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![]() Screenshot of the Fast Flip homepage | |
Type of site | News |
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Available in | English |
Owner | |
Created by | |
URL | fastflip.googlelabs.com |
Commercial | Yes |
Registration | Not required |
Launched | 14 September 2009 [1] |
Current status | Discontinued |
Google Fast Flip was an online news aggregator from Google Inc. that mimicked the experience of flicking through a newspaper or magazine, allowing visual search of stories in manner similar to microfiche. [2] [3] [4] It was launched in beta by Google Labs at the TechCrunch 50 conference in September 2009. [5] [6] [7]
The site presented images of stories from Google's news partners, which could be clicked on to navigate to the story on the news provider's own website. [7] Stories could be scrolled between using the mouse or cursor keys. The presentation of stories used a similar algorithm to Google News, but stories could be ordered by publication as well as by subject. [6] Krishna Bharat of Google News has said that "Fast Flip is mostly for longer shelf-life content, the kind of content you want to recommend to other people." [8] Fast Flip was created after Larry Page "asked why the web was not more like a magazine, allowing users to flip from screen to screen seamlessly." [4] Fast Flip was available as well on iPhone and Android mobile devices. [9]
Users of Fast Flip were able to follow friends and topics, find new content, and to create their own customized magazines around their searches. [10]
At launch, there were 39 mainly US-based news partners. Google said that it would share the majority of revenue from contextual adverts with its news partners. [7] [8] [11]
Fast Flip was praised for allowing visual, [12] fast [13] and serendipitous [14] browsing of news stories, but it has been criticized as being a novelty, [15] anachronistic, as it emulates print media, [16] limits navigation and presents few news sources, [17] and as being more focused on the needs of publishers than of readers. [18] [19] [20] Its visual search has been compared to the beta visual search of Microsoft Bing [2] [16] [21] and to The Onion's microfiche iPhone app. [22] Fast Flip has also been cited as a demonstration of Google's power in the news marketplace; by setting up another news interface that uses publishers' content without returning much value. [23]
In September 2011, Google announced it would discontinue a number of its products, including Google Fast Flip. [24]