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Reading gets personal with Popular items and Personalized ranking
October 22, 2009
(Cross-posted from the
Official Google Reader Blog
)
Today, we're launching two changes to
Google Reader
to help you discover more interesting content faster. Just as the launch of
Personalized Search
improved search results based on your search history, these changes use your Reader Trends to improve your reading experience.
Explore section
- We're always trying to help you discover new stuff in Reader, and today we're introducing Popular items and Recommended sources, two ways to find interesting content from all over the Internet. We use algorithms to find top-rising images, videos and pages from anywhere (not just your subscriptions), collect them in the new Popular items section and order them by what we think you'll like best. Now you don't have to be embarrassed about missing that hilarious video everyone is talking about — it should show up in your Popular items feed automatically. And to make it easier to find interesting feeds, we're moving
Recommendations
into the new Explore section and giving it a new name — Recommended sources. Like always, it uses your
Reader Trends
and
Web History
(if you're opted into Web History) to generate a list of feeds we think you might like.
Personalized ranking
- Only have a 10-minute coffee break and want to see the best items first? All feeds now have a new sort option called "magic" that re-orders items in the feed based on your personal usage, and overall activity in Reader, instead of default chronological order. Click "Sort by magic" under the Folder Settings menu of your feed to switch to personalized ranking. Unlike the old "auto" ranking, this new ranking is personalized for you, and gets better with time as we learn what you like best — the more you "like" and "share" stuff, the better your magic sort will be. Give it a try on a high-volume feed folder or All items and see for yourself!
The goal of personalization at Google remains the same as ever: to help you find the best content on the web. We hope these new features help you do just that — go
Explore
for yourself.
Finally, we'd love to hear your feedback — share your thoughts on
our help group
,
Twitter
or the Reader section of
Get Satisfaction
, a third party support community.
Posted by Beverly Yang, Software Engineer, Search Quality
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