalists about how early adopters and the tech-minded are consuming and helping distribute news is a necessary step to ensure the evolution rather than the extinction of American news services. Northwestern University has taken productive steps in that direction this spring and is set to present five interesting, student-created news apps this week.

"Right now we've got the resources, time and energy to do research and development that the news industry doesn't," says Jeremy Gilbert, assistant professor of multimedia at Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism. The school recently got the J-school kids to team up with a bunch of computer science majors from the McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science, and five innovative results are to be presented this Wednesday.

The students have focused on easing creation and consumption of news while reducing costs of news production and enabling journalistic standards of research and factuality.

The body of work from this experiment includes sports story generator (Machine Generated Sports Stories, or MGSS) that writes sports coverage all by itself from box scores and play-by-play; a Microsoft Word plug-in (Easy Writer) that allows journos to research and fact-check stories as they write them without having to use a separate search engine; an iPhone app (News Feed) that provides the daily news in five- 10- and 20-minute chunks for news-hungry readers with limited time to read; and two Twitter apps.

Twitter News Service sends pertinent news links to users based on their posts. Either the tool will run in the background of Twitter or from a designated Twitter account that users choose to follow (or un-follow) as they desire.

Tweedia will combine news stories with relevant personal opinion and information on a given topic. By integrating Tweedia into a news site, readers get instant access to relevant Twitter posts. News outlets can place a Tweedia link at the end of stories that will either open a widget on the page or redirect readers to the Tweedia site.

Last year, Medill students built News Mixer, a site that mashed up local news with Facebook, allowing users to comment as they read even though many old-school news organizations still don't allow for comments.

Now all Northwestern needs to do is throw in the business school kids and a couple hundred thousand dollars; Startup Semester, anyone?

Comments

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  1. This is great news! All of the apps sound like very useful tools for journalists and readers alike.

     Posted by: Vadim Author Profile Page | June 8, 2009 11:19 AM




  2. You can read more about this project here:

    http://www.pbs.org/idealab/2009/06/student-journalists-technologists-collaborate-on-news-innovations158.html

    Rich Gordon
    (one of the professors involved in the project)

     Posted by: Rich Author Profile Page Posted on FriendFeed   | June 8, 2009 12:16 PM



  3. We just made it (as in less than a week ago) to the Microsoft Imagine Cup world finals with a similar news app

    http://www.teamcurious.com/actors/

    It's still very much a work in progress, but definitely right in line with the goals outlined in the above article.

     Posted by: Marc Author Profile Page | June 8, 2009 1:56 PM



  4. Some of these apps sound awesome, and follow what I laid out here, http://bit.ly/2Smfr.

    Posted by: nebben | June 8, 2009 2:30 PM



  5. Congrats to Rich and all. Some questions for you:

    1. Who generates the ideas for the apps?
    2. How do the ideas get cross-pollinated?
    3. When does the app get built and by whom?
    4. Grades? Paychecks? Both?

    Posted by: Ryan Thornburg | June 8, 2009 7:32 PM



  6. this is so funny...

    I'm the first person in america to double major and get a degree in both Journalism and Computer Science; that was 1991; before the internet existed.

    Posted by: lemon obrien | June 8, 2009 11:30 PM



  7. Now all we need to do is create computer generated programs to consume the sports news, and robot players, and we can completely do away with the necessity for humans altogether.

    Posted by: JulesLt | June 9, 2009 5:24 AM



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