Google Fast Flip aims to accelerate the pace at which readers devour online news. Google is sharing ad revenue generated from Fast Flip clicks with participating publishing partners, including TechCrunch, The New York Times, Fast Company and Business Week. Fast Flip also works on Google Android and Apple iPhone smartphones.
Google Labs Sept. 14 unleashed Google
Fast Flip, which the company hopes will speed up the way readers read online
news while yielding more advertising dollars for the publishers that
participate in the experiment.
As the name suggests, Fast Flip is designed to make the
news Web browsing more like the way readers turn the pages of print newspapers
and magazines: Fast. Web pages with publishers' articles are rendered on the
Fast Flip page, where users can click on them to begin reading. Users may also scroll
through scores of articles simply by clicking the mouse on up, down or
side-to-side arrows.
Article choices are designated by most popular,
sections, topics and sources, and there are subsections within those. Popular
includes recent, most viewed, recommended and headlines. Current topics this morning included San Francisco, marketing,
football, New York, YouTube, hip hop and Barack Obama.
Resource Library:
Sections includes all
of the regular Google News sections, which indicates that if this
experiment works, it will become the default mode of browsing Google
News.
When users click on an article to read it, they will also
see a blue bar on the left hand of the screen with previews of additional
articles. Users can simply click on any of those to flit from content piece to
content piece without clicking the forward and back arrows surrounding the
article pages. Users can also click a "like" button in the top right
of an article page to recommend stories to other readers. See these features in action on Google Watch here.
In some ways, the navigational experience of Fast Flip is
not unlike using microfiche machines in public libraries to rapidly scroll
through articles. However, microfiche involves unwieldy mechanical reels and is
not viewed through a Web browser with ad dollars being generated from clicks on
articles.
To that end, Google is sharing ad revenue generated from
Fast Flip with participating publishing partners, including TechCrunch, The New
York Times, Fast Company and Business Week. There are currently 39 Fast Flip partners;
the full list is
here.
"This gives publishers an opportunity to introduce
new readers to their content. It also tests our theory that being able to read
articles faster means people will read more of them, driving more ad revenue to
publishers," wrote Krishna Bharat, Google News distinguished researcher,
in a blog post.
Bharat also nodded to the struggling publishing industry,
noting while Fast Flip is not a "magic bullet" to boost publishing ad
sales, Fast Flip could help Web users surf through more news.
Google is doing
other things to prop up the publishing industry while trying to pad its
coffers, including working on a micropayments solution for publishers and
embarking on an ambitious, albeit controversial Google Book Search deal with
book authors and publishers.
Google said Fast Flip also works for
Google Android and Apple iPhones. It is available through the same Fast Flip
link for desktop computers. Instead of clicking on articles with a mouse, users will be swiping and tapping tiny touch-screens with their fingers.