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<id>tag:www.pbs.org,2009:/idealab//31/tag:www.pbs.org,2009:/idealab//31.4707-</id>
<updated>2009-10-19T21:47:20Z</updated>
<title>Comments for Partnerships to Watch (and a Crowdsourcing Project I&apos;m Envying)</title>
<subtitle>Idea Lab is a group blog by innovators who are reinventing community news for the Digital Age.</subtitle>
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<id>tag:www.pbs.org,2009:/idealab//31.4707</id>
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<link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://blogs.pbs.org/mediashift/mt4/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=31/entry_id=4707" title="Partnerships to Watch (and a Crowdsourcing Project I'm Envying)" />
<published>2009-01-29T21:02:16Z</published>
<updated>2009-01-30T19:42:52Z</updated>
<title>Partnerships to Watch (and a Crowdsourcing Project I&apos;m Envying)</title>
<summary>A small local website from Brooklyn has partnered with NBC to build neighborhood pages for a handful of NBC markets. I haven&apos;t followed Outside.in for more than stoop sales (which is New Yorkerese for garage sales or yard sales since most New Yorkers have neither yards nor garages), but it looks like they&apos;ve taken up EveryBlock&apos;s approach to local news aggregation as well, though they want posts explicitly geo-tagged for their maps. Speaking of EveryBlock, they recently announced that they&apos;re working with the New York Times to track Times reporting on political districts. Presumably they&apos;ll be taking advantage of the...</summary>
<author>
<name>Amanda Hickman</name>

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<![CDATA[<p>A <a href="http://outside.in/">small local website</a> from Brooklyn <a href="http://www.nyconvergence.com/2009/01/nbc-local-media-partners-with-outsidein.html">has partnered with <span class="caps">NBC</span></a> to build neighborhood pages for a handful of <span class="caps">NBC </span>markets. I haven't followed Outside.in for more than stoop sales (which is New Yorkerese for garage sales or yard sales since most New Yorkers have neither yards nor garages), but it looks like they've taken up EveryBlock's approach to local news aggregation as well, though they want posts <a href="http://outside.in/public/geo_tagging">explicitly geo-tagged</a> for their maps.</p>

<p>Speaking of EveryBlock, they recently <a href="http://blog.everyblock.com/2009/jan/28/nyt/">announced</a> that they're working with the New York Times to track Times reporting on political districts. Presumably they'll be taking advantage of <a href="http://developer.nytimes.com/">the Times' new <span class="caps">API</span></a> -- now if only they could tell the rest of the media how to flag our stories as discussing a particular district. As the local election season gets rolling, <a href="http://www.gothamgazette.com">Gotham Gazette</a> will be covering many underreported races along side the ones everyone is talking about, and we'll be aggregating coverage of every race as it appears in other papers and news outlets around the city. </p>

<p>And, speaking of news outlets, local <span class="caps">NPR </span>station <span class="caps">WNYC </span>has launched a very cool crowdsourcing project tracking <a href="http://www.wnyc.org/shows/bl/economic_indicators/">Uncommon Economic Indicators</a> to mixed results so far (there's <a href="http://twitter.com/DrRaulDuke/statuses/1159436049">a tweet</a> up right now about the rising cost of heroin) but it should be interesting to see what listeners come up with. </p>]]>

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<entry>
<id>tag:www.pbs.org,2009:/idealab//31.4707-comment:41985</id>
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<title>Comment from Annie Shreffler on 2009-01-29</title>
<author>
<name>Annie Shreffler</name>
<uri>http://www.wnyc.org/shows/bl/economic_indicators/</uri>
</author>
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Thanks for the shout-out! And join the fun! We can&apos;t get enough photos--and we really want videos--of the economic changes occurring across the NYC Metro region.
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<published>2009-01-30T04:01:13Z</published>
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