DUOS expands AI capabilities to help seniors apply for assistance programs
It will complete and submit forms, and integrate with state benefit systems
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I just hate the word "killer" in a headline. It means the author is sensationalizing the potential outcome of a new product launch. FriendFeed was going to kill Twitter; Facebook was going to kill MySpace; Google Base was going to kill Craigslist. None of these things happened. Facebook's a juggernaut. FriendFeed might be. And Google Base is probably not. But new web services don't often kill existing web services, certainly not nearly as much as bloggers like to assert that they will.
So today's headline from Marshall Kirkpatrick at Read Write Web, Google Blogsearch Relaunches as Techmeme Killer, immediately made me laugh. I almost hesitate to link to it but that's not right if I mentioned it. I think Jason Kinkaid's post on TechCrunch is more balanced and realistic. And Matt Cutts from Google takes pains to explain why Google Blog Search is not a Techmeme killer.
Here's what I think. Blog post aggregators are great. I use them every day, at least several times a day. I use them instead of a feed reader. And I like to read at least three or four of them, a couple for tech, one for politics, one for music, and so on and so forth.
In the tech sector, I like techmeme, hacker news, and Tim O'Reilly's retweets on twitter. Those three links sources really cover the bases for me. And behind each of them is a voice. In Hacker News' case, it's Paul Graham and the Y Combinator community. In Techmeme's case, it's Gabe. And in Tim's case, it's Tim.
The new Google Blog Search is very nice. It's a big improvement to the old one. But it's like a lot of Google's services. All algorithm and no "voice". It may attract a mainstream audience the way Google News has and that's fine. But for me, it's not close to the value that I get from aggregators with an angle. It's like a mainstream newspaper versus a blog. On one you get the news and on the other you get insight.
Anyway, enough Google bashing for now. I'm off to read my aggregators.
For more from Fred, visit his blog.
It will complete and submit forms, and integrate with state benefit systems
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