Karthika Muthukumaraswamy looks at how games have been used in online journalism. BlackBerrys, iPods and Kindles are not enough anymore. Let’s add a joystick to the expanding repertoire of tools available to news consumers. Gaming is often overlooked as a tool for disseminating news. Online games are attempting to explain the economy through the politics of oil, educate users on disaster readiness in the
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Posted by Paul Bradshaw on Apr 16, 2009
online journalism • Tags: adam rice, ars regendi, class matters, consumer consequences, darfur is dying, games, games for change, georgia tech journalism and games project, global conflicts, interpretive reporting, jeffrey goldberg, Karthika Muthukumaraswamy, karthikaswamy, mark luckie, mediashift, MSNBC, New York Times, new york times news quiz, newsblaster, newsbreaker, newseum, nick diakopoulos, nora paul, our courts, palestine, peacemaker, serious games interactive, sexypolitics, Simon Ferrari, the atlantic • Comment feed RSS 2.0 - Read this post
online journalism • Tags: adam rice, ars regendi, class matters, consumer consequences, darfur is dying, games, games for change, georgia tech journalism and games project, global conflicts, interpretive reporting, jeffrey goldberg, Karthika Muthukumaraswamy, karthikaswamy, mark luckie, mediashift, MSNBC, New York Times, new york times news quiz, newsblaster, newsbreaker, newseum, nick diakopoulos, nora paul, our courts, palestine, peacemaker, serious games interactive, sexypolitics, Simon Ferrari, the atlantic • Comment feed RSS 2.0 - Read this post
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