Nieman Foundation at Harvard
HOME
          
LATEST STORY
Why “Sorry, I don’t know” is sometimes the best answer: The Washington Post’s technology chief on its first AI chatbot
ABOUT                    SUBSCRIBE
March 5, 2013, 10 a.m.

Project Argo, meet Project Largo: Open source code finds new use in the sites of nonprofit news orgs

An NPR beatblogging project gets recycled into a website framework for the Investigative News Network’s members.

The Lens, the nonprofit news site in New Orleans, announced a major redesign recently. Editor Steve Beatty wrote that the new site would feature responsive design for easier mobile reading, a more intuitive navigation, enhanced readability with highlighting of “important facts and figures,” and more, including a feed from ProPublica’s Muckreads.

But perhaps the most interesting aspect of the new site is that these nice new features didn’t cost The Lens a dime:

The new site is the product of cooperation among nonprofits. It is based on Project Largo, a WordPress theme developed by the Investigative News Network. And that’s an extension of National Public Radio’s Project Argo. The Lens will work with the network to help improve the Largo theme and lower the costs of high-quality publishing for other sites.

Project Argo was a project at NPR, funded by the Knight Foundation and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, to build topic-based verticals at member stations around the country. Those 12 beat blogs — on immigration in California, higher education in Minnesota, oceans and climate in Boston — were built on a set of WordPress-based tools built under the Argo banner.

Argo’s funding ended after two years (most of the blogs live on), but what lived on technologically speaking were those tools — themes, plugins, and lessons. The code lives on GitHub, but as many open source projects have discovered, the fact that code exists in the open is no guarantee that it will ever be used.

Enter Largo, which (loosely) stands for “longform Argo.” Largo was begun by INN in hopes of repurposing what Argo built for iterative blogging for a more traditional news site. Adam Schweigert, INN’s director of technology, was the lead developer on the Largo Project — or as he put it, the man in charge of asking the question, “What should nonprofit investigative news organizations look like on the web?” Most of INN’s members are small shops without much in the way of either tech capacity or excess budget.

INN had a lot of respect for what Argo had built, Schweigert said, but “there were a bunch of things investigative journalists wanted, especially smaller centers that do more data-focused stuff.” Improvements to that end included more support for embedded content, special pages for feature projects, and improving long-form readability.

One of the biggest additions Schweigert made to the Argo architecture was responsive design, a feature he says is important to the investigative organizations as they try to get a foot holding in mobile. (The Lens’ Beatty says the Largo collaboration has convinced him that separate apps for news outlets will “be looked back on fondly and quaintly one day.”)

The Lens is one of 11 INN members (and the largest) to adopt a design based on Largo. Steve Myers, The Lens’ managing editor (and familiar from his days at Poynter, said those added features were important factors in their decision to join the the project. “I’m a little surprised that we were able to get so much for no cost,” he said, adding that technology consulting is an “important member service” that the INN offers to nonprofit organizations like The Lens. He said pullquotes and other highlighting features are especially useful for the kind of work The Lens does: “Our stories are numbers-based, so we can pull some facts out and make it more of a pleasant experience.” He’s also looking forward to building on DocumentCloud to more easily offer primary sources to the reader.

Schweigert says Largo is still in beta; version 1.0 is currently scheduled to solidify around April. He expects to have between 10 and 12 INN members on Largo by then, increasing to between 15 and 20 by the end of the year. Future goals include better data plugins and an expanded framework for documentation and education. “NPR found [with Argo] that they have to provide a technical tool set and training in tandem,” Schweigert says. “We can give you a publishing tool, but it’s also a process of training folks that come out of print investigative news backgrounds, to sort of train them in skills for the web.”

Myers says his primary concern with switching to Largo was that the Lens site would look too much like a WordPress template rather than something original, a problem he says its extensive customization options helped them avoid. Schweigert’s next goal is to expand the theme’s customization options so that smaller organizations with lower output (say, those that produce just one major story a month) can have a more fitting design.

The original Argonauts (yeah) seem to appreciate the fact that Largo has given Argo an added life:

Myers noted that there’s no guarantee that open-sourced code ever finds a use past its initial release. Largo is trying to break that pattern. “No nonprofit is guaranteed tomorrow,” said Myers, “It’s nice that we don’t have to go out there and keep reinventing the wheel.” Or, in other words:

Of course, INN is itself sustained on grants, which can come and go, but Schweigert says Largo members don’t need to worry about investing in the platform: Unlike Argo, it doesn’t have an expiration date. “It’s designed as a core service,” he said, “We see this as more of an ongoing thing that we will keep investing in.”

POSTED     March 5, 2013, 10 a.m.
Show tags
 
Join the 60,000 who get the freshest future-of-journalism news in our daily email.
Why “Sorry, I don’t know” is sometimes the best answer: The Washington Post’s technology chief on its first AI chatbot
“For Google, that might be failure mode…but for us, that is success,” says the Post’s Vineet Khosla
Browser cookies, as unkillable as cockroaches, won’t be leaving Google Chrome after all
Google — which planned to block third-party cookies in 2022, then 2023, then 2024, then 2025 — now says it won’t block them after all. A big win for adtech, but what about publishers?
Would you pay to be able to quit TikTok and Instagram? You’d be surprised how many would
“The relationship he has uncovered is more like the co-dependence seen in a destructive relationship, or the way we relate to addictive products such as tobacco that we know are doing us harm.”