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Show HN: Bit of News – Intelligent news summaries

95 points| _uchf | 12 years ago |bitofnews.com | reply

33 comments

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[+] scottjad|12 years ago|reply
My favorite terse world news source these days is http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Current_events

For a long time I've wanted a new source that will only show me stories that are likely to be relevant in a year. If no one is going to care or remember something in a month, then I'd rather just skip it. Portal:Current_events is as close to that as I've found.

What I love about it: very short summaries with the most important details about stories that people might still care about in a year, no sensational or partisan headlines, one click to excellent summaries of the issues, and I can easily catch up after missing a few days, whereas many news sites make it hard to see what they looked like even yesterday.

Take for instance the top story on bitofnews.com. The Portal:Current_events summary is:

"<a>A roof collapse</a> at a grocery store in <a>Riga</a>, Latvia, kills more than 50 people."

So it's more up to date than the bitofnews summary that has "at least 32," and if I care where Riga is instead of reading "Riga, which is the biggest city in the Baltics and its biggest seaport" I can click the Riga link and see a map and photo and population etc. If I want to know about the ongoing event, I can click the "a roof collapse" link and I'm presented with a pretty good summary of the issue.

I'm happy to see more news sources like this appear though. My only problem with the Portal:Current_events is that it doesn't have a good RSS feed and if I check it more than once a day, or mid-day, then it can be hard to see what has changed since my last visit.

[+] TossThisIsh|12 years ago|reply
Another vote for Wikipedia's Current Events portal. So much better than nearly everything out there.
[+] dredwerker|12 years ago|reply
The wikipedia portal is really good thanks for that.

Also the bit of news website didnt work for me.

[+] ajiang|12 years ago|reply
I'm impressed - clean interface, consumable, and actually really great summaries. The e-mail newsletter version of this sounds very useful. It would be great to be able to select the categories you're interested in too.

I actually have been working on an app that wakes you up in the morning with a voice reading your schedule for the day, the weather and the latest news, and the API for this looks perfect to fill the last part.

[+] xux|12 years ago|reply
Sounds cool! When you implement it, please let me know (email in profile). I'd be glad to feature your app on the website if it's using the API :)
[+] dmunoz|12 years ago|reply
I was going to ask what happened with the bit of news bot on reddit [0], but I see it just resumed posting!

I don't check it all that often, but I like getting a summary of recent news by browsing the bots user page every so often. Was saddened to see it inactive for the past two weeks.

[0] http://www.reddit.com/user/bitofnewsbot

[+] gojomo|12 years ago|reply
Wikipedia cofounder Larry Sanger is working on something similar, not yet launched, called 'Infobitt':

http://infobitt.com

(Unsure if that'll be its launch name, and there's certainly room for multiple approaches in the faster/fairer news space.)

[+] skadamat|12 years ago|reply
Very nicely done!

I would check out Twitter bootstrap or look for a font, that's the only thing that I dislike is the times new roman font. For a website that's focused on consuming text summaries, efficiently reading / understanding is important, and having a readable clean font is too :D

[+] xux|12 years ago|reply
Thanks! What type of fonts do you recommend?
[+] brown9-2|12 years ago|reply
Looks neat, but you might want to dig into what went wrong with this Bitcoin story:

Rise of Bitcoin: Is the digital currency a solution or a menace? (+video)

The Christian Science Monitor - Yesterday

She downloaded the software that would allow her family-owned floral shop/cafe to accept BTC, as Bitcoin is known.

[+] nmcfarl|12 years ago|reply
These are actually really good summaries, though in one case it was to commenting policy that was summarized, not the article... Still I think the best summaries I've seen.

I'd love to know what the tech behind this is like.

[+] sesqu|12 years ago|reply
The new Xbox vs PS article summary is horrible, though:

  * It's also a great gaming system – it has great games this year.
  * Ronald Reagan was president, MTV had just launched and choosing a video game system was easy.
  * " This holiday season buying a video game system is a bit more complicated.
[+] xux|12 years ago|reply
Thanks! You can find out more about the tech behind it here:

http://bitofnews.com/about.html

Each sentence is ranked by using four criteria:

- Relevance to the title - Relevance to keywords in the article - Position of the sentence - Length of the sentence

[+] TossThisIsh|12 years ago|reply
I subscribed to the email service a while back. Then on the day the Iranian embassy was bombed, what'd I get summarized?

Celebrity news.

I won't subscribe again unless there's a "nothing trivial" policy.

[+] tr4656|12 years ago|reply
Seems good although Quartz (http://qz.com/) daily newsletter seems more than enough for me.
[+] sebkomianos|12 years ago|reply
I like Quartz a lot as well but it's too focused on economy stories.
[+] taylorbuley|12 years ago|reply
Very cool! Do you use TFDF and then extract the most "meaningful" sentences?
[+] hnriot|12 years ago|reply
I think you meant TFIDF, but that would only work if you were looking for salient phrases in an article from many articles. When you look at a corpus of news the algorithm would likely work less effectively than an algorithm that using linguistics, for example Topia or even Rake.
[+] v1tyaz|12 years ago|reply
Do you have any plans to add RSS feeds?
[+] dublinben|12 years ago|reply
There's a similar Android app called Circa.
[+] Samuel_Michon|12 years ago|reply
No, Circa has a large team of actual human editors. That’s why the content is good.

Also, Circa started out as an iPhone app. The iPad and Android versions came later.

[+] elwell|12 years ago|reply
reminds me of summly