There's been no shortage of talk recently about the "future of news." Should publishers charge for news online? How do they replace lost sources of revenue such as classified ads? How will accountability journalism endure? And, even more fundamentally, will news survive in the digital era? These are questions we're deeply interested in, and we've been exploring potential solutions. But what's often overlooked in these debates is the nature of the news story itself and the experience of how it's read online. We believe it's just as important to experiment with how news organizations can take advantage of the web to tell stories in new ways — ways that simply aren't possible offline.
While we have strong ideas about how information is experienced on the web, we're not journalists and we don't create content. So over the last few months we've been talking to a number of people to help develop the concept of something that we and some others in the industry call the "living story." Today, on Google Labs, we're unveiling some of the work we've done in partnership with two world-class news organizations: The New York Times and The Washington Post. The result of that experiment is the Living Stories prototype, which features new ways to interact with news and the quality of reporting you've come to expect from the reporters and editors at The Post and The Times. We're excited to learn from this experiment, and hope to eventually make these tools available to any publisher that wants to use them.
The idea behind Living Stories is to experiment with a different format for presenting news coverage online. News organizations produce a wealth of information that we all value; access to this information should be as great as the online medium allows. A typical newspaper article leads with the most important and interesting news, and follows with additional information of decreasing importance. Information from prior coverage is often repeated with each new online article, and the same article is presented to everyone regardless of whether they already read it. Living Stories try a different approach that plays to certain unique advantages of online publishing. They unify coverage on a single, dynamic page with a consistent URL. They organize information by developments in the story. They call your attention to changes in the story since you last viewed it so you can easily find the new material. Through a succinct summary of the whole story and regular updates, they offer a different online approach to balancing the overview with depth and context.
This project sprang from conversations among senior executives at the three companies. We shared thoughts about how the web can work for storytelling, and the Times and Post shared their core journalistic principles. The Living Stories started taking shape over the summer after our engineering and user interface teams spent time in the newsrooms of both papers. We're providing the technology platform, the Times and Post's journalists are writing and editing the stories, and we're continuously collaborating to make the user interface fit with their editorial vision.
Over the coming months, we'll refine Living Stories based on your feedback. We're also looking to develop openly available tools that could aid news organizations in the creation of these pages or at least in some of the features. If you're a news reader, we'd love to hear your thoughts. If you're a news organization, we want to hear your comments on the Living Story format. If you decide to implement this on your site, we would love to hear about that too. At the very least, we hope this collaboration will kick off debate and encourage innovation in how people interact with news online. To learn more about Living Stories, check out the video below.
Selasa, 08 Desember 2009
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Blog Archive
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2009
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Desember
- Five years of Google blogging
- Ordinary citizens, extraordinary videos
- This week in search 12/25/09
- Now, Dasher! Now, Dancer! Track Santa and his slei...
- Unofficial tech support returns home for the holidays
- The meaning of open
- Google Checkout for Non-Profits in 2010
- This week in search 12/18/09
- Tips and tricks for deploying Google Apps
- Carbon offsets at Google
- Go thataway: Google Maps India learns to navigate ...
- Translate Google Sites with one click
- Transliteration goes global
- Browser Size: a tool to see how others view your w...
- More great news sources to discover in Fast Flip
- What you watched and searched for on YouTube in 2009
- Live on YouTube: Leaders answer your questions in ...
- The top ten ways to get your business ready for th...
- A deep dive on display advertising
- Making URLs shorter for Google Toolbar and FeedBurner
- Share any web page from your Toolbar (and more)
- Cloud apps, big city: LA goes Google
- This week in search 12/11/09
- Ad policies — the year in review
- Google Apps highlights – 12/11/2009
- Two new features enhance search beyond the results...
- Panelists for CNN/YouTube Climate Debate announced...
- Seeing the forest through the cloud
- PBS NewsHour comes to YouTube
- Join this group: Google Groups joins Google Apps
- Faster apps for a faster web: introducing Speed Tr...
- Exploring a new, more dynamic way of reading news ...
- Google Chrome for the holidays: Mac, Linux and ext...
- Fighting fraud online: taking "Google Money" scamm...
- Happy holidays from Picasa Web Albums and Eye-Fi
- Celebrating Computer Science Education Week
- Relevance meets the real-time web
- Explore a whole new way to window shop, with Googl...
- Climate tools for Copenhagen and beyond
- This week in search 12/4/09
- Personalized Search for everyone
- Now on Google Finance: streaming news
- Searching the global web just got a little easier
- Connect with world leaders on the climate debate
- Introducing Google Public DNS
- Now you see it, now you don't
- Spread some holiday cheer, one card at a time
- Show Your Vote for COP15
- Show me the pictures: better format for image results
- Introducing the Google Model Your Town Competition
- Zeitgeist 2009: the collective consciousness
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