Slashdot Mirror


And Now, the Cartoon News

theodp writes "Would you read a cartoon version of Slashdot? Quality stuff, not half-baked MS-Paint posts like 'Introducing Microsoft Monocle and Self-Driving Bentley'. Erin Polgreen has big plans for illustrated journalism. In October, Polgreen will be launching Symbolia, a tablet-based magazine of illustrated journalism, through Apple's App Store. 'Illustrated journalism draws you in, Polgreen explains. 'It's accessible in a way 5,000 words of text isn't. Regardless of age, gender or anything, you grasp it faster than most journalism.' Polgreen follows in the footsteps of other cartoonist-journalists, including Joe Kubert (RIP), Joe Sacco, and Josh Neufeld."

3 of 107 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Would you read a cartoon version of Slashdot? by fiannaFailMan · · Score: 4, Interesting

    When will people seriously get it into their think marketer heads that although cartoons or videos may be more initially eye-catching, they have low information density and are worse at getting actual information across than plain old text?

    Not necessarily. Depending on what's being reported on, a picture can be worth a thousand words. And "information density" isn't always the only objective of journalism. A lot of stories are about evoking the emotion of the situation, so a lot of it tends to be descriptive. Quality news sources like the BBC are pretty good at almost transporting you there by capturing the sensations of what's going on. Illustrated news lends itself very well to that kind of reporting.

    --
    Drill baby drill - on Mars
  2. Re:Would you read a cartoon version of Slashdot? by firewrought · · Score: 4, Interesting

    When will people seriously get it into their think marketer heads that although cartoons or videos may be more initially eye-catching, they have low information density and are worse at getting actual information across than plain old text?

    First, density != effectiveness in human-to-human communications.

    Second, text has medium density... it's more dense than a comic but less dense than a well-designed graph.

    Finally, consider that your view of cartoons may not include everything the medium is capable of. Have you seen, for example, Scott McCloud's comic-book introduction to Google Chrome? Plain old text could have conveyed the same information, but it's doubtful the audience would have been as large or absorbed as much. Scott argues that cartoons can be more effective than pure text, and while I suspect he's only partially right, it is still worthwhile to try experiments like the one Polgreen is talking about.

    --
    -1, Too Many Layers Of Abstraction
  3. Nooooo!! by pubwvj · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Please.
    No.
    Giga bandwidth wasting graphic simplification.

    Text is best.

    Be eloquent.