| 23rd October - New mobile journalism
application allows reporters to file and publish text, photo, audio and video
news stories from handheld devices, rather than laptops.
Nokia Research
Center (NRC) and Reuters are working together on a mobile journalism project that
could transform the way journalists file news reports when on the move. The new
mobile application is the first project to be showcased from a long term research
collaboration that has been established between NRC and Reuters. It centres around
a lightweight toolkit that provides everything journalists need to file and publish
stories from even the most remote regions of the world. Through an ongoing
trial that started this summer, select Reuters journalists around the world made
use of the mobile journalism application in their everyday work to edit, combine
and file text, images, sound and live and recorded video streams, producing and
publishing multi-media stories of broadcast quality without needing to return
to the studio or office. "This is a very easy-to-use application
that takes account of the demands placed on journalists in the field," said
Nic Fulton, Chief Scientist of Reuters Media. "By running on handheld devices,
rather than on bulkier laptop computers, the mobile journalism application enables
us to create complete stories and file them for distribution, without leaving
the scene. This saves us time and benefits our audience by ensuring that they
receive high quality news that is absolutely up-to-date." While the
application's most immediate use would be for professional journalists, the implications
of the research could be much wider in the long term. Timo Koskinen, project manager
with Nokia Research Center, said: "The term 'citizen journalism' has been
in use for several years, but technological innovations - particularly the introduction
of mobile multimedia computers - have transformed the concept. 'Citizen journalism'
is beginning to embrace a wide range of public engagement with the media, from
groups of contributors organized around subject or geographic areas to the casual
participation of observers who are lucky - or unlucky - enough to be at the scene
of a newsworthy event." The mobile journalism application uses the
multimedia capabilities already available in existing smart phones and combines
these to produce a toolkit that fits intuitively with the way in which journalists
want to use it. The toolkit comprises multimedia capabilities, text editing tools
and live video streaming and is accessed using an innovative user interface. Metadata
facilities automatically combine every piece of information the device already
has about the context for the story - location, time, date and so on. For the
trial, GPS integrated video-streaming technology was provided by Comvu. Reuters
has already developed a mobile editorial interface that links the toolkit developed
by NRC to the in-house editorial process, allowing stories to be published almost
instantly from the field. The trial involved a select group of Reuters
journalists who filed stories from events ranging from New York's Fashion Week
to the Edinburgh Film Festival. Reuters continues to make experimental use of
the application. A group of university students will also use the application
in coming months, to give an idea of how the toolkit could possibly work in a
future citizen journalism context.
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