More geotagging: sneak preview of prototype “BBC Local”

January 17, 2008

Following this week’s post about Archant’s experiences with geotagging, Andrew Williams looks at how the BBC is using the technology in its prototype hyperlocal web service. 

The latest incarnation of the BBC’s troubled local television scheme could be up and running by the end of the year, it was revealed last week. Academics and journalists at the Broadcast News and the Active Citizen Conference at Leeds University were given a sneak preview of a prototype BBC hyper-local web service which makes extensive use of mapping and geotagging in order to allow the audience to access a range of multimedia content linked to a local area of their own choosing.

BBC Yorkshire’s Catherine Hearne, who gave the talk, said, “The idea is that, subject to approval, we will be offering 60 local sites across the UK, and it will transform the way that people can actively engage with their local broadcaster.”

“This piece of work is really underway at the moment. It was piloted first and foremost as the BBC local TV proposition in the West Midlands, which was very successful. This is a further development of that, and we are anticipating that by the end of this year the BBC Trust will give us the go-ahead.”

Hearne’s demonstration showed how the sites will offer highly customisable ways of accessing local news, sport, travel, and weather coverage, alongside other content from the BBC - an example used in the presentation was content from the popular BBC TV series Coast - as well as “multimedia user generated content”.

She continued, “People’s notion of their local areas change at different points during the week, even. If you look at your local area on a Monday morning, then what you need to know is what the traffic will be like when you’re going to work. This will be quite different at the weekend, when actually you might want to be travelling 150 miles away, as well. Well the service will suit that, because it’s flexible.”

The project’s previous incarnations have faced continued criticism from local and regional newspaper companies, who fear that a more localised BBC news service will impact on their already declining profits.

Hearne was keen to allay such fears, demonstrating that the new local service will integrate links to local newspaper coverage. “There are of course other local news providers and we see ourselves as complementing the work that they do. Clearly the local newspapers will be offering a much more localised service that we will be doing even with this advance.”

Entry Filed under: BBC, geotagging, hyperlocal, online journalism. Tags: , .

5 Comments Add your own

  • 1. Sneak preview of BBC hype&hellip  |  January 17, 2008 at 1:02 pm

    [...] Williams, over at the Online Journalism blog, reports on a preview of the BBC’s hyperlocal web service, which will utilise geotagging and mapping, given at last week’s Broadcast News and the [...]

  • 2. BBC planning local web si&hellip  |  January 17, 2008 at 3:10 pm

    [...] BBC’s controversial local television service could involve a network of 60 web sites that use geotagging technology to localise news and other [...]

  • 3. Magnetbox - links for 200&hellip  |  January 18, 2008 at 1:22 am

    [...] Sneak preview of prototype “BBC Local” The BBC is proposing a hyper-local web service which makes extensive use of mapping and geotagging. (tags: bbc local web news) [...]

  • 4. links for 2008-01-18 &laq&hellip  |  January 18, 2008 at 2:24 am

    [...] More geotagging: sneak preview of prototype “BBC Local” - Online Journalism Blog “Following this week’s post about Archant’s experiences with geotagging, Andrew Williams looks at how the BBC is using the technology in its prototype hyperlocal web service. “ (tags: internet journalism local news tagging geotagging bbc) [...]

  • 5. Lee Jordan  |  February 14, 2008 at 10:32 am

    Linking in with getotagged photos from flickr would be really cool! If the site was also postcode centric it could present news not just from your city but close to your postal code.

    Tie in with upcoming for local events ….. social eh?

Leave a Comment

Required

Required, hidden

Some HTML allowed:
<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Trackback this post  |  Subscribe to the comments via RSS Feed


Feeds

Recent Comments

Reasons to be a joll… on 10 reasons (or more) to be a j…
kashif on The Chinese earthquake and Twi…
shaka on The Chinese earthquake and Twi…
uohaa on 10 questions from a student: H…
Jolly Journalist: po… on 10 reasons (or more) to be a j…

Top Posts

Categories

del.icio.us bookmarks

Links

Category Cloud

advertising blogs citizen journalism comments community computer aided reporting crowdsourcing databases enterprise facebook future journalism Guardian interactivity journalism magazines mobile phone news newspapers online audio online journalism online journalism careers online journalism education online journalism students online video RSS social networking twitter user generated content web 2.0 website relaunch wikis

Tags

Get OJB on your mobile

RSS Twitter feed