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News media APIs: more on mashups

Posted by Martin Stabe on 28 August 2008 at 09:40
Tags: Journalism

The idea of a website that is not merely a destination, but a “platform” or a set of tools on which users can build additional services, is nothing new — it’s a key feature of many of the thinking underlying many of the current “2.0″ startups, and has been a fundamental part of the success of Internet giants Google and Yahoo.

What is new is that news organsiations are beginning to adopt this approach and are beginning to release application programming interfaces - more commonly abbreviated as APIs - to allow outside web developers easy access to their content for use in non-commercial online projects.

Publishers see it as a way of expanding their reach online by gaining access to niche platforms such as new mobile phone handsets and games consoles, new niche reader communities they do not have the resources to serve directly, or simply discovering new ways of using their content by tapping into the creativity of their online users.

Some also hope it will be a pipeline toward more traditional commercial syndication deals. It’s a trend I looked at in the first issue of the monthly Press Gazette, which is out today.

The BBC has been a leader in the field, with its BBC Backstage programme, which has been making available APIs and fostering a community of online developers since 2004.

Releasing data to the public is the easy bit; building a community of developers to actually use it as part of a platform strategy can be more difficult for some publishers. To get around this, some are co-operating with established networks. An API of listings data from the Press Association is expected to be released this week through BBC Backstage.

Ian Forrester who heads Backstage, says fostering the online development community in the UK is part of the public service remit of the BBC project.

Projects built by the BBC Backstage have been spun off into commercial projects. The website Trafficeye, for example, started out as a Backstage prototype using traffic information supplied by Trafficlink. Exceptional Backstage projects may be integrated into the main BBC website. The BBC home page archive is an example.

Thomson Reuters has several projects accessible to outside web developers. It has opened an advanced semantic tagging tool used to organise its internal archives to the public in a limited form called Open Calais. It has quickly build a community of 2,500 developers actively experimenting with it, and a Reuters spokeswoman says it has already generated requests for commercial licensing of the more powerful underlying software from Reuters-owned Clear Forest.

In May the Reuters Labs research and development unit released Spotlight, and API providing access to the content of Reuters.com in various languages. One impressive prototype combines the two Reuters services to create Gist, a self-organising news website.

In July, the US National Public Radio network unveiled an API providing access to 250,000 articles from its website NPR.org, dating back to 1995. It has already been used to create a widget that (somewhat inevitably) places NPR news stories on a world map and to make NPR material available on the Apple iPhone.

Some projects have caused a stir online before even being released. The New York Times revealed in May that it was planning to be release a number of APIs.

Oren Michaels, chief executive of Mashery, a company that is working with both Reuters and the New York Times on their API projects, says the announcement has spurred interest from other news organisations.

“Everyone saw the New York Times announcement and it’s all starting to buzz around,” Michaels said.

“We’re getting a lot of preliminary feelers from people. That often happens in a lot of the areas we work in: As soon as a market leader makes an announcement like this all he others think ‘we need to do something like this too’.”

Marc Frons, the chief technology officer for digital at the New York Times said the first beta tests of a New York Times API should be expected in early September. They have come about as part of a wider newsroom IT project called the “data universe”, which is setting up new ways for journalists to store various types of information, such as events listings, restaurant reviews, BMDs and political party funding information, in a more computer-friendly structured format — an approach that some tech-savvy journalists have been advocating for some time. Frons explained the data universe project in a recent web chat on NYTimes.com.

Closer to home, both the Guardian and Telegraph have been hinting at developing a similar approach to their websites. The Telegraph has made outreach to the web developer community one of the tasks of its Telegraph Labs setup and has already hosted one weekend open house to encourage programmers to come up with new ways of using Telegraph.co.uk content. The Guardian, meanwhile, hired Matt McAlister, who previously headed Yahoo’s developer network, to launch a Guardian Developer Network.

More links about this topic can be found on my delicious.com page.

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PA set to launch listings data API through BBC Backstage

Posted by Martin Stabe on 27 August 2008 at 13:03
Tags: BBC

The Press Association’s events listings database is to be made available for non-commercial use by web developers and will be released through the BBC’s web developer network.

PA is releasing an API (application programming interface) of its events listings through the BBC Backstage programme, a developer network that provides access to BBC and some third-party content to a community of web developers.

The plan was first revealed by BBC Backstage producer Ian Forrester at the Mashed08 conference in June, and is set to go live this week.

Forrester said publishing APIs through BBC Backstage gives third-party data providers like PA access to the projects’s existing community of developers, which he has been actively fostering for several years.

“They saw the Backstage as being not just about releasing APIs but also the engagement with the community,” Forrester told Press Gazette.

“That’s why they - rather than set up their own Backstage-ish project - wanted to work with us.”

The news agency hopes that users of the data will provide new ideas about how to use it and how listings are stored.

The PA database contains listings of events in cinema, art, theatre, literature and includes includes web links, venue details, times and prices. It is the same data that PA also supplies to newspapers, magazines and websites.

