Google Intros Fast Flip for Reading News Online
Google today announced Fast Flip, a tool developed to help Internet users browse news quickly.
Google has announced a new tool that promises the ability to "flip through articles really fast without unnatural delays, just as we can in print." Enter Fast Flips, combining the "best elements of print and online media" while cutting down on the time you spend waiting for media-rich websites to load. That's the word according to Google, at least.
Visiting Fast Flip you'll be faced with streams of news, stacked one above the other. You've got one stream for popular news, one for popular topics, one for source, etc. Clicking the arrow on the side flicks the stream to the next row of articles and you basically keep flipping until you see something you like.
If you're like us, you're going to take one look at Fast Flip and notice one thing almost immediately: where the heck are all the ads? I'm looking at the New York Times and I'm not seeing any ads. How are they going to make money? Well, don't worry. Google partnered with three dozen publishers, including the New York Times, the Atlantic, the Washington Post, Salon, Fast Company, ProPublica and Newsweek. All of these will receive a cut of revenue garnered from contextually relevant ads.
Check out Fast Flip below and let us know what you think!
- Apple Rumorama: Tablet in Feb '10, $800-$1000
- Microsoft Introduces Visual Search for Bing
- Intel Shows Off 32-nm Westmere CPU Wafer
- Apple Causes NAND Shortage in Taiwan
- Ferrari Speeds Into Netbook Race
- Windows 7 Upgrade Could Take Over 20 Hours
- Bethesda Sues Interplay Over Fallout Game
- 802.11n Finalized After 7 Years in the Making
- Asus Eee Keyboard Launching in October
- Lightning SSDs Provide Crazy Fast Speeds
- HP Launches Ion-based Mini 311
- Lenovo Thinkpads X200, T400s Have Multitouch
- Blizzard: More "Broad Appeal" In Next MMOG
- Sony to Kill Half of Its Star Wars Servers
- iPhone 3.1 Jailbroken for Older iPods and iPhones
- Lenovo's Super Bright Outdoor X200 LCD
- Windows 7 Not Afraid of Netbooks or Macs
- Video: Lenovo SimpleTap Touch for Thinkpads





