Over the past year or so we've seen many mainstream publications 'web
2.0-ize' their web presence. BBC has been a leading force, while in
March USA Today
announced a re-design. Also we covered Martha Stewart 2.0 in April. Now it's CNN's turn. One of the
leading mainstream news operations in the world, CNN is this weekend re-launching its
website as an enhanced multimedia site - packed with web 2.0 features such as
recommendations and user generated content.
The new site officially launches on Sunday, July 1 - although the whsiper is that it might go-live sometime Saturday. Read/WriteWeb was given a sneak peak of the new site and we came away very impressed.
The new CNN.com features a big increase in multimedia, including live video content that was previously only available via the subscription-only CNN Pipeline. It is also now in Flash, rather than Windows Media format. That video content has been integrated into the main site and is available for free. CNN has beefed up its content with that web 2.0 favorite, "user-generated content". Also there is a recommendation feature called "We Recommend" - which is based on past browsing.

The new CNN.com also makes great use of Ajax, which as the Bivings Report noted, reduces page loading and so is "a baby step away from the page view advertising model."
In summary, the new features are:

Did someone say 'web 2.0'? We got blogs, podcasts, ...
CNN.com currently gets an average of more than 24 million unique users each month. The site was launched in 1995, and this re-design represents a big step forward for the 12-year old site. A CNN representative told us that CNN.com has been completely redeveloped - both graphically and technically. Its goal was to present integrated storytelling, using multimedia (especially video) and the web 2.0 aspects that R/WW readers are familiar with - user generated content, recommendations, related content, blogs, etc.
A CNN blog has been covering the re-design and also there was a beta version of the new CNN.com running for a while - but it was taken offline on Tuesday June 26, so that CNN could make the final changes. In a blog post entitled How it all works, CNN staff explained that "from a technology standpoint, the biggest shift in the new CNN.com is the inclusion of more dynamic services", such as personalization and the "We Recommend" feature described above.
We took a look at the beta while it was up and came away impressed with the changes. The new CNN.com ties video in a lot better - no more annoying popups. The main articles now have video and image tabs on top, so that you can easily view related media. Also the video is now in Flash format, unlike the Windows Media format on the current CNN. We thought the beta was definitely an improvement design wise - it is a lot easier on the eyes. Add that to the new 'web 2.0' functionality - such as story recommendation based on past browsing (kind of like Amazon for news!). Overall we think this is a big improvement on the old site.
The new CNN.com will go live either Saturday or Sunday, so check it out and let us know your thoughts.

New site, due to go-live 1 July 2007

Old site
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Impressive design; I've been loving CNN's international on-screen look recently as well. Far better than the British channels' big red shouty BREAKING news bars.
And far, far, far better than American news channels with the 18 scrolling bars of text news, and 45 on-screen animations. ;)
I've actually had a chance to use the beta site for about a month and it's a lot easier to get around. The cleaner design is quite nice.
(posted from iphone) my good friend rus was art director on this, i think he did a great job
"(posted from iphone)"
Show off! :-)
Maybe CNN could report some news on their web site instead of the 56 stories of Paris Hilton and I might actually read the CNN site.............maybe
Um, well, guess what? Their stupid "upgrade" doesn't work for us Linux people. I'm running Suse 10.0 and I do have the latest flash player for Linux installed and it plays content from everywhere else flawlessly. CNN though doesn't work. And that's with Firefox, Konqueror or Opera.
It just sits there like a guy on the couch and does nothing at all.
The old way worked fine.
Thank goodness they switched away from WMP, there were so many things I wanted to read but only had video stories, which I would never watch because firefox would first tell me I didn't have the required plugins then proceeded to buffer for a half hour a thirty second clip...
The new site design is a major improvement. The interface is much cleaner and more organized. And finally the video is practical to watch quickly in the browser window without plugins and popups.
I don't like it at and can't find a number of items. I only just noticed the science and funny news at the bottom of the page. I miss the weather page showing the newest weather related stories. Much too busy.
Also, another huge improvement (at least for now) is that there are no "flashy" ads.
The only ads on the site seem to be for CNN programs...
Is anyone else getting a "Bad request" error when you try to open the Weather page?
I'm using Firefox 2.0.0.4.
I am also using Firefox 2.0.0.4 and I get a "The connection was reset" error page whenever I try to open cnn.com. I have looked at Firefox, Trend Micro and Webroot Spy Sweeper options and have not found anything obviously wrong. It opens OK in IE. Any help?
I'm using Firefox 2.0.0.4 and the layout is badly messed up, several of the headlines appear as black on black so you can't read thems, the pop-up ads obscure the article and you can't move the windows. Guess the Quality Assurance team didn't test this using Firefox or they aren't sharing their settings.