PA head of digital development Chris McCormack said the launch of a public, non-commercial version of its listings came about after the service was developed for use by some of its commerical clients. PA has long delivered its material to media clients using XML feeds, but these require the clients to recreate PA’s database on their own servers. By providing APIs, the agency can instead give customers structured access to its existing content databases.

The version available to developers through BBC Backstage will be strictly for non-commercial use by the BBC Backstage developer community, McCormack said.

“We have to safeguard our existing customers, so we won’t be allowing anyone to do anything commercial with them,” he said.

McCormack said PA has no immediate plans for launching further public APIs.

“We’re going to wait and see how this goes first,” he said. “There’s no strategy or plan to release our news or TV listings or anything after this.”

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Thomson Reuters releases new version of semantic tagging tool

Posted by Martin Stabe on 19 May 2008 at 08:56
Tags: Agencies, New Media, Online

Thomson Reuters has released a new version of its semantic tagging tool Open Calais along with plugins for several blogging and content management systems.

The new version of the software, which allows web publishers to automatically add metadata indicating the people, companies, places, events mentioned in their stories, was unvielled at the SemTech 2008 conference in California.

Also released at the same event were Tagaroo, an Open Calais plugin for WordPress blogging software, an Open Calais module for the content management system Drupal, and Yahoo!’s new search developer platform SearchMonkey.

Last month, the Open Calais was used at the Telegraph’s Developer Weekend to create a tool that automatically categorises news stories in RSS feeds.

Update: The new version of Calais will fix the tool’s previous emphasis on business terminology, ReadWriteWeb reports. The changes will make the tool more useful for those covering media, music, entertainment and sports, as well as pharmaceuticals, medicine and healthcare.

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Google Maps mashup, Open Calais tagger and Adobe Air toolbar take Telegraph Developer Weekend prizes

Posted by Martin Stabe on 28 April 2008 at 08:47
Tags: New Media, Telegraph.co.uk, telegraph

Philip Skinner of onlinegalleries.com won the first prize at the web developers’ competition held by the Telegraph this weekend.

Skinner’s winning entry, which netted him £600 in vouchers for Apple products, was a mashup that combines YouTube videos and Telegraph.co.uk news stories on a Google Map.

Mark Ng (a consultant to PressGazette.co.uk and the creator of the previous version of this site) won second place for a tool that categorises Telegraph content — along with feeds from BBC News and Google News — using Reuters’ semantic tagging software Open Calais and creates custom RSS feeds for each tag.

A team that developed a Telegraph toolbar written in Adobe AIR
won third place.

The second and third-place winners took home £400 of Apple vouchers.

Other entries included:

  • An application that took keywords from the Telegraph’s motoring RSS feed and searched Google Images to find pictures related to the article.
  • A downloadable Telegraph RSS reader, video player and offline reader, which Telegraph CIO Paul Cheesbrough described as a “very professional looking application that we’ll certainly take forwards”.
  • A desktop widget for viewing Telegraph RSS feeds.
  • A tool to attach a blog to Telegraph stories.
  • A program to tag videos and finds relevant related search results from Google while the video is playing

Representatives of some of the Telegraph’s technology partners demonstrated some applications of the technologies they had demonstrated on the first day of the competition

Google presented a tool that uses its translation software to automatically translate Telegraph stories into several languages. Adobe, meanwhile, showed off a Telegraph RSS reader.

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Telegraph developers weekend: Morning highlights

Posted by Martin Stabe on 26 April 2008 at 13:44
Tags: Telegraph.co.uk

This morning’s presentations from Digg, Google, Adobe and Apple have provided some inspiration for potential Telegraph applications.

So far, we’ve heard about Digg’s API, iGoogle, Google Earth, Open Social, Adobe AIR or development tools for iPhone or iPod Touch.

I’ve already mentioned the Google presentation (and have been Twittering some other things). Here are some highlights from the other presentations:

  • Apple’s Paul Burford says Safari now has 71 per cent market share in the US mobile browser market. He shows off the iPhone OS and the iPhone developer tools. A new “App Store” will be the only way for end users to load applications onto the phone. The reason, he says, is that this is to protect users from applications that are badly written or do malicious things.
  • Adobe’s Xavier Agnetti shows off an Adobe AIR project, currently under development, which will let customers of fashion etailer Anthropologie search its product range by picking a colour from a palette or picking a colour from a local image.
  • Digg’s Matt Van Horn shows off how Digg drives traffic to news sites, such as when an eight-year-old Guardian story about Astronaut sex suddenly went viral or how the New York Times’ traffic from Digg grew after its added Digg buttons. More

The visiting developers are now being taken for a tour of the Telegraph newsroom or for lunch.

This afteroon, they will disperse to training sessions with Google, Adobe and APple before the tomorrow’s developer competition is launched this afternoon.

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Telegraph developer weekend: Showing off the possibilites of Google Earth

Posted by Martin Stabe on 26 April 2008 at 12:15
Tags: Google, Google Maps, Online, Telegraph.co.uk, telegraph

Google’s Chewy Trewhella been presenting the sort of things are possible with the search giant’s various APIs, particularly the geographic mashups in Google Earth.

he acknowledges that despite the vast data available on Google Earth, the company has been having difficulty keeping people interested in using the tool beyond a few initial experiments.

