Articles

Projects walkthroughs, tool teardowns, interviews, and more.

  1. What We’ve Learned About Sharing Our Data Analysis

    By Jeremy Singer-Vine

    Posted on

    Last Friday morning, Jessica Garrison, Ken Bensinger, and I published a BuzzFeed News investigation highlighting the ease with which American employers have exploited and abused a particular type of foreign worker—those on seasonal H–2 visas. That same morning, we published the corresponding data, methodologies, and analytic code on GitHub. This isn’t the first time we’ve open-sourced our data and analysis; far from it. But the H–2 project represents our most ambitious effort yet. In this post, I’ll describe our current thinking on “reproducible data analyses,” and how the H–2 project reflects those thoughts.

  2. Introducing Aufbau

    By Michael Keller

    Posted on

    Remembering where all our tools live and how to use them can be tiresome, even for us. As a potential solution, we’re experimenting with packaging these previously web apps into a desktop application using GitHub’s Electron framework, which NPR has also been experimenting with for photo tools. The project is called Aufbau and it’s up on GitHub.

  3. Demo Sites Are Weird

    By Ryan Mark and Kavya Sukumar

    Posted on

    Since the launch of Autotune, we have been approached by people interested in adopting it for their own newsrooms. While a lot of people didn’t mind diving right into the set up, a few people asked us “Is there anywhere I can try this out?”. Fueled by the amazing coffee selection at the most recent OpenNews code convening in Portland, we decided to build a demo site that allows users to try building projects and get a feel for the framework.

  4. Draw Your Own Election Adventure

    By Juan Elosua

    Posted on

    At La Nación, we have been working on real-time coverage of Buenos Aires elections, as well as a more detailed view results once we get data for each polling station. In this post, we’ll to explain our mapping-app innovation that allows readers to choose what parts of the city they are interested in by drawing shapes over a basemap, and then returns custom results for their selected area.

  5. Event Roundup, Aug 3

    By Erika Owens

    Posted on

    Demos at Hacks/Hackers meetups this week in Seattle and next week in New York.

  6. News Nerd Roundup, July 31, 2015

    By Lindsay Muscato

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    Recent pieces that we loved from ProPublica and Matter, BuzzFeed, the Daily Herald and WBEZ, New York Magazine, and more.

  7. Introducing broca

    By Francis Tseng

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    Made at our recent code convening, broca creates a system for easier experimentation and implementation of natural language processing.

  8. Introducing Lunchbox

    By Tyler Fisher and Livia Labate

    Posted on

    At the OpenNews July 2015 Code Convening, the NPR Visuals Team built and released a desktop app for creating shareable images across social media platforms.

  9. A User-Centered Conversation at SRCCON

    By Lindsay Muscato

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    At SRCCON, we heard a lot about a user-centered approach. What does that mean for journalism?

  10. Fellows + Code Convening = New Open Source Tools

    By Erin Kissane

    Posted on

    Our fifth OpenNews code convening wrapped up last Friday. Uniquely for our convenings, this one included all seven of our current Knight-Mozilla Fellows, each working with a colleague from their news organization or another organization with shared challenges and complimentary skills. Over the next week, we’ll be posting project introductions from each of the seven project teams that joined us in Portland for the event. In the interim, a quick intro to the teams, the projects they brought to the convening, and what they got done.

  11. Event Roundup, July 27

    By Erika Owens

    Posted on

    Meetups this week in Austin, Tokyo, NYC, DC, Bogota, Miami, and Montevideo, plus it’s your last chance to pitch to the Hacks/Hackers Buenos Aires Media Party

  12. How We Made Losing Ground

    By Brian Jacobs

    Posted on

    How we tracked down, processed, filtered, revisualized, mashed up, and otherwise handled a boatload of disparate imagery to map changes in the Louisiana coastline backward and forward in time.

  13. Event Roundup, July 20

    By Erika Owens

    Posted on

    Chat with OpenNews this week about Knight-Mozilla Fellowships, or apply for the HBCU fellowship to ONA.

  14. Event Roundup, July 13

    By Erika Owens

    Posted on

    Media Factory bootcamps continue this week, with Knight-Mozilla Fellowship alum Sonya Song in Lima.

  15. You Are Such Polymaths

    By Lindsay Muscato

    Posted on

    At SRCCON, OpenNews’s two-day conference in Minneapolis last month, we basked in the collective smarts of 220+ attendees and nearly 50 sessions. Afterward, we heard a lot of lovely feedback (people like snacks and unisex bathrooms and child care, and we are so very happy you were happy). So we’d like to reflect back some thoughts about you. Like: it was really clear, in a tangible way, that you have more gears, switches, and hidden functions than Furiosa’s war rig.

  16. Introducing Autotune

    By Ryan Mark, Lauren Rabaino, and Kavya Sukumar

    Posted on

    Today we’re announcing a new project we’ve been working on at Vox Media: Autotune, a centralized management system for charts, graphics, quizzes, and other tools. We built the application to address the problem of reusability in our work. This project is open source and available to everyone.

  17. Event Roundup, July 6

    By

    Posted on

    The third Hacking Journalism event is in DC this weekend, plus a data visualization workshop in Pittsburgh, and Hacks/Hackers meetups around the world.

  18. Reported.ly’s Editorial—and Web—Evolution

    By P. Kim Bui

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    Kim Bui breaks down the iterative process reported.ly’s web presence has undergone alongside the team’s editorial evolution.

  19. Event Roundup, June 22

    By Erika Owens

    Posted on

    It’s time for SRCCON, plus the first Hacks/Hackers Connect, Open Source Bridge, and local meetups.

  20. How We Made “Faces of Death Row”

    By Jolie McCullough and Lindsay Muscato

    Posted on

    This week, the Texas Tribune launched Faces of Death Row, a simply designed news app that prominently features photographs of each of the 261 people currently awaiting execution in Texas (accompanying article). The app allows for filtering by age, race, sex, and number of years spent on death row. Its simplicity—an artifact of the unavailability of the data the Tribune originally sought—is also its strength.

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