It seems like a good time for news on mobile devices, with the popular Flipboard iPad application launching earlier this year, and News Corps&' iPad-only newspaper The Daily coming in a few months.

But where most apps either represent a single publication (like CNN or The New York Times) or are built around social aggregation (like Flipboard), a Moscow, Russia-based startup called News360 says that the key to nailing the news experience on the phone is using artificial intelligence and semantic analysis to deliver a smarter, better-organized experience.

News360 just launched an upgraded version of its iPhone app and also announced that it has raised an undisclosed amount of seed funding from the Russian firm Oradell Equities.

There are a few different components to News360a4ぎa4г technology. First, therea4ぎa4г the crawler, which currently collects news from more than 500 sources (that number is supposed to increase to 1,000). Then therea4ぎa4г the entity extractor, which identifies the companies, people, brands, and places in each story. An object dossier creates informational pages around those topics &8212' for example, if I mention Apple on News360, you can click on the word a4ぎAApplea4ぎ and the app will give you a short rundown of what Apple is. Articles from different sources that are about the same news get clustered together, and theya4ぎa4вe also divided into different news categories.

So therea4ぎa4г supposedly a lot of complicated technical stuff on the back end, but on the front end users should see the most important stories of the day, organized into an easy-to-browse format. You can also search for news, focus on stories that are relevant to your current location, or browse categories like tech and business.

Now, none of that sounds like a huge leap forward from news search engines like Google News. Even if some of the backend technology is better than what already exists, I suspect the difference isna4ぎa4д big enough to win people over. But thata4ぎa4г why the focus on mobile is smart. News search or RSS-reading can be a pain on the phone. News360 ties its technology to a simple swiping interface that makes it easy to scroll through a bunch of news at once. And the object dossier means that you can get quick answers a lot of the basic questions that can come up during newsreading (a4ぎAWait, who is that againa4ぎ) without having to perform a bunch of Web searches.

I played with the News360 app last night, and as implied above, I liked the interface. I thought the object dossier was super-useful, even though it wasna4ぎa4д totally accurate &8212' in an article about an America tourist murdered in Jerusalem, I clicked on the a4ぎAJerusalema4ぎ link and was told, a4ぎAJerusalem is a DOS file virus detected in Jerusalem, Israel.a4ぎ The main downside was the fact that the app only includes the first couple paragraphs of each article, so you have to jump to the publishera4ぎa4г website to read the whole thing. But hey, thata4ぎa4г good for publishers, it should help avoid thorny legal issues, and even on those websites you can still click on links to the News360 dossiers.

With Version 2.0, News360 now supports landscape mode, it integrates with Instapaper and Read It Later so you can read articles when youa4ぎa4вe offline, and it includes stock price charts in company dossiers. An Android app is planned soon.

News360 hasna4ぎa4д shared any numbers about total downloads, but it was included as one of the best news apps in Applea4ぎa4г Year in Review section in the App Store.

Previous Story: What Facebook&'s Zuckerberg won&'t be able do in China: End the blockade

Print Email Twitter Facebook Google Buzz LinkedIn Digg StumbleUpon Reddit Delicious Google More&8230'

Tags: iPhone, newsreading

Companies: Apple, News360, Oradell Equities

Tags: iPhone, newsreading

Companies: Apple, News360, Oradell Equities

Anthony is a senior editor at VentureBeat, as well as its reporter on media, advertising, and social networks. Before joining the site in 2008, Anthony worked at the Hollister Free Lance, where he won awards from the California Newspaper Publishers Association for breaking news coverage and writing. He attended Stanford University and now lives in San Francisco. Reach him at anthony@venturebeat.com. (All story pitches should also be sent to tips@venturebeat.com) You can also follow Anthony on Twitter.

VentureBeat has new weekly email newsletters. Stay on top of the news, and don't miss a beat.


Discuss   Add this link to...  Bury

Comments Who Voted Related Links