ShortFormBlog

Read a little. Learn a lot. • Ask Us Stuff!FAQArchiveTimeline

 
nav: on
December 6, 2012
21:57 • 5 months ago
poptech:

futurejournalismproject:

Syria Deeply, Beat Page of the Future
It’s an incredible idea: one site, one beat. No front page. No sports, no business or finance, anywhere. It’s called Syria Deeply.
It’s about 25% original content, written by veteran Middle East correspondent Lara Setrakian and friends. The rest is aggregated and includes interactives, maps, and contextual material aimed to catch people up on the story without pointing them off site.
From FastCompany:

From a taxonomy perspective, Syria Deeply is the opposite of most news sites. In a traditional news taxonomy, information is divided by broad topics, like World News. Each topic is divided into subsections, like the Middle East. Each subsection is then often divided into even smaller subsections, like Syria. Each section gets smaller and smaller. Topic pages live in obscure ghettos on many news websites: auto-aggregated and ugly dumping grounds for content that happens to be tagged with particular keywords.
On Syria Deeply (designed by Brock Petrie and developed by Soumyadeep Paul and Arindam Biswas, who runs Collective Zen) the topic page is the homepage. Setrakian’s hope is that this site-wide focus on a single beat will allow for deeper, more thoughtful reporting.

FJP: Looks extremely promising.

Context, context, context. Bravo. 

If you have not made it to this site, do so. This is how you cover single-topic news.

poptech:

futurejournalismproject:

Syria Deeply, Beat Page of the Future

It’s an incredible idea: one site, one beat. No front page. No sports, no business or finance, anywhere. It’s called Syria Deeply.

It’s about 25% original content, written by veteran Middle East correspondent Lara Setrakian and friends. The rest is aggregated and includes interactives, maps, and contextual material aimed to catch people up on the story without pointing them off site.

From FastCompany:

From a taxonomy perspective, Syria Deeply is the opposite of most news sites. In a traditional news taxonomy, information is divided by broad topics, like World News. Each topic is divided into subsections, like the Middle East. Each subsection is then often divided into even smaller subsections, like Syria. Each section gets smaller and smaller. Topic pages live in obscure ghettos on many news websites: auto-aggregated and ugly dumping grounds for content that happens to be tagged with particular keywords.

On Syria Deeply (designed by Brock Petrie and developed by Soumyadeep Paul and Arindam Biswas, who runs Collective Zen) the topic page is the homepage. Setrakian’s hope is that this site-wide focus on a single beat will allow for deeper, more thoughtful reporting.

FJP: Looks extremely promising.

Context, context, context. Bravo. 

If you have not made it to this site, do so. This is how you cover single-topic news.

blog comments powered by Disqus

236 notes from really cool Tumblrs like ours:

  1. yjcanvas reblogged this from shortformblog
  2. fromrusholmewithlove reblogged this from futurejournalismproject
  3. pod313 reblogged this from futurejournalismproject
  4. haveaterrabletime reblogged this from shortformblog
  5. snarkofspace reblogged this from soupsoup
  6. onlymi reblogged this from futurejournalismproject
  7. mickeymousehasgrownupaclown reblogged this from futurejournalismproject
  8. lelutin reblogged this from shortformblog
  9. onepercentaboutanything reblogged this from ze-violet
  10. creativemilk reblogged this from shortformblog
  11. quadrillion reblogged this from shortformblog
  12. ze-violet reblogged this from misantropo
  13. misantropo reblogged this from shortformblog
  14. This was featured in #News
  15. ricardo800 reblogged this from shortformblog
  16. givemypoorheartease reblogged this from shortformblog
  17. rhetoricandtreason reblogged this from lifeandcode
  18. catedrals reblogged this from shortformblog
More Cool Stuff From Buzzfeed:
 

ShortFormBlog is the product of Ernie Smith, Seth Millstein, Chris Tognotti, Sami Main, Scott Craft, Matthew Keys, Julius the laid-off RSS robot, awesome links from awesome sources, a hacked version of Wordpress, Tumblr's Tumblarity, the letter Q, the number 13 and a series of tubes.

Copyright 2009-2013 Ernie SmithAsk us stuff!E-mail usFollow us on TwitterFollow us on Facebook

    TwitterCounter for @shortformblog   Real Time Web Analytics   Creative Commons License Real Time Web Analytics