terça-feira, agosto 22, 2006: Need for speed sees computers writing the news
...
Thomson Financial, the business information group, has been using computers to generate some stories since March and is so pleased with the results that it plans to expand the practice.
The computers work so fast that an earnings story can be released within 0.3 seconds of the company making results public.
By using previous results in Thomson's database, the computer stories say whether a company has done better or worse than expected. "This is not about cost but about delivering information to our customers at a speed at which they can make an almost immediate trading decision," said Matthew Burkley, senior vice-president of strategy at Thomson Financial. "This means we can free up reporters so they have more time to think."
Mr Burkley said the computer-generated stories had not made any mistakes. But he said they were very standardised. "We might try and write a few more adjectives into the program."
Thomson started writing computer programs for different types of stories, at a cost of $150,000-$200,000 (£79,623-£106,190) per project, to try to catch up with rivals.
Thomson has also hired hundreds of specialist reporters to boost its news operations. Reuters said it automatically generated some stories, while Bloomberg said it did not.
The desire for speed reflects the growth of automated trading. Many hedge funds want direct feeds that can be plugged into programs and used for trading.
Thomson's automatic stories are mostly for US company results but it plans to expand in other markets.
...
FT.com / Companies / Media & internet - Need for speed sees computers writing the news
About
- CMT Taveira
- View profile
Recent posts
- Workers in favour of extending their hours
- An undeclared war is raging across the business wo...
- How US assault grabbed global attention
- Appealing To the Senses
- CHENEY SHOOTS HUNTING BUDDY, NEWS OR NOT?
- The McKinsey Quarterly: Ten trends to watch in 2006
- First impressions count for web
- Forget the 30-second spot on a 50-inch high-defini...
- Forget the 30-second spot on a 50-inch high-defini...
- The final frontier media buy
Archives
- dezembro 2004
- janeiro 2005
- fevereiro 2005
- março 2005
- abril 2005
- maio 2005
- junho 2005
- julho 2005
- outubro 2005
- dezembro 2005
- janeiro 2006
- fevereiro 2006
- março 2006
- agosto 2006
- janeiro 2008
- fevereiro 2009