If you like news, and elegant ways of representing data visually, then you will just love newsmap.
newsmap, as you would expect, maps news stories visually, using Googlenews as its source. Here’s a screenshot of UK national news stories at c. 1 p.m. today (click on image for a closer look):
You can click on each story to see the number of articles and view original articles and filter the feed so you can include a mix of different categories for news. You can also compare the news from two different territories side by side – here’s how the business news looks today in the US and the UK as two newsmaps:
We can – at a glance – tell that concerns about consumer spending in the run up to Christmas is the lead story for most media in both countries, with Singapore’s comments about the WTO conference in December taking second place.Other stories are smaller and more regionally focussed.
I’m not sure how accurate or specifically applicable this application is but it does spark a number of thoughts:
1. If you were able to manipulate the filters more this could be the start of an extremely useful monitoring / evaluation tool: anyone who gets involved in these areas as part of their job will know how the crunching of big numbers of news feeds and turning them around into meaningful analysis is hard work.
2. If a tool like this can be combined with an automated broadcast monitoring tool it would be possible to actually see in real time what issues and conversations where happening that affected your markets, publics or directly your brand.
My prediction (yep another one): we’ll see cross-media, dashboard / analysis tools across all media appearing over the next five years, and the use of them will be a core offering for corporate communications and research firms by 2010.
There’s a fuller technical explanation of what it does on the site here.
newsmap’s been around since last year – but it’s the first time I’ve come
across it and I am deeply delighted by the things that it does. I
haven’t had an online-epiphany like this since I saw Plumb Design’s first
visual thesaurus in the late 90s (also still as beautiful and
practical as it ever was – have a look here).
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