Finding tools vs. making tools: Discovering common ground between computer science and journalism by Nick Diakopoulos.
From the post:
The second Computation + Journalism Symposium convened recently at the Georgia Tech College of Computing to ask the broad question: What role does computation have in the practice of journalism today and in the near future? (I was one of its organizers.) The symposium attracted almost 150 participants, both technologists and journalists, to discuss and debate the issues and to forge a multi-disciplinary path forward around that question.
Topics for panels covered the gamut, from precision and data journalism, to verification of visual content, news dissemination on social media, sports and health beats, storytelling with data, longform interfaces, the new economic landscape of content, and the educational needs of aspiring journalists. But what made these sessions and topics really pop was that participants on both sides of the computation and journalism aisle met each other in a conversational format where intersections and differences in the ways they viewed these topics could be teased apart through dialogue. (Videos of the sessions are online.)
While the panelists were all too civilized for any brawls to break out, mixing two disciplines as different as computing and journalism nonetheless did lead to some interesting discussions, divergences, and opportunities that I’d like to explore further here. Keeping these issues top-of-mind should help as this field moves forward.
Tool foragers and tool forgers
The following metaphor is not meant to be incendiary, but rather to illuminate two different approaches to tool innovation that seemed apparent at the symposium.
Imagine you live about 10,000 years ago, on the cusp of the Neolithic Revolution. The invention of agriculture is just around the corner. It’s spring and you’re hungry after the long winter. You can start scrounging around for berries and other tasty roots to feed you and your family — or you can stop and try to invent some agricultural implements, tools adapted to your own local crops and soil that could lead to an era of prosperity. If you take the inventive approach, you might fail, and there’s a real chance you’ll starve trying — while foraging will likely guarantee you another year of subsistence life.
What role does computation have in your field of practice?