Visual browsing of World News

I have been looking into how a GUI ( geekspeak for ‘graphic user interface’) could enhance a message, and am considering doing some cool interactive, kiosk-type visualizations in our lobby at the Decision Theater. Interactive displays such as the Campus Metabolism project from the Global Institute of Sustainability is one way to do this. It’s a web-based but is much more interesting on a touch-screen in their lobby.

newstinBut apart from aggregating data, a GUI could simplify the user experience, for news, as this site called Newstin demonstrates.

Click on the Newstin map, and it basically organizes world news from 166,000 sources, organized into about 1 million topics. Mind you, Newstin was created before the iPhone, so it’s easy to see how a widget could transfer this kind of experience to a mobile device.

Bernie Goldbach’s vidcast experiments with new format

Bernie Goldbach may not be a household name, but for listeners of the podcast FIR (For Immediate Release) he’s the Irish correspondent who delivers an interesting perspective.

So I was really curious as to what got him started on a format like this, pointing a video camera at a newspaper, flipping the pages, and discussing stories. It reminded me of a radio segment on BBC radio (BBC World Service, if I am not mistaken) where the host/anchor gave listeners a summary of the news every day.

Some podcasts do this, but a video podcast has an additional benefit of pointing to the story itself, and being able to comment on parts of it.