ICFJ Knight Fellows Showcase Open Source Newsroom Tools for NICAR 2016 Conference

By: ICFJ | 03/11/2016

During their fellowships, the ICFJ Knight Fellows help spur a culture of media innovation and experimentation. Through their work, fellows develop and build a variety of new tools and technologies that have helped revolutionize newsrooms across the globe.

The tools range from HackDash, a platform that helps keep track of ideas and participants during hackathons and other collaborative projects, to Yo Quiero Saber, which helps voters compare their views with those of political candidates. In addition to the newsrooms from which they originated, the tools can help media organizations everywhere adapt to the latest technologies and better engage their readers.

Ahead of the NICAR 2016 conference, the Fellows offered up 12 free and open source tools they've created during their fellowships that any newsroom can use.

This post is also published on IJNet, which is produced by ICFJ.

Main image CC-licensed by Flickr via Jim Culp.

Country/Region

Latest News

A Journalist's Guide to Reporting on ESG and the Geopolitics of Sustainability

This article is your reporter’s guide to that fault line: where ESG came from; how it has been weaponized politically in the second Trump administration, and why the rest of the world sees it as essential infrastructure that cannot be repealed.

Covering the US-China Economic Showdown: What Journalists Need to Know

Tariffs have always been about more than just economics. They are tools of power and leverage, expressions of national priorities and xenophobic fears. But the 2025 U.S.-China trade standoff marks a profound shift.

Journalists to Investigate Education, Evictions & More With Support from ICFJ and News Corp

Four early-career journalists supported by the International Center for Journalists (ICFJ) will report on education, high school sports, eviction trends, and immigration enforcement. This financial support and mentorship are made possible by an ICFJ program supported by News Corp. It is designed to support early-career journalists around the world through training and reporting grants.