• Most Popular
  • Most Shared
Vincent Padois, head tutor at the Pierre and Marie Curie University who teaches robotics and is babysitting the Paris ICub, makes a demonstration with ICub robot, a ?hybrid embodied cognitive system for a humanoid robot" about 1 metre (3.2 feet) high, at the Pierre and Marie Curie University in Paris September 4, 2009. Six versions of ICub exist in laboratories across Europe, where scientists are painstakingly tweaking its electronic brain to make it capable of learning, just like a human child and hoping it will learn how to adapt its behaviour to changing circumstances, offering new insights into the development of human consciousness.   REUTERS/Philippe Wojazer

Pictures of the year: Technology

A look at the year's best science and technology photos.   Slideshow 

    Fast Search sides with newspapers in Web sales war

    NEW YORK
    Mon Apr 30, 2007 12:57am EDT

    NEW YORK (Reuters) - A Norwegian company that supplies search technology to business users is looking to help newspaper publishers make more money from online advertising without sharing it with big Internet services.

    Technology

    Fast Search and Transfer on Monday released FASTMedia, software that lets media companies like newspaper publishers deliver results tailored to their local markets without striking revenue-sharing deals with search companies.

    "It's a way for media companies to create and manage their own advertising networks without using Google or Yahoo," said Nick Patience, a business software analyst at the 451 Group.

    Norway's Schibsted is using the technology on its Sesam Web site. Reed Elsevier's Reed Business Information, is testing it, a spokesman said. Meanwhile, Fast is trying to build interest among U.S. publishers.

    U.S. newspaper companies are looking to offset weakness in traditional classified advertising businesses by signing deals with Internet search companies such as Google or Yahoo, but such deals put added pressure on already tight margins.

    FASTMedia is made of several existing products developed by the Oslo-based Fast Search and Transfer, which specializes in developing software for businesses to search both internal archives and Web-based information. Once a publisher purchases and installs the software, they retain all resulting revenue.

    Among those products are tools to present different kinds of search results including audio, video, images and text, as well as technology to deliver those results and accompanying advertising to mobile devices.

    "There are so many companies that don't want to give any more money to Google and Yahoo because Google and Yahoo are sucking the life blood out of them," said Susan Aldrich, an analyst with the Patricia Seybold Group in Boston.

    Newspaper publishers from USA Today's Gannett Co. Inc. to The New York Times Co. are looking for every way possible to increase online sales to offset declines in their print businesses, but growth rates are still slowing.

    Some major publishers such as McClatchy Co. are working with Yahoo or Google on deals to beef up their online advertising in exchange for giving the search engine companies an entry into the publishers' local markets.

    Fast's advantage, analysts say, is that it eliminates the need for sharing sales dollars. Its search technology also allows publishers to better target ads to local readers.

    "Last week, I was looking for a restaurant and I went to Boston.com. Did I type that into Google, Yahoo or MSN? Nope," said Susan Feldman, vice president of content technologies at IDC, a research company based in Framingham, Massachusetts.

    "It's just extending ... the expertise they already have in their local market, and then making money on it instead of having somebody else grab it," she said.

    Other media companies that use various Fast products include Hearst Corp., The Washington Post Co.'s washingtonpost.com unit and Britain's Guardian, Financial Times and Reuters Group Plc.



    More from Reuters

    Photo

    Obama blames "systemic failures" for plane attack

    KANEOHE, Hawaii (Reuters) - President Barack Obama on Tuesday blamed "human and systemic failures" for allowing a botched Christmas Day attack aboard a Detroit-bound airliner and a U.S. official said the incident was linked to al Qaeda. | Video

    A man passes by a logo of the Tokyo Stock Exchange at the bourse in Tokyo December 29, 2009. REUTERS/Yuriko Nakao

    Tokyo trade gets turbocharged

    The "Arrowhead" gives Asia's largest -- and long derided -- bourse a viable electronic trading platform, it hopes.  Full Article 

    REUTERS/James Saft

    Welcome to the "Teenies"

    Shrinking financial sector? Paltry investment returns? Welcome to the the next decade. Don't worry, there's some good news, too.  Commentary