News at a Glance
chris writes: "If you're too lazy to read headlines, a new way to find writings might just save your soul. Paradoxically, this site is showing all the pictures found in news and reviews over the Internet. Nothing to read there, just thumbnail galleries sorted by theme (with, of course, links to the original articles). This format is showing some interesting side-effects. First, you can see what's hot lately because the same picture is repeated over your screen. It is also very effective when looking for reviews of tech toys or computer gizmos... spotting a CPU or a japanese robot among other items is almost instantaneous. Another thing to notice is that pictures of human faces seem to keep the lead over pie charts and battlefields... they are a good clue to figure what an article is about."
I can't wait till MSNBC changes to a format like that. I can see it now, bill gates 1000x's on my screen just looking back at me with a different pose and look on his face.
Since pitures take more bandwidth than words, maybe they will change it to ASCII pictures next? Talk about a fast news service!
But no I didn't RTFA
It would be much more useful if it adds a short caption/title under the images instead of just the name of the source. I think it is quite good for slashdotters, as most of us don't RTFA. Now we can simply RTFP.
how is that any better than the pictures already at news.google.com ?
Sorry, but it seems something that someone with good scripting abilities can do in a matter of hours.
This paid my last vacation, it mi
A nice feature is it you can get pictures from various country-specific news sources. This is one thing I think news.google.com lacks. I can't do " site:.au" on news.google.com :/
No one has what... Oh nevermind I'm going look at some more pictures now...
Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons created a superhero, Ozymandias, in their 1985 graphic novel WATCHMEN. He had a huge wall of TV screens that showed the whole world's channels, each screen switching randomly every few seconds. Being incredibly intelligent, he could divine the state of the world through these Burroughsian blipvert glimpses, like a prophet reading entrails. This page reminded me of Ozymandias.
Sounds like /. and PHPNuke category icons system to me. Category icons are even better because you get used to, and remember the pictures, making your browsing even faster.
One area of study had been Repetition Blindness that thinks a person's ability to remember pictures when subjected to many at a time lessens.
This is described as remarkable lapses.
They also describe how people cannot tell subtle shifts in scenes.
A neat way of looking at the news, but I wonder how much is missed?
There's nothing to read, and yet people will still not RTFA.
// file: mice.h
#include "frickin_lasers.h"
Another thing to notice is that pictures of human faces seem to keep the lead over pie charts and battlefields... they are a good clue to figure what an article is about.
The first thing this reminded me of was this quote by George Orwell:
"If you want a vision of the future, imagine a boot stamping on a human face
forever."
This site doesn't strike me as being very different from Google News. The only difference seems to be that Google includes short captions for each item, while this one just shows you a picture.
If they could just include some text/descriptions etc., it could be a worthy competitor to google.
My mom never taught me to sign.
Just looking at http://www.news-images.com/1118de/p0-0.htm, you can see the third picture on the right, it's a cooky, yet the page it links to shows "Bundeskanzler Schroeder". In fact non of the "Spiegel" pictures are right.
Maybe "Der Spiegel" has some kind of protection against using images outside their site?
If I am correct, some (most?) warez and porn sites have this kind of protection. But a paper? Why?
-- (:> jms cs.vu.nl (_) --"---
Not really, we've already had TV for years.
I do believe that we will some day move to a more pictorial language where the alphabets will be replaced by pics ... (no, we will not all be chinese then though chinese has 10-20,000 pictorial characters)
and just like we look at combinations of alphabets to grasp words, and combinations of words to grasp phrases, and combinations of phrases to grasp paras ... we will look at cluster of pics to grasp the articles ....
Looking with that analogy, 50 stock thumbs means that we could either look at it as 50 alphabets on that page, or if there is a little caption beneath the pic, then there are an equivalent of 50 words on that home page ....
- this is too few as it is the equivalent of a page with 50 words at the most
...
- this is too few as it means that each topic like Business, Sports,etc is created by stringing 6 words (pics) which does not even begin to capture a headline let alone a summary
....
