RJI news
The Importance of context, data, and expert sources in discussing Latino communities
And the proliferation of disinformation in these spaces.
How investing in work culture will protect journalism’s most valuable resource: people
News breaks, but it doesn’t have to break our journalists. Our industry is not sustainable if we don’t take care of one of our most valuable resources: our people.
Building a chatbot trained on your newsroom’s content
What it takes: time, money and ethical considerations.
A sensitivity editor takes on my tweets
What it looks like when a small newsroom tries a little harder.
How to bring democracy into your newsroom
Build a power-sharing decision making model that works for you.
The Star Tribune asked its interns to envision the future of the company
Our presentation delivered strategies ranging from expanded revenue models to top-of-funnel engagement to subscriber retention.
When the Internet and the power are out, newsrooms might need a ‘hamd’
How can journalists report when there’s no power, electricity, reception? Radio amateurs come in handy.
AI takes ONA23 by storm
ONA 23, the Online News Association’s annual conference held last week in Philadelphia, demonstrated just how quickly artificial intelligence and machine learning have become a dominant focus in the industry, even as news organizations largely remain cautious about integrating Large Language Models like ChatGPT into workflows.
Two friendly AI sidekicks for web reading
These plugins help summarize, synthesize and analyze.
The removal of ego
The problem, especially when it comes to disability, media, and innovation, is that everyone thinks they know how to solve it, including those who need to listen most.