Nerd Alert #60: Moonshots, Startups, and Funding Models, oh my!

HOT LINKS

What we're reading this week

  Adam: Startup founders, Jennifer Brandel (Hearken) and Mara Zepeda (Switchboard), argue that we need a new funding model for startups that recognizes founders with long-term, wide-ranging visions instead of focusing myopically on things that matter less just because they’re the things that are easiest to quantify.

  Ben: Not all encryption is the same, and the random number generator used in network appliances isn’t iPhone encryption, but for a peep into how convoluted this mess can get, check out the blog post at AgileBits explaining how the NSA backdoored the Dual Elliptic Curve Deterministic Random Bit Generator algorithm used to generate encryption keys. The math is explained in translucent prose, at least.

  Jack: The Wall Street Journal has a Snapchat team of five people pushing out content eight times a day. The Washington Post snapchatted (now a verb) during the Nigerian elections and has expanded its use of the burgeoning social media platform known for its young user base.  So how do many teens use Snapchat? It’s a different world.

  Ryan: Walk through this "Paint a room" exercise to see just how bad you are at schedule estimation. When you're through, send the link to anyone who needs to be convinced of the importance of evidence based scheduling.

  Bert: The Netflix graphical user interface is colorful and friendly, they say. But numbers are so much more fun.


BE OUR GUEST

This week's guest contributor

Our guest this week is Pam Dempsey (@pamelagdempsey), executive director, the Midwest Center for Investigative Reporting.

Four years ago, we refocused The Midwest Center for Investigative Reporting with an investigative lens on agribusiness. Based in Champaign, Illinois, agribusiness is a billions-dollar industry in our region which reaches nationally and internationally. Yet coverage of agribusiness is sparse.

But with our strategy to provide not only in-depth reporting but also training and research, our stream of content became lost in the noise.

To resolve this, we recently launched Big Ag Watch, a new brand of our Center to exclusively focus on the big dogs of agribusiness through original reporting, commentary and curation. This provides a clear channel for our investigative work on big ag while giving our research and training work - and more general agriculture stories - a better defined space at the Midwest Center.


GET A JOB

Good jobs with good people

The Texas Tribune is seeking an Audience Engagement Director.

Oklahoma Watch is hiring a State Issues Reporter.


SOME OTHER STUFF

Gather ye rosebuds

LISTEN: Tuvan throat singer Huun-Huur Tu.

WATCH: In 1969 we either went to the moon or faked the whole thing.

EAT: Can’t go wrong with a recipe that starts with “Bacon wrapped cheese and mushroom”.


Houston we have a problem
moon with a rocket stuck in its eye

Welcome Our New Lead Designer, Julia Smith To The INN Nerds Team

Julia SmithWe're thrilled to welcome Julia Smith to the team as our new lead designer.

Julia comes to INN from the Center for Investigative Reporting where she was a 2015 Knight-Mozilla Fellow. At CIR she worked with a team of data journalists to create news applications, visualizations and custom interactives for RevealNews.org.

Julia holds a degree in journalism from Creighton University in Omaha, NE. She worked as a corporate software developer and user experience designer early in her career before an enthusiastic return to the news industry.

At INN she'll be the design lead on our team working on a mix of internal projects (like Largo, our open source WordPress framework/platform for news sites), creating design standards and style guides to help guide our work and helping out INN's 110+ nonprofit members and our consulting clients.

Julia starts full time with us on March 1 and we're really excited to have her on board!

Five Takeaways From My News Apps Apprenticeship

My apprenticeship ends this week, after nine great months with INN. In that time I worked on seven website redesigns, many INN members' sites, contributed to Largo releases and worked on some of INN’s plugins, namely Link Roundups.

Screen Shot 2016-01-15 at 11.26.50 AM

I gained invaluable knowledge from my coworkers in pair sessions and improved my own self-learning. With the weekly INN Nerd Alert newsletter my coworkers shared great articles and I learned more about their interests. Each month the News Nerd Book Club exposed me to great ideas and discussions about newsrooms, audiences and web development. Plus every day working on INN member's sites I was exposed to terrific journalism and learned about the publishing needs of content creators.

(If the flexibility of remote work and all this sounds exciting to you, consider applying for one of INN's open positions)

Some important things I've gained:

Always be learning

One of INN's core values and one of mine as well. I've learned better habits and developed more informed opinions around publishing, design, development and business.

Documentation is more important than code

Frameworks, libraries and development techniques are all fleeting. Good documentation is timeless. Be kind to the soul who inherits your code — it could very well be you.

Responsive grids have made too many websites look alike

Web designers have gotten too good at following the rules.