I think the density of information could be increased here, and we could have many more pics. In addition if the pics are arranged according to some reasonable criteria, even more info can be conveyedTo see a world in a grain of sand, and then to step back and see the beach where the sand lies
People always seem to think that if there's a picture of something then it's the truth, but pictures are actually even easier to use when it comes to twisting the truth to fit your agenda. I don't mean actually editing the picture, but just using it so it fits your goal. Just alter the tagline and it changes a whole perspective. There was a series of ads for a radio statoin here that showed big pictures and would twist them. For example you'd see a bunch of small dots on a desert with fumes behind them so you could ony see they were vehicles and the tagline would read "Military offensive or rally race?"...
We live in an image-based, image-controlled world. I want my news without images, not made out of images.
did you notice the palm 515 review as part of a "headline"? that thing has been out for years!!! there are two pics below... i wonder how they choose their stories, but as far as i am concerned, i will swtick to google news for the time...
I've been addicted to Yahoo's most popular photos for years. It's fun to make predictions on a picture's popularity (if it will go up or down on the list).
What, this is supposed to be /useful/? Aside from the aforementioned lack of context with graphs, the other pictures aren't too helpful either. Here's what I gleaned from a quick look at the site: Arnold Schwarzenegger did something, some guy in a bike helmet did something, a fat dude in a suit sat down.
How this serves as anything other than a mildly interesting diversion is beyond me.
CBC News
Ydco co
Usually I have to lurch past interminable murders and battlefield pics to get to some maybe-already-read science story at the bottom of the page (on cnn).
But with this it was easy. I clicked on Top Stories more.. and skip the photos which I don't know what they are. Right away I see my two choices, what seems like a gorgeous tanned piece of royalty in a crimson and silver dress, or a stressed out techie on the phone. Hmmm, which should I pick? It's over in a microsecond and obviously everyone else here is making the same decision since the story (Halle on her Disastrous Love Life) is slashdotted. But the theory works. I don't know who the heck Halle is but now I want to know and save her from a bad boyfriend too!
I would even go for fewer thumbnails about 5 times the size of these and scrap the ones with bad pictures. That way we could see the news before it gets slashdotted. Next we'll evolve to networked torrents of femmes fatales (girls you pick hommes fatals or whatever you like). It is so much easier to make a decision without all those pesky letters they give me so much eyestrain anyway.
Check out this fishy photo by the AFP (Agence France-Presse). It was taken with a wide-angle "fisheye" lens, which distorts the image of the actual scene.
The Newseum has hundrets of digitized frontpages of real newspapers. It's kinda better than that.
* Smile. People will wonder what you think. *
This is quite interesting to see that the same people asking for technical papers on IT are rejoicing about the prospect of feeling clever by looking at some non-sense pictures.
/.ers are not discussing more sharply such a decisive issue.
Of course, this is socially gratifying to be able to discuss on a shallow way of roughly every subject on Earth. But when you meet someone that truly knows what he/she is talking about (exactly the same way that people on /. know what they are talking about when it comes to IT), then you are fucked up. It's worth to get involved in a more serious way of learning how our world is rotating.This is exactly what I try to do by visiting this site, and learning from people that are competent on this precise subject.
I'm not going to discuss about the strength of the immediate impact of a very intuitive and emotional object, ie a picture, a photography. I think history gave us some very interesting examples of misuse of information through pictures, videos, etc. My main point is that we should be careful, because our relationship to visual stimuli are not that rational ; you can go there if you want to learn more about the debate on the power of pictures, and what they really represent in our society.
Our world is by now so complex, so wide-open, that only strong and addictive stimuli can catch our attention. This is not surprising that the story of pictural representations is tightly related to the complexification of the world we're living in right now.
Thus, I have such an admiration for photographers such as James Nachtwey; what the folks like him did and still do is all the more useful than everyday brings a little more sadness to our daily lives.
