Newspapers To Offer Their Own News Aggregators
RedSteve writes "Wired News is reporting that several newspapers are about to take on news aggregators at their own game, offering their own branded newsreaders in direct competition with the likes of Google News. The Los Angeles Times, the Denver Post and British newspaper the Guardian will soon offer stand-alone newsreader software for reading stories on their own websites and those of their competitors. The move is apparently intended to capture the less tech-savvy news consumer who may not know what an RSS reader is, but know that their favorite paper now offers them a way to get lots of headlines from lots of places. Oh, and did I mention it allows the newspaper to maintain its brand and sell its own advertising based on what the user is viewing?"
The Guardian already does something like this - it's called "The Editor", and appears daily in their paper. It's a full page spread which details columns, letters, and news coverage in papers and media around the world. Obviously you can't cover that much in a single page, but I'm pretty sure the Guardian also produces a weekly version of The Editor (although it might be printed under a different name) which you can buy.
I'd imagine their online service would use "The Editor" namesake.
Polish biggest newspaper, Gazeta Wyborcza, has been offering its own RSS aggregator for a few months. And they've been marketising it outside the Internet, which surprised me -- I've seen ads placed on city buses, for example.
With RSS you can only see headline and if the source so wishes, a brief discussion. Big factual error. You can only see *the data that's provided*, which may be anything between a short description and several hundred K of data. Effectively, since the feeds available from news pages are short on data, seeing only the headline and a brief discussion is how it stands today, but saying "With RSS" implies a limit imposed by the underlying technology, and that's just not true.
The BBC?
Isn't that the one that, the one time they actually publicly called into direct question the government's motives in seeking war in Iraq, almost lost their charter and had to back down?
I'm not sure how much I can take them seriously.
RSS-aware programs called news aggregators are popular in the weblogging community. Many weblogs make content available in RSS. A news aggregator can help you keep up with all your favorite weblogs by checking their RSS feeds and displaying new items from each of them.
RSS is also known to stand for "RDF Site Summary".
For some odd reason I prefer that acronym over "Really simple syndication", even though RSS is simple.
Debugging? Klingons do not debug. Bugs are good for building character in the user.
(cue resentment after downloading MSN Messenger 7 last night and being shocked by now ad-packed it was)
Get the Mess patch from http://www.mess.be. You'll thank me afterwards. It removes the ads and lots of other annoyances.
By summer it was all gone...now shesmovedon. --