Today a drive down Content Websites Blvd. is like passing through a bland subdivision: similar grid patterns, similar gardens of social media buttons and similar pairings of colors and fonts. Most of these websites aren’t bad, but most aren’t memorable.

Some of my favorite work was with INN members InvestigateWest, Midwest Energy News and New Mexico In-Depth, whose website redesigns called for a mix of unique and common design patterns to create usable, memorable sites.

Less is more*

In code. In design. In words. Often.

*Never in regards to tacos, documentation or testing.

Kindness, patience, and humor

In every job I aim to bring kindness, patience and humor. Being remote, it’s important to extend these things to yourself, in addition to coworkers and clients.

Thanks y'all and farewell

It's been a pleasure working with the INN Nerds and INN's members! I start a new position with TIME, Inc. and Fansided near Phoenix after the long weekend. You'll still see me in the #00-open-tech channel of INN's Slack org and @dryanmedia on Twitter.

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Deez Nerds helped me take flight, gonna miss 'em! See y'all round the friendly skies of the Internet.

Saying Goodbye To My Favorite Nerds

It's so hard to say goodbye to yesterday.

Today is my last day at INN. In a couple of weeks, I'll be joining The Washington Post to lead its data/news apps team. It's a bittersweet transition; I'm excited about the new role, and sad to say goodbye to such an amazing and supportive team.

Together, we've tirelessly documented our processes and team values. We redesigned and launched the new inn.org. We helped dozens of clients and nonprofit news organizations build websites. We released updates for Largo. We created a newsletter, hosted a monthly book club, and gathered for weekly office hours.

There has also been a lot of pie, good meals, ridiculous music, and countless gifs. And I got to work with some of my favorite people — the kind of colleagues that make hard work bearable and fun work feel like no work at all.

(Interested in working with these wonderful people? We're hiring a lead designer.)

I can't wait to see how INN grows in the future, and I'll continue to follow along as our members publish some of the best in-depth and investigative journalism out there. See you at NICAR?

hissnoswears

Announcing Largo 0.5.4 – Improved Navigation And Social Sharing Tools

A lot of change is happening on the web. One of the advantages of working with so many great nonprofit news organizations is we get to see how they are using the web for journalism and storytelling, and how people are using their websites. This drives us to continually improve the user experience, for those consuming news and for those producing it.

Today we’re happy to announce the next evolutionary step in INN’s WordPress framework for news websites, Largo version 0.5.4.  This release brings a number of major improvements to the mobile experience, social media sharing tools, and general clarity and aesthetics.

Enhancements include:

Complete navigation overhaul - Menus have a cleaner look and are much more usable on mobile devices. On small screens, menus should help when needed but otherwise get out of the way. With Largo 0.5.4, the sticky navigation bar is visible by default on all pages for mobile screen sizes. It disappears when a user scrolls down and reappears on an up scroll.  There’s also an option to enable the sticky navigation for all screen sizes on article pages, and to hide the main banner on article pages.

New social sharing buttons on single-column posts improve functionality and look - As the user scrolls down into a story page, the social sharing buttons fade in and float along with the viewport, so they’re always in the user’s easy reach.

Here's a short video showing the new sticky navigation and floating social media sharing buttons.

Archive pages for terms (including categories, tags, series and other custom taxonomies) can now have their own featured image - This image will display as a banner image on the top of the term’s archive page and we hope to extend this functionality in the future to support images of different sizes and aspect ratios. Additionally, with the addition of this functionality the Largo Taxonomy List Widget now includes an option to display thumbnail images for each series.

Other visual improvements include removal of the sticky footer, consistent styles for the search box across all headers, and many other style adjustments that add up to a better user experience.

Behind the scenes we also improved the performance of Largo by streamlining parts of the code people never see.  We believe this release will result in more useable, attractive, and better performing sites for the dozens of organizations now using Largo.

You can read all the details in the release notes on GitHub. Largo 0.5.4 is being rolled out over the next couple of days for sites that we host.

If you're not an INN member using our hosting, you can download the latest version from the project repository on GitHub.

We’re not done improving Largo and probably never will be. As long as the web continues to evolve, we’ll roll with it. And we’ll keep working for your success and greater impact!

Nerd Alert #44: INN nerdbots exterminating the roadblocks

We definitely believe the Internet should be free, fast, and open to all comers. We also like farms.


HOT LINKS

What we're reading this week

  Adam: From Maine FarmLink, a list of farms for sale (or lease, for the noncommittal).

  Ben: Today is a good day to write tests. Here are some test strings.

  Jack: Google’s new plan for Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP) promises to kick the speed of news on the mobile web into hyperspace. Or it might destroy the open web. We can’t wait to find out which!

