The new-look Google News makes local news and custom topics easier to find. | Image: Google

Google News has been given a fresh lick of paint for desktop users on its 20th birthday, with a redesign that gives more prominence to local news and personalized content.

Users can now more easily customize the topics theyā€™re shown by hitting the blue ā€œcustomizeā€ button in the right hand column (it appears just below ā€œPicks For Youā€). They can also add multiple locations to the ā€œLocal Newsā€ section by hitting the settings button to the right of the Local News header.

In practical terms, the biggest change is that various categories of news ā€” like world, business, science, and health ā€” have been moved from the left-hand side of the screen to a menu bar at the top. You can compare the before and after in the screenshots of the new design (up top) and the old look (below).

The old Google News design put topics down the left-hand column and gave more space for the weather.

Image: Google
Google News has now been running for 20 years, after launching in 2002.

Google says itā€™s also expanded its ā€œFact Checkā€ section, which highlights debunkings of viral claims from organizations like Full Fact. However, itā€™s not that prominent really, and tucked away in a section most visitors wonā€™t see at the bottom of the homepage.

Overall, I think the redesign of Google News makes it look more like a newspaperā€™s frontpage than an aggregated source like an RSS feed (RIP Google Reader). Itā€™s a pretty small change, but a welcome one.

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