By Mathew Ingram While Twitter has been alive with breaking news about the events in Ferguson, Mo. after the shooting of an unarmed black man — video clips posted by participants, live-tweet... Read more
By Frédéric Filloux The modern smartphone is 7 years old and yet, when it comes to designing mobile applications, we are still barely scratching the surface. Today we’ll see how harnessing t... Read more
By Margaret Looney The loudest buzzwords you’re hearing in the journalism industry today – native advertising, monetization, big data – are here to stay, according to... Read more
By Douglas Grant Building a capacity for video news online remains an exercise in faith. Despite the fact that videos aren’t directly producing revenue, they still have an important ro... Read more
By Jessica Weiss In 2004, Texas man Todd Willingham was executed for starting the fire that had killed his three daughters thirteen years earlier. The case rested on the testimony of a... Read more
By Friedrich Lindenberg How can online research tools aid the work of investigative reporters and others looking into transnational financial flows, corporate structures and other illi... Read more
By David Brewer Interviewing as a fact-finding tool Interviewing is one of a journalist’s main skills. It is through interviewing that you find facts, hear diverse perspectives a... Read more
The International Reporting Project (IRP) is accepting applications for its new media reporting trip to Mozambique from October 24 to November 6, 2014. The focus o... Read more
By David Carr USA Today and other Gannett newspapers will be spun off into a stand-alone print company. Jake Naughton / The New York Times Media companies spin off newspapers, to uncert... Read more
By John McDuling Last week, America’s biggest newspaper by total circulation, USA Today, was effectively discarded by its owner. News Corp, the owner of the second biggest (the Wall Str... Read more







