Matt Stiles appears in the following:
Data Journalism
Friday, June 29, 2012
The immense amounts of data collected by local, state and federal government agencies can be an incredibly valuable trove for enterprising journalists. It can also be a pointless slog. NPR's StateImpact project database reporting coordinator Matt Stiles and computational journalism professor at Duke Sarah Cohen explain how they find good stories in a sea of government data.
Supported by
-
An 11-year-old and his 3D printer
-
Conservative Bloggers Vindicated, Advice for Leakers, and More
-
Who’s gonna pay for this stuff?
-
Angelina Jolie's Secret Test Results
-
A Source for Sources
-
AdBlock Plus: The Internet's Ad Gatekeeper?
-
Brooke Gladstone + Cyndi Lauper
-
The Totally Legal Subpoena
-
Web Only Audio Extra - TV Cord Cutters
-
One Way To Make Money: Ask People For It
-
Conservative Bloggers Vindicated, Advice for Leakers, and More
-
Who’s gonna pay for this stuff?
-
The Totally Legal Subpoena
-
A New Incentive for Cord Cutters
-
The Media Supernova
-
A Source for Sources
-
With IRS Scandal, Conservative Bloggers Feel Vindicated
-
The Future History of the Newspaper Industry
-
Meet Strongbox
-
Bloomberg Terminals, Spying, and Business Models
-
AdBlock Plus: The Internet's Ad Gatekeeper?
-
The Media Supernova
-
The State of Streaming Music
-
An 11-year-old and his 3D printer
-
How Will Journalism Keep The Lights On?
-
Ads vs. Ad-Blockers
-
A New Incentive for Cord Cutters
-
With IRS Scandal, Conservative Bloggers Feel Vindicated
-
The Totally Legal Subpoena
-
Web Only Audio Extra - Crowdsourcing FOIA Requests

