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Mapping Google News

CousinLarry writes "A neat project called Buzztracker.org has been mining Google News for over a year and keeping track of relationships between geographic locations mentioned in articles. The results are some really cool maps that actually seem to reflect the "buzz" of the day - check out the Vatican clusters from earlier this month, or the global New Year's chatter. You can also dig down into the articles from which the maps were generated."

3 of 133 comments (clear)

  1. Nelson Mandela != Nelson town by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It looks like the code needs a bit more tuning. http://www.buzztracker.org/index.html lists Nelson, NZ, as one of the hot spots. Clicking on that lists a bunch of articles about apartheid. I think the site code misinterpreted a reference to Nelson Mandela in one of the articles.

  2. Does Google mind? by IBeatUpNerds · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I remember about a year ago or so, there was a guy who was mining google news to produce an RSS feed. IIRC, google politely demanded that individual stop offering this to people. I can't find the article to cite this, maybe someone can help? At any rate, I wonder how google will feel about this.

  3. This is pretty nifty by aftk2 · · Score: 4, Interesting
    While mapping the news activity over the whole world is certainly cool, I can see this having an even greater effect when applied to a smaller area. For example, if you're moving somewhere, you could easily see crime news applied to the particular region. It doesn't have all have to be depressing news, either: you could use such a "buzz" indication to find out information like the following:
    • find where there are lots of new jobs being generated
    • view up-and-coming areas by their positive "buzz" (new creative hot spots, architecture, etc...)
    • find areas of town with great new restaurants
    I think this is where it starts to get exciting (and more useful). Mapping Google news? Meh. Mapping the northwest, and giving that information to Citysearch? You betcha.
    --
    concrete5: a cms made for marketing, but strong enough for geeks.