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When Thomas Seymat started his residential fellowship, he wanted to investigate how 360/VR content creators could better put the audience at the center of the production process so that immersive journalism may reach its full potential. -
Utopian or dystopian? When it comes to artificial intelligence and machine learning, how journalists view the technology, and how willing they are to delve into the many layers it can empower, is the secret sauce in creating a better workplace. -
Artificial intelligence poses a number of threats and opportunities to the news industry. News outlets such as Bloomberg and The Washington Post have used robots to help produce content. But some journalists fear robots might replace them. -
RJI invited five journalists from across the globe to participate in a two-day discussion around immersive video storytelling, Sept. 17–18. They came to teach, test and try the newest in technology surrounding augmented, virtual and mixed reality. -
Rather than just hearing case studies about what newsrooms are doing with immersive technologies, University of Missouri students will get to interact with professionals in the classroom during an upcoming event. -
Continuing and growing its outreach and service to community news organizations across the nation, the Missouri School of Journalism and MU Extension recently partnered to deliver video expertise and strategies to journalists in northwest Missouri. -
While much of content is built around per-use, micropayments and subscriptions, there are other pots of potential revenue that lie outside of what journalists may presently be considering. -
Victor Hernandez uses Storify to capture some of the moments at day 1 of the RJI Spring Sympsium 2017 -
A not-so-subtle theme kept cropping up this week at the Collaboration Culture Symposium (#rjicollab) at the Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute: a superhero theme. -
Today’s media companies are using collaboration as a way to stay ahead of rapid change. Efficient organizations understand their core capabilities, and what lies outside their expertise.