Google Does the News
rizen was among the countless readers who submitted that google does the news. They've added a new tab to their interface, and a CNNish sorta web page that indexes thousands of online news sites. Their technology section is showing some Slashdot stories too (sweet!). I like that they combine related stories on the same subject.
Nifty setup.
.. it's just linked to the main page now. For something extra-schweet though, try their experimental keyboard-navigable search interface - found it from Mycroft, the Mozilla search bar plugin project.
Michel
Fedora Project Contribut
They have a partner agreement with NY Times at least that bypasses the registration requirement.
These types of links are called deep links .
There has already been quite a lot of controversy regarding deep links, dating all the way back to 1999.
In fact, one major free website hosting company, whose name escapes me at the moment, does not allow you to deep link to their members' pages. Instead, you are forced to go to that member's home page first (I imagine that they are checking for referers or some such thing).
Clearly, deep linking is beneficial, but some companies just don't get it.
Karma: Chevy Kavalierma.
If companies want to force viewers through a predetermined path, the web is simply the wrong medium.
Patrick Doyle
I mod down every jackass who puts his moderation policy in his sig. Oh, wait a sec....
It has been mentioned that Google has covered news stories for quite some time. The best place to get info on Google's current projects is Google Labs...
No regristration if you go to a nytimes story from google's news page! Why can't we do that? Here's google's link, for example:
N IN T.html?ex=1033444800&en=c4f426ba46654ccb&ei=5062&p artner=GOOGLE
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/09/21/technology/21
I assume it's the partner=google part that bypasses the registration
The most it says about the technology is this: I'm guessing that the sources themselves are ranked in the usual manner. The same story from different sources are grouped and finally the placement of the story is determined by how many sources (weighted by their rank) ran it and how those sources positioned it themselves.