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.
New news makes the news. *snicker*
"I'm a leaf on the wind. Watch how I soar."
-Hoban Washburn
I can load relevant headlines without waiting for my browser to time out on CNN's AOL/Netscape banner every time.
Still, I wonder how the other news sources are going to react. They make their revenue on advertisting and if Google is skimming off the top of their viewership, I have to wonder if they're not going to start kvetching pretty quickly.
The next Slashdot story will be ready soon, but subscribers can beat the rush and slashdot the links early!
That dup detection code would do wonders to help slashdot. Any chance that Google will license it to /. ?
At the moment it has World and U.S. sections. I think what it could really do with is different regional sections, which would be default to different regions URLs. (eg. news.google.co.uk having a UK section). It really doesn't interest me that much that South Dakota is to vote on extending jury rights!
I know lots of news pages exist, but this is nice and clean. Plus, they seem to have a good amount of international news. I can see using this every day. Plus, it's nice not to be beaten over the head with layers, flash and such. Imagine that... just the news!
Amateurs discuss tactics. Professionals discuss logistics.
I thought Google's indexing/spidering system was innovative because it ranked pages in terms of how popular and prevalent they are on OTHER pages. I would think that it takes a small amount of time for this kind of "popularity" to build up. Are they changing their methods for the news section? Using their traditional methods, it wouldn't be "news" anymore. Is it just taking the headlines from the most popular websites and posting them there? Don't get me wrong, Google's the best at what it does, so this will probably end up being a good thing, I'm just curious about the methodologies employed.
the best part of it is that Cricket is the headlining sport.
People who think they know everything really piss off those of us that actually do.
maybe time for slashdot to get a google topic
They already have one. It's called "Ask Slashdot"
GoogleNews does GoogleNews.
.. 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.
" This page was generated entirely by computer algorithms without human editors. No humans were harmed or even used in the creation of this page."
I was just saying to my girlfriend that if there's any one company that I have more respect for than any other company in the world, it would be Google.
And then this came out. I got to point and say, "See, this is why!" Then I ran around the room in my underwear laughing maniacally. I think I'm sleeping on the couch tonight.
- SMJ - (It's not just a name: it's a bad aftertaste.)
From Google's "About Google News" link:
This is an interesting development for Google. Ruling out the possibility of paid placement (for now), it seems as though PageRank doesn't apply to the news aggregator. (And how would it? Stories are updated continuously.) It's not likely to be completely random, either, although such an approach could lead to some very interesting story angles.
:wq
we slashdot the site, here's a link to the google cache. :)
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.
I just want to see a google archive of this:
http://www.alltooflat.com/geeky/elgoog/
Free unix account: freeshell.org
Would it be possible to localize it more? Right now it is -1, Too US-Centric. This could be my startup page. :)