  Kaeti: A helpful collection of CSS #protips.

  Ryan: Zappos is tossing its organizational chart in favor of a new system with no job titles or descriptions.

  Bert: Happy packets make for a better Internet. You don’t want to make them angry >:)


GET A JOB

Good jobs with good people

INN seeks an apprentice.

Also, a contract WordPress developer.

ProPublica is hiring a Data Fellow.

Religion News Service (RNS) has an immediate opening for a full-time Web Developer.

MinnPost is looking for a Director of Development, and an Education Reporter.


SHOUT OUT

Work we admire by our journalism peers

IRE y NICAR lanza una lista de correo en español.

The Texas Tribune's God & Governing series examines how Texas legislators' religious beliefs guide their lawmaking.

FBI recognizes Wapo and the Guardian for collecting better data than the FBI.


SOME OTHER STUFF

Just thought we'd overshare

LISTEN: Wagakki Band: Too good!

GIF: Let's speed up everything! What could possible go wrong?

Dalek exploding

Nobody Said This Would Be Easy

Allow me to introduce myself: I’m the idiot who joined the INN tech team and thought he could be on top of things right away.

OK not totally on top of things, but how hard could it be? I spent the past 28 years working for public broadcasting in a variety of roles, most recently as New Media director at Illinois Public Media. I’ve designed and coded dozens of websites, set up and run Content Management Systems, and provided training, documentation, and support for staff and public users of Illinois Public Media’s websites and digital services. Prior to the web I produced lots of radio using tape decks and razor blades, learned the ropes in television production, and got caught up in on-air hosting for a while. As digital technology came along I migrated from tape to computers, file systems and servers, and I had to learn about this thing called data. I edited our first websites using Netscape Communicator, and started posting broadcast archives online as RealMedia. After 28 years I knew everything about our operation, what the work was, and how to do it.

Now I’m completing my first week at INN as your new manager of support, training, and documentation, and suddenly I’m working with about 110 different news organizations. Each of these has different needs, and relies on INN for a variety of mission-critical services. There’s a whole new INN technology stack developed by people smarter than me, and a different way of working than anything I’ve experienced. (Although, lots fewer meetings!) The INN team has a pace that is both more intense and somehow more relaxed than I’m used to.

These people know what they’re doing, and it’s clear to me I don’t yet. This is a very uncomfortable feeling, and it causes me to question if I have what it takes.

But wait: This feeling is familiar, it’s just that I haven’t experienced it for a long time. I’ve been doing the same work in the same ways for at least 15 years, with lots of incremental change but no seismic shifts.

If you have worked in news for the past 20 years, odds are good that you have also experienced  a feeling of deep anxiety and displacement in the digital age. As change in technology and audience behavior has accelerated, the ground has shifted under our feet and we find ourselves in a strange new landscape. We don’t know the rules, the skills, or even the roles required for effective digital journalism. I’ve seen this in many of the people I’ve worked with, and it can lead to stress, conflict, and even organizational failure.

We are seasoned news professionals who have won many awards, and deserve our sense of accomplishment. Acknowledging this doesn’t change the fact that the technology, business,  and social base of our industry has changed, and that change will continue.

So my first week at INN was a bit of a wake-up call, which I pretty much knew was coming. It would have been much easier to stay where I was, doing the same things I had long been doing. It would be much more comfortable for us veterans of the news business to pretend change isn’t happening, and that we can keep doing our business as usual. But none of us can afford that illusion, and we owe it to our communities and stakeholders to take the next steps in the evolution of news.

I’m not sure how we do that comfortably, without stress and anxiety. Speaking for myself, I am aware once again that I have much to learn and this will take some hard work. It definitely helps that my teammates at INN have also experienced this seismic shift, and understand that we’re all in this together. As I was tempted to panic this week, they reminded me that I actually do have what it takes.

And here’s the best part: so does the nonprofit news industry, and INN is here to help.

Apprenticeship Reflections

I make these reflections as my apprenticeship with INN ends. Over the past weeks, I have learned the many things one should learn in my position: good team communication, project management, and additions of new tech skills to my repertoire. And as if this summer did not bear fruits aplenty, from my teammates I have also learned about workplace flexibility and compassion.

Working remotely pushes me to be hyper-aware of communication. Without a doubt, there are many things that are more easily communicated in person, but if only I could share a glimpse of some of our Hipchat gif-sharing and taco-longing sessions, you would understand my preference for chat communication. Unlike real-time talking, chatting allows me to think through my ideas – particularly important for solving technical problems – and have a casual conversation with my colleague friends. This was my first experience of nearly 100 percent chat communication with a team, and I cannot overestimate how much it enhances team communication.

