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Tuesday, February 19, 2008

NOLA.com’s Dave Walker writes about All Star Weekend, held in New Orleans during the holiday weekend. It notes celebrities in town including CNN’s John King:

Also in town for the All-Star festivities on Time-Warner’s dime was John King, CNN’s chief national correspondent and master manipulator of the Multi-Touch Collaboration Wall.

It’s a good thing “chief national correspondent still comes first in his title, but I wonder how long it will be his prime descriptor? Based on the media’s take, the wall (and it’s master as side kick) is becoming the star. The article goes on:

If you don’t know what that is, you’re not among the huge numbers Blitzer said are plugging into CNN’s political coverage.

The wall, developed by a New York company named Perceptive Pixel, is the breakout media star of the campaign so far.

It’s basically a giant iPhone screen—touch-sensitive and fronting enough computing power to allow King—or whoever’s poking it at an individual moment—to zoom, squeeze and whoosh through maps and graphics.

It’s “Minority Report” meets a pollster’s fever dream, and King, a political correspondent for The Associated Press before joining CNN in 1997, is its first maestro.

“My son jokes with me… that he actually likes what I do now,” King said. “But I’m a little worried about it, because the cab driver who brought me here today said, ‘I love that map board.’ It’s obviously connecting with people in a way beyond what I would’ve thought.

“It scares me a little bit because I don’t want it to become a gimmick. There are a lot of things in television that are for show and not for tell. I think this is great show and tell. You can use the technology to bring some of the nuts-and-bolts of it closer to people.”

I wonder if soon instead of students learning to use PowerPoint (what a horrid thought!), they’ll also learn to present using the Multi-touch Wall in school.

 

by Adena Schutzberg on 02/19 at 06:46 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Researchers published two studies this week that included important maps. One highlighted the human impact on the world’s oceans. A second documented the past, current and future vulnerability of the U.S. population to natural disasters. Press coverage of the first study was considerable, with the map distributed far and wide on the Web and beyond. Coverage of the second was limited to the scientific and geographic press. Why the disparity? Our editors review the maps and offer their thoughts.

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by Adena Schutzberg on 02/19 at 01:00 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share
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