He shows off some projects that use Google Earth to display the sort of information that might be interesting to a news site:

  • Property website Nestoria used the Google mapping API to build its site and plot different layers of information in various neighbourhoods.
  • A tool that explains the tomb of Tutankhamun in three dimensions.
  • A layer that shows global oil consumption as a bar graph where each country’s height reflects its consumption.
  • A layer that shows the effects of rising sea levels. He demonstrates that if the sea level ere to rise by 20m, the Google and Telegraph offices in Victoria would be one tiny island of dry land in London.
  • Fboweb.com plots aircraft flight data in real time, plotting airplanes’ locations and flightpaths with planes at the correct altitude.

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Telegraph Labs hosts web developer open house weekend

Posted by Martin Stabe on 26 April 2008 at 11:19
Tags: Online

Telegraph Labs, the Telegraph web development team’s unit that experiments with new tools, is hosting a developer weekend today and tomorrow.

This morning, there will be a number of presentations and training sessions followed by a development competition tomorrow.

As you would expect from an event like this, there will be plenty of live blogging, Twittering, and photo posting on Flickr.

Telegraph chief information officer Paul Cheesbrough opened the weekend by stressing that like all newspapers, the Telegraph is “undergoing a quiet revolution”, where the average age, particularly of the technology team, is being driven down.

The new Telegraph Labs, he says, will be developing new products to launch The Telegraph is creating a space for the Telegraph Labs to create new ideas and products to launch online.

Some of the results of this weekend are likely to developed further under the Telegraph Labs brand he stresses

“We really want a close link with the development community,” he says.

Cheesbrough’s introduction will be followed this morning with presentations from representatives of Google, Adobe, Digg, and Apple.

Updates to follow all day, both here and at the great blog run by Telegraph communities editor Shane Richmond

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Plymouth Herald starts Twittering

Posted by Martin Stabe on 15 April 2008 at 15:18
Tags: twitter

The Plymouth Herald is the latest newspaper to use Twitter to keep its readers informed about the latest news.

Unlike many other news sites (including Press Gazette) that use Twitterfeed to push its RSS feeds into Twitter, the is publishing custom messages to its readers.

The Herald also has profile pages to reach readers who use social networking sites.

Online editor Neil Shaw says the paper has amassed more than 800 friends on Facebook, with 400 in a Facebook group, 475 on MySpace and 200 on Bebo.

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British entries shortlisted for Knight journalism grants

Posted by Martin Stabe on 1 April 2008 at 09:14
Tags: Journalism, Online

Birmingham City University journalism lecturer Paul Bradshaw and former BBC journalist Nick Booth are among the finalists in the the Knight News Challenge, an annual competition run by Knight Foundation to fund innovation in online journalism with grants of up to $5 million (£2.5m).

Bradshaw, author of the Online Journalism Blog and occasional contributor to Press Gazette, is the only British entrant to have reached the final stage — and the only finalist with two separate projects up for consideration.

In one of his entries, Bradshaw and Booth are seeking $200,000 (£100,000) to fund Citizen Investigation, a website that will allow users to assign and pursue investigative journalism projects with the support of professional journalists.

In their other shortlisted entry, they are seeking $250,000 (£125,000) to fund “The conversation toolkit“, a series of plugins for websites to allow online news publishers to implement social networking, mapping and other functionality outlined by Bradshaw in a much-cited blog post, “The News Diamond“, and “Five W’s and a H“, which advocates a new way of producing about news stories online.

The winners of the grants will be announced on 14 May at the Editor & Publisher Interactive Media Conference in Las Vegas.

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Gavin O’Reilly responds to Google on ACAP

Posted by Martin Stabe on 13 March 2008 at 07:00
Tags: ACAP, Google

The consortium of publishing groups behind the Automated Content Access Protocol (ACAP) has responded to comments made about the project yesterday by Google’s head of media and publishing partnerships for Europe, Rob Jonas.

ACAP seeks to establish a new technical standard for allowing website publishers to specify different levels of access they wish to grant search engines’ indexing software. The group argues that the existing standard, known as the Robots Exclusion Standard (or “robots.txt”) is insufficient.

Jonas told yesterday’s MediaGuardian Changing Media Summit that “the general view within the company is that the robots.txt provides everything most publishers need to do.

Gavin O’Reilly, the chairman of the World Association of Newspapers and COO of Independent News & Media responded in a statement:

It’s strange for Google to be telling publishers what they should think about robots.txt when publishers worldwide across the sector have already very clearly told Google that they disagree. If Google’s reason for not supporting ACAP is that they think publishers should have a different view then we would ask Google to respect the fact that after considerable consideration and work we have identified not only the inadequacies of robots.txt but also come up with a practical and open solution. We call upon Google to adopt ACAP as soon as possible and respect the right of content owners to determine how their content is used.

Last November, Times Online became the first newspaper website to adopt ACAP.

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