The on-point communication we practice amongst the INN Nerds team we also use with our clients. Working on two or three client project at once pushed me to take good notes and schedule project-specific blocks of time to be on top of communication for each project. With these practices, our team is able to work through blockers and move projects along.

And speaking of projects, I had the pleasure of working on superb data projects and learn a few new tech tricks this summer. For one, while I had used Python and worked with data science libraries such as sklearn and numpy, I was able to learn how to use Django to help create the New Mexico In Depth Capital Dilemma project. The Nerds team has also started a handful of other data projects with other INN members, and I am eager to see how these develop in the upcoming months. Finally, in the process of developing data projects, I learned about the importance of creating documentation and style guides, a practice many other tech teams should follow.

Certainly the things I will remember best about my apprenticeship will be the feelings of inclusion and flexibility fostered within the Nerds team. Working remotely made me more respectful of others' time and work-life balance. The INN Nerds team is a testament that remote work is feasible and that allowing an individual to find her highest-performing place of work is humane and optimal. I learned that it's acceptable and recommended to take time during the day to go out to lunch, an appointment, or go for a run. I’ve come to believe that the eight-hour workday is a vestige of times past, and that INN is a good example for nonprofits that may be interested in using telecommuting to attract the best people and decrease costs. For my part, working with the Nerds team made me reflect on compassionate workplace practices, something I hope to continue discussing and promoting in future work.

Please stay in touch through Twitter @DataDanaL and email danalitovsky@gmail.com.

New WordPress Plugin: Link Roundups

Many sites we work with collect links from around the web and then either present this feed of links on their sites in a widget or turn them into daily (or weekly) roundup posts and email newsletters.

To improve the workflow for curating and publishing these roundups, we've created a new WordPress plugin called Link Roundups.

The plugin borrows some patterns and a bit of the original code from a plugin called Argo Links, but has been almost completely rewritten with a number of new features added (if you are a current Argo Links user, we've included an update script to help you migrate).

Features

Some of the key features of the plugin include:

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A browser bookmarklet to collect links as you browse, add your own description, tags and then save the link directly to your WordPress site, all without having to leave the site you're on. This bookmarklet will also attempt to automatically pull in the title, source and a featured image for the links so you don't have to populate these fields manually.

Widgets for saved links and link roundups to display the links you've saved or your recently published roundups in any WordPress widget area.

published-roundupA WordPress custom post type called Link Roundups with a way to browse your saved links and compile roundup posts to be published on your site.

Integration with MailChimp to simplify the process of sending the roundup posts to your newsletter subscribers.

Plugin options to control the display of saved links in roundups, manually specify the anchor text to be used and a number of other nice enhancements to give you the flexibility to format link roundups the way you want.

Installation

You can find documentation and installation instructions on GitHub and the plugin is also now available from the WordPress.org plugin directory.

What's Next?

In our next release we plan to add the ability to share links you save directly to Facebook/Twitter at the same time as they are saved to your site, improve documentation and add a number of other features.

You can submit feature requests and see our plans for future releases on the project's GitHub repository. Feedback, bug reports and questions are most welcome!

Thanks!

Finally, we want to thank INN member Fresh Energy who funded some of the development of this plugin as part of our recent redesign of their Midwest Energy News site. Thanks also to Aspen Journalism for offering some helpful feedback.

Welcome Jack Brighton, Our New Manager of Support, Documentation and Training!

Jack BrightonWe're very excited to announce the latest addition to the INN Nerds team, Jack Brighton.

Jack will be joining us full-time on September 21st as our new Manager of Support, Documentation and Training.

This is a new position we've created because we want to invest more time and effort in improving our documentation and training to help INN members take full advantage of the tools we build and level up their technology skills. We also hope to develop more training and resources on best practices in digital publishing and work more effectively with the open source community and other nonprofit and independent media organizations.

Jack comes to INN from Illinois Public Media where he has served many roles during his career in journalism and technology: as a public radio producer and host, multimedia editor, web designer, digital storyteller, and university instructor.

He says his proudest moments come from helping people succeed as journalists and producers at a time of rapid change in media technology and audience behaviors.

Jack has also been deeply involved in media preservation projects funded by the Library of Congress and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, including the American Archive project and the PBCore Metadata initiative. He has also served on the PBS Digital Advisory Council and the NPR Digital Advisory Working Group, and currently serves on the advisory council of the Public Media Platform (a current INN client).

I am very excited to welcome him to the team and for all the work we know he'll do to help INN further its mission and better serve our members.

You can follow Jack on Twitter (@jackbrighton) or send him a note of congratulations to jack@inn.org.

Welcome, Jack!