Does Cover Flow work for browsing the Web? Increasingly, I’ve been seeing Flash-based Websites adopt the visual metaphor of Apple’s iTunes Cover Flow as a navigational tool to quickly flip through Web pages (instead of album covers). You can see that in new search engines like SearchMe, and in a news filter that just launched this weekend called Flowww. (Apparently, we are now entering the era of triple-letter misspellings for Websites because all the double-letter misspellings are taken). Flowww lets you flip through about 24 current pages culled from the top 100 tech blogs and news aggregation sites like Digg and Techmeme.
Right now, you will find some of the same stories that you will find on Techmeme and elsewhere, including posts from TechCrunch, GigaOm, O’Reilly Radar, Silicon Alley Insider, Datawocky, TorrentFreak, The New York Times, and Yahoo News. It’s 98 percent tech news, but the site throws in some pop culture stuff and a couple cool photos from Flickr. Eventually, you’ll be able to add your own feeds, or use it to read one particluar source (here’s what it would look like for TechCrunch).
The idea is that many people are having a hard time keeping up with all the news coming at them from their RSS readers, Twitter, FriendFeed, Facebook, and everywhere else. So Flowww tries to reduce the noise and present just the most important stuff. It looks at the top tech blogs and the big stories on the news aggregation sites and puts it through a data mining and predictive analysis engine powered by SPSS Clementine. It also takes into account social votes on sites like Digg, Tweets, highly bookmarked stories, and evaluates anything tagged “flowww” on del.icio.us, Flickr, or any other service it monitors. There will also be a way to e-mail in stories for evaluation
Flowww was created by David Zotter, a developer in Connecticut. He won’t really explain what his organizing principle is other than to say it is a “mix between crowd sourcing and predictive analytics” and that “there is large amount of text processing happening to trim down the top news.” He also claims “it should be impossible for a dominant minority from a single source to game the overall rankings,” but refuses to give any details on exactly how it is supposed to do that. (It seems that simply getting lots of people to tag photos and stories with the word “flowww” would be one way to try to game the system).
Ultimately, people will have to decide for themselves if the news presented in Flowww does a better job than other filters. For me, at least, it doesn’t. There are certainly posts and articles there that I would want to read, but many of them are the same ones I can find on TechMeme, Digg, or simply looking at my RSS reader. And there are some I could care less about, like an EW story about American Idol David Cook. I’m not sure why I should trust Flowww to make my reading selections for me, and Zotter doesn’t care to try to explain his approach.
The other issue I have is that, while the site is pretty, the Cover Flow metaphor just doesn’t work for me as a navigational tool. It is too slow and it forces you to look at the pre-selected sites in the order that the algorithm (or Zotter) picks them. If you want to read the middle story, you have to flip through all the previous ones to get to it. I’d rather pick my own stories from a list of headlines, thank you very much.
What do readers think? Would you use it?






Hard to tell if it’s good or not as it just crashes my Firefox AND Explorer, seems to be massively memory hungry, so can’t use even if I wanted to.
It seems that the majority of complaints are focused on the ultra dumbed
down gui. All relevant points. It is too easy for sophisticated users.
Btw, this runs fine on my 2 year old Mac. Are my fellow techcrunch readers using 5 year old laptops? What are you guys using? Thinkpad Pentium III’s, 1 gig, 1024×768?
No one has mentioned the selection mechanism behind the eye candy. It doesn’t look as simple as displaying RSS feeds. As far as I can tell, most RSS feeds do not include the numberof bookmarks, tweets or diggs associated with a story, do they?
How does it work?
I’m going to laugh when Jobs releases an actual working coverflow viewer for rss feeds later this year and everyone praises the concept.
Surely, grandmas everywhere will follow the daily web 2.0 news this way.
Have any of you tried this plugin from a company called cooliris (www.cooliris.com). Their plugin allows you to search and browse all kinds of media. I use it all the time and have stopped going to Flickr and YouTube, because the experience that their product provides is so much better. I have a lot of friends in the photography community who swear by it.
My guess would be that the www in flowww stands for World Wide Web.
It’s just a joke. Too slowww (triple letter), and please just tell people coverflow is not for your mouse.
However it let me think about that why RSS reader can’t show the site’s layout. For some time I’m bored to keep reading plain text in Google Reader and a good-looking site can definitely improve the readability.
What kinds of computers are you viewing this on? I am using a 3 year old Mac and it’s working fine.
Maybe it’s not meant for “sophisticated viewers” (who apparently are still using their college computers). I think it has great potential!
thanks for that