But in no manner they represent - and themselves acknowledge it frankly - the truth. Because the truth is not in a picture, nor it is in a series of pictures. Photographers are here to draw our attention to urgent, revolting, funny, clever, ie interesting subjects. But I hate nothing more than people going to see Rwanda's genocide exposition in a museum, and then coming back with the so good-conscience feeling about the fact that yes, they did something, and what's more, they understood the problem.
Pictures are a beginning. I see a beautiful -yes, beautiful- picture of kids starving in Ouganda, my first reaction is to take some time and read papers about it. If I have some interest in Africa's demise (yes, yes, you'll see that in some time, the Southern part of Africa will be empty of black people), and if I have some time to spend on that, I'll read very different papers. Read NGO reports on the subject. Try to understand how I can be of any help. Etc. etc. etc.
A site that is supposed to make you understand the whole international actuality with pictures and snippets is the best way, first to make Ignorance's realm all the more important, and second to encourage, indeed, lazzyness. I don't even see why
And this is really what a responsible citizen should do with the general purpose information.
Regards,
Jdif
Let's overcome our weakness.
a picture is worth a thousand words...
the pictures(images) on the site are around 1 kb which is about 1000 bytes which is about one thousand words
hence a picture is really word about a thousand words!!
1. make 1 kb sized images and substitute for long news articles
2. save bandwidth
3. ???
4. profit!!!
You may want to slashdot this one too. It's even less different from Google News, it just looks better, and it even has a TV mode...
My next comment will be ready soon, but moderators can beat the rush and mod it up early.
Textz.com News may be of interest as well. It even lets you open the news images in an external window, turning them into a TV program, sort of. Btw, the site doesn't even use the Google API (there is a link to the source code at the bottom of the main page), it's all old-style HTML parsing...
I concur with most posts that this isn't a really useful source of news, but it is a fun a way to see how up on the news you are. Plus you can check instantly to see if you're right. I get most of my news from the radio so it was refreshing to put a face on the news of the day.
In theory, there is no difference between theory and practice, in practice there is.
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=index2&cid=7 02
All photos, click to read.
Wait... only reading the headlines is what lazy people do. That's why 99.9% of humanity lives in near complete ignorance.
To be too lazy to even read headlines you have to be, like, in a vegetative state or something. Headlines are your least concern. Somewhere there's a family member looking to pull the plug on you.
--- Ban humanity.
So, here are the first half-dozen things I tried:
1) A picture of a donut in the Science/Technology section. Links to a story about the record breaking sales of the Finding Nemo DVD??!? So, wrong image *and* wrong category.
2) In the Business section, a photo of some diamonds with a link to a story about Ukrainian diamonds! Hooray! Unfortunately, the next four (unrelated) photo's in the business section point to the exact same article.
3) Even when I selected the "US" edition, the top three entries in "Top Stories" were links to articles in German.
4) The next photo in the Science/Technology section linked to an advert for some video game or other. Not what I'd describe as news.
5) Local News (remember I have 'US' selected). The first three items are in Spanish. If these were stories about the US or maybe Mexico - for Mexicans - maybe I could understand that - but these appeared to be about Spain and were obviously 'Local' stories only if you happen to live in Spain!
6) Clicked on the first photo in the Health section - got a broken link.
Deeply unimpressive.
www.sjbaker.org
I thought that's what USA Today was for. Some days, reading that paper is like reading a comic book.
The developers must have ADD. I clicked on a picture of Harry Potter and got a story titled "Risque role for Diaz" with a picture of Cameron Diaz and no mention of the boy wizard. I wonder what diverted their attention?
I've been watching this site for a while:
Yahoo most popular pictures
It's a collection of the most emailed news pictures. Usually pretty interesting stuff. from cutsey animals, to the Victoria Secret model show.
M@
Krispy Cream is people
First, you can see what's hot lately because the same picture is repeated over your screen
Doesn't that just mean that the AD/PR campaign for that particular item has been launched?