Today I attended two workshops on digital journalism: the first, about tools for mobile news, the second, on watchdog journalism, which will come in a later post.
In "The Future of Journalism: Going Mobile," the presenters emphasized tablets similar to the iPad. "The only game in town is the iPad," said Paul Niwa. He sought to dispel the enigma of programming and codes, saying any and every journalist now has the tool to create their own mobile applications.
"You don't have to be a geek to embrace the ability to make some of these new things," said Gil Asakawa.
For example, some tools are useful: Adobe InDesign offers a free plugin for its publishing suite. Newsstand, an iPad app, centralizes news and magazines. Sophie: provides an open source publishing platform in html5, without the complexity of Flash script. Niwa also mentioned Android app inventors and Push Pop Press, an app publisher recently bought by Facebook that makes books interactive. Layar is another tool of "augmented reality," allowing consumers to pull up information on their phone just by pointing their mobile device at an object.
The advantage of creating applications is its compact nature. An entire multimedia package can be created and read on the go, on your phone or on a small screen. And now, more than ever, people want to see that information, in a contained, easy-to-digest story, from wherever they are.
"People want to see their media immediate," Niwa said.
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