From the WSJ's job market tracker.
As we did last year, we've asked a couple of dozen people from all around the news-nerd community to tell us about one thing—article, feature, app, tool, or something else entirely—that they loved in 2015. This week, we're publishing their responses, from interactives to project management software.
We hope you find here at least one thing that eases your work, inspires new angles on your stories, and helps carry you through to 2016. —ed
Great Interactives
Becky Bowers, The Wall Street Journal
I’m deeply in love with my colleagues’ job market tracker. Who’s getting jobs, who’s losing them—and is it happening in industries big enough to matter? Every month, it told the story, with just a moment of human help. That’s the power of visualizations built to last, and just one reason I love the future of news.
Derek Willis, ProPublica
There is a lot of clutter and noise in modern American politics, and much moreso when it comes to a presidential race. That’s why my single thing in 2015 is a feature from early this year that took a look at the correspondence of Jeb Bush during his father’s time as vice president and president, by Alicia Parlapiano and Wilson Andrews of the New York Times.
While we have great tools for working with documents, I feel this piece really set a bar for how to combine the original documents with context and design in a way that made it feel almost like a museum piece. Would love to see more rich treatment of source documents in 2016.
MaryJo Webster, The Star Tribune
My colleagues and I are all just so impressed with this visualization by the Tampa Bay Times.
I wish it was a bit shorter (maybe a half dozen slides), but I just love the concept of explaining something complicated in this slide-like way.
Jacob Harris, 18F
It’s not cheery, but I am still amazed by this piece from the New York Times on how Syrians are dying.
I wrote that it’s easy to forget the dots are people, but this piece doesn’t let you, and those are a goddamned lot of dots, enough to make you gasp at the horror of it all.
Juan Elosua, OpenNews Fellow, La Nacion
From the Guardian regarding Homan Square Chicago detainees.
I love the way they use the scroll to do the complete storytelling—you do not need to do anything more than scroll to understand a complex and intricate issue.
Julia Wolfe, The Wall Street Journal
You Draw It: How Family Income Predicts Children’s College Chances
This just totally changed how I approach and think about gamified journalism. Done well, one simple 15-second game can tell a powerful and humbling story. A good reminder that there’s nothing wrong with striving for “something fun.”
Useful Tools
Derek Watkins, The New York Times
For tools, I’ve been using Geographic Imager for the first time this year, and I’m continually impressed with how easy it makes processing raster imagery in Photoshop. Huge time saver. I’m also really interested in/impressed by Mapbox Studio and Mapbox GL JS, but haven’t had as much time to use those yet. More broadly I’ve been dabbling in WebGL and writing shaders with GLSL. It’s been a steep learning curve, but the performance payoff is bonkers. Looking forward to using that technology more next year.
Lauren Rabaino, Vox Product
The PM in me is going to pick a web app that I can’t live without: worklife. It has given structure to the way I plan agendas, document notes, and communicate action items!
Tyler Fisher, NPR
I know Chris [Groskopf] technically built it while he was working on the same team as me, but, agate.
As someone with programming experience but not data analysis experience, it is already my favorite tool for doing the level of analysis I need to do.
Tiff Fehr, The New York Times
Google’s Analytics Query Explorer tool, which has you authorize your GA account(s), then poke around your own data via their API. It helps you learn their API vocabulary while helping you run basic reports much faster than in Google Analytics’ GUI interface itself. For quick tallies or rough audience segmentation, it’s pretty handy.
Kavya Sukumar, OpenNews Fellow, Vox Product
Two tools that made my life a lot easier this year:
- PymViewer from the Texas Tribune, a very useful tool for testing iFrame embeds.
- Fontface Ninja Chrome add-on, an easy answer to the “What’s that font?” question.
Wonderful Books and Talks
Andrew Loswosky, The Coral Project
Sarah Jeong’s The Internet of Garbage came out just as the majority of our team joined the project. It laid out for us a witty, perfectly formed road map of how to approach a key element of our work: creating safer, more respectful online spaces. The internet might be garbage, but this short ebook is gold.
Joe Germuska, Knight Lab
It’s not even from this year but I was really delighted by Bret Victor’s “Future of Programming” talk from 2013. Just watch it, or at least look at his typically great notes page for it.
…and Chess Sweaters
Ben Welsh, The Los Angeles Times
Last holiday season, the Norwegian daily VG challenged its reader to create chess sweaters to commemorate the world title defense of Norway’s celebrated champion, Magnus Carlsen. Sure. It’s technically from 2014. But, like Magnus, it remains undefeated.
Read Full Story from Source https://source.opennews.org/articles/things-we-loved-2015/
This article by originally appeared on source.opennews.org on December 16, 2015 at 06:00PM