Microsoft, Google expand search-engine tools
http://www.cnn.com/2009/TECH/09/16/visual.web.bing.google/index.html

(CNN) -- Say you're buying a dog. You know the breed you want; you can
picture it in your head. But what was the name? A bull terrier? A pit
bull? A bull mastiff?

Or what if you're in the market for a new camera? You saw a friend with
a credit-card-thin model at a party last weekend. But was that a Canon?
A Nikon? A brand you've never heard of?

If you're like many people, you'd turn to the Internet for answers. But
you type in "dog breeds" or "digital cameras" into Google and punch
enter, and a big list of blue links comes up. You don't see the dog you
want. You don't find the camera, either -- at least not quickly.

Such quandaries are the driving force behind Bing's new "visual search"
function, which lets Web users troll through image catalogues instead of
Web pages when they know what something looks like but can't put their
finger on the name.

The examples are also evidence that the search engine market, once
dominated by simple rectangular search bars and the lists of Web pages
that follow, is diversifying. People who once were happy with a
one-search-fits-all model are finding exceptions, and a number of niche
search products are trying to respond to these increasingly diverse
needs.

Also this week, Google introduced a test product called Fast Flip, which
takes a retro look at Web design by making online news look like
something magazine readers will find familiar.

The company has other news products -- namely Google Reader and Google
News -- but is looking for ways to make news content more visual and to
share some of the revenue.

The new products come as Microsoft's Bing continues to elbow for more
room in an online search market that Google has dominated for years. In
June, 65 percent of all Internet searchers were done through Google
sites, according to comScore. Microsoft caught only 8.4 percent of
searchers in the same period.

Fast Flip, an experimental feature of Google Labs, is a Web application
that allows users to scan news articles from 39 print and online
publishers, including The New York Times, Newsweek, TechCrunch and Us
magazine.

Users can "flip" through a horizontal stream of screen grabs of articles
as they appear on the partners' Web sites, with layout, design and
images intact. You can click once on a story to enlarge the page; a
second click takes you to the partner's site. Users also can browse
popular topics (the economy, Taylor Swift) or search for others of their
choosing.

Google says the idea behind the new service is to make online
news-browsing faster and replicate the reading experience of flipping
through a magazine or newspaper.

Unlike Google News, which emphasizes breaking news articles from the
past 24 hours, Fast Flip "is more for stories with a longer shelf life,"
Google spokesman Chris Gaither said.

"We think there's a lot of room for innovation in how people consume
news articles on the Web," Gaither said. "The easier it is for people to
browse articles quickly, the more they'll read."

Loren Baker, editor of Search Engine Journal, says that increases in
bandwidth make "visual search" functions more successful today than in
previous years, when images would load more slowly.

Baker believes that Google Fast Flip could make it easier for people to
scan news articles on their netbooks, tablets or even smartphones.

"I don't have to sift through my bookmarks. I don't even have to leave
Google," he said. "It's almost like a virtual newsstand on my handheld."

But not everyone is excited about Google's new product.

"If this is the future of news, I think news is kind of screwed," said
Frederic Lardinois, a writer at ReadWriteWeb, a technology blog.
Lardinois said the interface is backward-thinking and is hard to use.

Fast Flip is in a test phase and will incorporate feedback from users,
Gaither said. Google also is seeking to expand the roster of Fast Flip
partners, he said.

Some tech observers say Bing's hyper-visual search function gives it a
new leg up on Google in terms of functionality.

Nova Spivack, a search expert and founder of Twine, said the most
important thing about Bing's visual search is that users can sort the
images into categories.

By creating different kinds of searches and making them sortable, Bing
is catering to high-end Internet users -- which, soon, will be everyone,
he said.

"I think Bing has realized that everybody is becoming a search geek," he
said.

On the dog-breed search example, users can filter the images to include
only terriers, or hypoallergenic dogs or toy dogs, or dogs that need a
medium level of exercise, so they don't have to scroll through hundreds
of photos to find the dog they're searching for.

Mary Jo Foley, editor of the All About Microsoft blog at ZDNet, said she
personally finds Bing's visual search useless because she's not a
visually minded person. But she said it's an example of search engines
diversifying, and that's a good thing for everyone.

"I think the idea for Microsoft and Google and Yahoo is to present
things in new ways and say, 'What if you could do this? Would you want
to do it this way?' "

She added: "Not all people search in the same way, and not all people
want to get their results in the same way."

There are about 50 galleries of images in the new Bing visual search
bin, but more will be added, and eventually the idea will be integrated
into the main search site, said Stefan Weitz, director of Bing. Right
now, users have to go to a separate page to find the visual searches.

David Coursey, a blogger at PCWorld.com, said the search works like a
"visual dictionary."

"I think Bing is onto something," he said. "And if they can figure out
how to extend Bing's visual search, it could be very helpful for people
who know what something looks like but don't know what to call it."
***********************************
* POST TO MEDIANEWS@ETSKYWARN.NET *
***********************************

Medianews mailing list
Medianews@etskywarn.net
http://lists.etskywarn.net/mailman/listinfo/medianews

Reply via email to